What can you expect in the Food Thread on PF?

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The discussion revolves around a vibrant exchange of food-related topics, with participants sharing favorite recipes, culinary experiences, and kitchen mishaps. A notable focus is on lentil recipes, with suggestions for dishes like chocolate lentil cake and lentil lasagna, as well as creative uses of lentils in various cuisines. Participants also share recipes for pasta with pesto, grilled shrimp marinades, and Indian dishes like dahl and gulab jamun. There’s a strong emphasis on improvisation in cooking, with many contributors discussing how they cook "by feel" rather than following strict measurements. The conversation also touches on cultural influences, such as the appreciation for Lebanese and South Indian cuisine, and the importance of traditional meals like the Indian sadya. Additionally, humorous anecdotes about kitchen disasters and the challenges of cooking techniques, like frying mozzarella sticks, add a lighthearted tone to the thread. Overall, the thread celebrates the joy of cooking and the communal sharing of food experiences.
  • #4,981
hypatia said:
Om...wow dang, you just put the stress back into my dinner plans

Put it back in the freezer!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tIg2nK67LQ​

Nightmares on PF Street...

ps. without stress, we'd be jellyfish, or, something... :smile:
 
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  • #4,982
Lol love it.
 
  • #4,983
OmCheeto said:
...
If the temperature is over 212 F, the water will boil away. Duh! Dry Turkey sucks!
...

OMG! I just realized why KFC's chicken doesn't suck. Or at least, why it didn't, back when I was cooking it, 37 years ago.

-----------------------
I know the secret recipe! I actually always did, but never realized it, until just now.
Have I mentioned that I'm a bit slow?
 
  • #4,984
Danago, that looks amazing, could we have your recipes (especially the chocolate stack and lemonade)? :biggrin: I made an no-bake passionfruit cheesecake yesterday topped with berries, it looked something like this:
000826132_001_cheesecake_300.jpg


danago said:
My throw-together chocolate stack with an espresso. Layers of chocolate biscuit, salted peanuts, caramel, chocolate mousse, shortbread biscuit and finally a layer of Lindt Piccoli couverture chocolate. Lucky I exercise regularly :smile:

https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn2/1461242_352577821552937_563625171_n.jpg
 
  • #4,985
coma

reading these sunday morning i thought I'd passed out and woke up 19th december ! losing a month "god what have i done during this time what terrible things have i done that my mind wants to block out " then i thought ahhh,,, american website thanksgiving day etc etc !
 
  • #4,986
OmCheeto said:
Put it back in the freezer!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tIg2nK67LQ​

Nightmares on PF Street...

ps. without stress, we'd be jellyfish, or, something... :smile:

Hahah too funny! I might show that video next time I'm cooking for somebody :P

Monique said:
Danago, that looks amazing, could we have your recipes (especially the chocolate stack and lemonade)? :biggrin: I made an no-bake passionfruit cheesecake yesterday topped with berries, it looked something like this:
000826132_001_cheesecake_300.jpg

Wow that too is a great cheesecake photo! It looks like it came straight from a Donna Hay cookbook (are people outside of Australia familiar with Donna Hay? She is kind of the cake queen here).

Unfortunately there is no recipe for the chocolate stack. I just had lots of leftover chocolate, egg whites and cream to use up, so I made up all of the recipes without measuring much. The mousse is a ganache of roughly equal quantities (by mass) chocolate and cream, with whipped egg whites folded through. The caramel is really just an ordinary caramel of sugar, water and cream. I used pre-made chocolate biscuits from a packet for the base (yea, I cheated :-p) and the shortbread is just an ordinary shortbread. I salted the peanuts, because I looooovvveee the chocolate/caramel/salt/peanut combination, and the top layer is just Lindt Piccoli couverture chocolate.

I took the lemonade recipe from another Australian food blog:
http://thelifeofclare.com.au/mint-lime-ade/

I just published the recipe for the squid ink tagliatelle on my blog today:
http://eatspeakwrite.com/recipes/squid-ink-pasta-with-calamari/
 
  • #4,987
It may be Sunday morning, but I've been up since 6:00 am. Hosting a Sunday brunch this morning, and I started out making my often-requested blueberry scones. Made with 2 parts all-purpose flour and 1 part whole-wheat flour, I use only sweet Irish butter, no shortening, so no trans-fat. It's not diet food, but I certainly don't want to make it any worse.

The first batch is out of the oven, and it tastes yummy, if I may say so myself.

9krn.jpg


mosv.jpg


r5rl.jpg


Zz.
 
  • #4,988
Those are gorgeous, Zz!
 
  • #4,989
Yummy Zz! I don't think members here realize what a great cook Zz is.
 
  • #4,990
danago said:
(are people outside of Australia familiar with Donna Hay? She is kind of the cake queen here).
I'm a Masterchef Australia addict, so I do know her :smile: I should try and bake one-person cakes, then I could try out a lot more recipes. My boyfriend doesn't eat cakes so only when a group of people are stopping by, and I have enough time, do I prepare fancy desserts. I must say the cheesecake was ridiculously easy: the hardest part was crumbling the cookies for the base :biggrin: Thursday I have a potluck party, I think I'll make another one.

Unfortunately there is no recipe for the chocolate stack. I just had lots of leftover chocolate, egg whites and cream to use up, so I made up all of the recipes without measuring much. The mousse is a ganache of roughly equal quantities (by mass) chocolate and cream, with whipped egg whites folded through. The caramel is really just an ordinary caramel of sugar, water and cream. I used pre-made chocolate biscuits from a packet for the base (yea, I cheated :-p) and the shortbread is just an ordinary shortbread. I salted the peanuts, because I looooovvveee the chocolate/caramel/salt/peanut combination, and the top layer is just Lindt Piccoli couverture chocolate.
Thanks for the tips, I should try and throw together something like that, it looks absolutely delicious!
 
  • #4,991
ZapperZ said:
It may be Sunday morning, but I've been up since 6:00 am. Hosting a Sunday brunch this morning, and I started out making my often-requested blueberry scones. Made with 2 parts all-purpose flour and 1 part whole-wheat flour, I use only sweet Irish butter, no shortening, so no trans-fat. It's not diet food, but I certainly don't want to make it any worse.

The first batch is out of the oven, and it tastes yummy, if I may say so myself.

Zz.

Oh they look great!

Monique said:
I'm a Masterchef Australia addict, so I do know her :smile: I should try and bake one-person cakes, then I could try out a lot more recipes. My boyfriend doesn't eat cakes so only when a group of people are stopping by, and I have enough time, do I prepare fancy desserts. I must say the cheesecake was ridiculously easy: the hardest part was crumbling the cookies for the base :biggrin: Thursday I have a potluck party, I think I'll make another one.

Thanks for the tips, I should try and throw together something like that, it looks absolutely delicious!

I love Masterchef Australia too - I watch it religiously :-p Actually a few of the Masterchef stars (contestants, judges and past chefs) are currently here in Western Australia for an event called the Gourmet Escape. George, Poh Ling Yeow, Heston, Adriano Zumbo, plus a whole heap of other famous chefs. So devastated that I couldn't make it :frown:
 
  • #4,992
Today I made sweet pickled red onions :biggrin:. A bit of sugar, apple cider vinegar, and a lot of lime juice. And thinly-sliced onions of course. I'll let you know how they came out tomorrow!
 
  • #4,993
lisab said:
Today I made sweet pickled red onions :biggrin:. A bit of sugar, apple cider vinegar, and a lot of lime juice. And thinly-sliced onions of course. I'll let you know how they came out tomorrow!

I don't think I've tried anything pickled in lime juice like that. I'm intrigued!
 
  • #4,994
What's the best thing about Christmas? Panettone of course!

316kfwi.jpg


Anybody else a fan? I didn't make this one, I only unwrapped it and took the photo (and then ate) :-p
 
  • #4,995
lisab said:
Today I made sweet pickled red onions :biggrin:. A bit of sugar, apple cider vinegar, and a lot of lime juice. And thinly-sliced onions of course. I'll let you know how they came out tomorrow!

My friend suggested I try introducing sliced lemon into my turkey yesterday.

FXARMh0.jpg

A sliced sweet Walla Walla onion might impress everyone even a bit more.

OMG, I love onions! :!)
 
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  • #4,996
Here are some zucchini flower fritters, made about 10 minutes ago. My grandmother grows zucchini and uses them, along with the flowers, to make these incredible fritters. They are crispy on the outside and so soft and silky in the middle. I don't know what else she puts in them (I should find out), but they are so tasty.

vih1lk.jpg
 
  • #4,997
OmCheeto said:
My friend suggested I try introducing sliced lemon into my turkey yesterday.

FXARMh0.jpg

Thanksgiving turkey porn!

Be ready for a ban the moment Evo sees the picture.

Edit: wow, 5000th random post in the 2nd random thread.
 
  • #4,998
Someone showed that to me the other day, OH MY!
 
  • #4,999
My wife has been cooking since early morning. All kinds of bread, including cherry bread and raw-apple cake. Right now there is a chicken roasting in the rotisserie oven. She just got back from visiting the neighbors and handing out fresh loaves of bread. When she visits, she always takes them baked goods. Fresh bread for Thanksgiving... Bread is inexpensive to make - flour, salt, water, and yeast, but it is so tasty - especially hot out of the oven. Our nearest neighbors' grandson is about 7 or so, and he always wants fresh bread - a crusty heel piece with no butter is fine with him.
 
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  • #5,000
A work in progress: gravlax! Did this yesterday; it should be ready by Thanksgiving.

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  • #5,001
Ben Niehoff said:
A work in progress: gravlax! Did this yesterday; it should be ready by Thanksgiving.
...

Have you done this?:

During the Middle Ages, gravlax was made by fishermen, who salted the salmon and lightly fermented it by burying it in the sand above the high-tide line.

Do you live near a sea shore?

And I think fermenting takes more than a day.

You might want to order pizza...
 
  • #5,002
Love the pictures Ben!
 
  • #5,003
My wife and I decided to delve into sour-dough breads. The trick is that you have to leaven the dough with naturally-occurring yeasts in the air and make batches of "starter" to save and preserve the character of these basic breads. Sour-dough pizza crust is to die for.
 
  • #5,004
Evo said:
Love the pictures Ben!

ditto.

I was so jealous/hungry after I saw those... :devil:
 
  • #5,005
OmCheeto said:
Have you done this?:

Not the medieval way, no. My fish aren't fermenting, just curing in sugar and salt. It takes 2-4 days, depending on what flavor you want.
 
  • #5,006
Apple strudel attempt. Definitely NOT the easiest thing in the world to make without a lot of practice. Dough has to be super, super thin so that you can see through it. Much easier probably if you have the right work space/equipment. The dough came out quite well though.


streudel_1.jpg

streudel_2.jpg

streudel_3.jpg
 
  • #5,007
Strudel is very difficult. I remember when I was 12 and made my own phyllo dough for baklava. It was awesome, never again.
 
  • #5,008
Last night, I decided to line the turkey tray with baby cut carrots. I just tried one. I think I've invented carrot jerky. :redface:
 
  • #5,009
Wow! Blueberry scones, fritters, gravlax, sourdough, apple strudel...looks like some people are kicking it up a notch these days :approve:.
 
  • #5,010
I baked a Mrs Smith's blackberry cobbler. Not much fruit, mostly syrup, but very tasty.
 

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