Breakfast! The most important meal of the day (2004-2011)
#301
Posted 30 January 2005 - 04:14 PM
#302
Posted 31 January 2005 - 01:42 AM
Hubby baked a lovely ham on the Webber for about four hours, and it fell in juicy creamy-pink slices, just floating off the knife onto the platter. I made a broccoli/bacon/Jack quiche, a red and yellow pepper fritatta, a carb-treasure of a hashbrown casserole, laden with coarse-grated Colby and Gruyere.
Hearts of baby romaine with raita; bocconcini, grape tomato and basil salad; tiniest steamed baby carrots in lemon vinaigrette. A cut-glass cakestand with strawberries like fat rubies circling a bowl of ricotta sprinkled with Turbinado sugar; a tall compote filled with bright golden sticks of fresh pineapple. A thick rope of Kielbasa roasted skin-crackly and full of savory juices, served with Rothschild's grainy raspberry honey mustard; cathead biscuits in a big black skillet, with homemade threeberry jam.
Dear Daughter made a fresh peach cobbler and a Caillebaut ganache birthday cake. Endless latte from my new Senseo, Kona blue in the French press, iced tea in tall goblets.
Everyone stayed for hours, til almost twilight, then went home to either a carb coma or a cheese seizure. 'Twasn't breakfast, but 'twill serve.
And the flavour you imagine will come streaming from the spout.
Fairy Tea
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#303
Posted 31 January 2005 - 07:08 AM
#304
Posted 31 January 2005 - 08:31 AM
thick cut bacon - ummmmm. so good, so crispy.
#305
Posted 31 January 2005 - 09:20 AM
#306
Posted 31 January 2005 - 11:25 AM
After seeing many health-conscious people order this in movies and tv shows, I wondered if I would like it.
Now I know.. I don't.
~ The Travels of Verjuice & Chufi
~ Eat cheap, travel far
~ Dutch Cooking recipe index
website
#307
Posted 31 January 2005 - 11:41 AM
LOL, I'm with you!I had some eggwhites left over (with traces of yolk in it so no good for meringue) and I made an eggwhite omelet for breakfast.
After seeing many health-conscious people order this in movies and tv shows, I wondered if I would like it.
Now I know.. I don't.
#308
Posted 31 January 2005 - 12:07 PM
I had some eggwhites left over (with traces of yolk in it so no good for meringue) and I made an eggwhite omelet for breakfast.
After seeing many health-conscious people order this in movies and tv shows, I wondered if I would like it.
Now I know.. I don't.
I agree--but if I need to use up some whites and don't have time to use them for something else I'll do it. They're a lot better if you add a least one whole egg in--say, 2 egg whites and 1 whole egg.
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
#309
Posted 02 February 2005 - 08:23 AM
One thing I have liked to do is to make scrambled eggs with sour cream instead of whipping cream or water as the added 'liquid'. It gives them a very creamy texture, and a nice tang. I also do mine over very high heat, I basically just whisk the eggs together with the sour cream, some salt, and some pepper, get some butter to the brown stage in an ultra hot pan, pour in the egg mixture and rapidly swirl with a spatula for about 15 - 25 seconds, that's all it takes, and they come out great every time.
He don't eat humble pie,
So sing a miserere
And hang the bastard high!
- Richard Wilbur and John LaTouche from Candide
#310
Posted 02 February 2005 - 08:43 AM
I will try that, thanks. It sounds good. (You come up with great breakfast ideas.I've been eating a lot of eggs for breakfast lately, well, actually a lot of eggs in general lately. When I can pick up 36-packs of eggs for $2.50 at Costco, they become a very economical protein source.
One thing I have liked to do is to make scrambled eggs with sour cream instead of whipping cream or water as the added 'liquid'. It gives them a very creamy texture, and a nice tang. I also do mine over very high heat, I basically just whisk the eggs together with the sour cream, some salt, and some pepper, get some butter to the brown stage in an ultra hot pan, pour in the egg mixture and rapidly swirl with a spatula for about 15 - 25 seconds, that's all it takes, and they come out great every time.
#311
Posted 02 February 2005 - 05:58 PM

This morning I'm having roti canai and cafe au lait. Basically, Ling's scallion pancake recipe sans the onions. Drizzled with melted butter, these are a good way to start the day!
Edited by spaghetttti, 02 February 2005 - 06:20 PM.
I am spaghetttti
#312
Posted 02 February 2005 - 06:16 PM

#313
Posted 04 February 2005 - 07:10 PM

Brought back some Malt-O-Meal, it's like cream of wheat, grits, and Maypo. Anyone else remember Maypo?
I am spaghetttti
#314
Posted 04 February 2005 - 07:19 PM
#315
Posted 05 February 2005 - 07:51 AM

Added some cream cheese to the eggs for a nice, smooth, creamy texture.
#316
Posted 05 February 2005 - 08:47 AM
Grits, white and yellow, freshly ground, stirred into boiling water.

at 20 minutes they have absorbed a lot of water:

at 40 minutes they are done:

Poured into a loaf pan to cool overnight:

This morning, sliced, lightly dredged with flour and into browned butter on the griddle:

nearly done:

Finished, ready to plate and eat with eggs, bacon and/or sausage and maple syrup or ??

Very tasty! My housekeeper, originally from Hungary, had never heard of grits but has taken to them with great enthusiasm. Indeed, she has sent some home to her mother and brothers with explicit instructions on how they are to be stored (freezer) and cooked.
Often I place the freshly made grits in a small gratin dish, make a hollow in the middle and add a couple of poached eggs topped with shredded ham. This is her favorite but the fried comes in a very close second.
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#317
Posted 05 February 2005 - 08:59 AM
#318
Posted 05 February 2005 - 09:34 AM
My breakfast was rather pedestrian, pancakes, bacon, chunky applesauce on the side. Trying to get the bacon out of the house before Lent.
#319
Posted 05 February 2005 - 09:40 AM
As I visited back and forth, I was sometimes a bit confused when I was very young, but finally learned that grits and hominy were one and the same on the breakfast table. Hominy as a vegetable was something else.
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#320
Posted 05 February 2005 - 12:29 PM
#321
Posted 06 February 2005 - 08:30 AM

Made these eggs with a dollop of sour cream. While the texture was good, I prefer the taste and texture of cream cheese as opposed to sour cream.
#322
Posted 06 February 2005 - 09:06 AM
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#323
Posted 06 February 2005 - 09:27 AM
Early this morning I knocked it down, shaped it and popped it into a (slightly too small) pan allowed it to rise again and popped it into the Sharp convection oven (it revolves as it is also a microwave).
Here it is in the oven:

just out of the oven, still in the pan:

Now out of the pan so it can cool:

Sliced and ready to eat - we are going to toast it lightly.

Doesn't that look good? You should smell the aroma!
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#324
Posted 06 February 2005 - 01:36 PM
#325
Posted 06 February 2005 - 02:25 PM
Then we had soft scrambled eggs with sour cream and caviar, potatoes fried in chicken fat, bagels and lox and the trimmings, and cheap bubbly (to match up nicely with that cheap caviar). It tasted wonderful, though.


#326
Posted 06 February 2005 - 02:42 PM
Looks good andiesenji....did you make the dough yourself or is it from a readymade mixture?
Made from scratch.
The batch makes 4 good-sized loaves. I usually divide it into loaf portions and freeze them after the first rise. The dough keeps well in the freezer for about a month.
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#327
Posted 07 February 2005 - 11:18 AM

With my morning coffee, half a bagel left over from yesterday, toasted, with the pictured mango marmalade on it. The Floribbean line of tropical style condiments is really good.
#328
Posted 07 February 2005 - 12:21 PM
Brunch today after a long walk/run was first, a glass of Victory Storm King Impy Stout.
Then we had soft scrambled eggs with sour cream and caviar, potatoes fried in chicken fat, bagels and lox and the trimmings, and cheap bubbly (to match up nicely with that cheap caviar). It tasted wonderful, though.
wow Susan I could have your brunch for dinner!!
~ The Travels of Verjuice & Chufi
~ Eat cheap, travel far
~ Dutch Cooking recipe index
website
#329
Posted 08 February 2005 - 10:02 AM
Hi pattimw! Thank you, yes -- the pancakes are very light and fluffy, and above all very easy to make:
Blueberry Pancakes
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 Tbsp. sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1 beaten egg
1 cup milk
2 Tbsp. melted cooled butter
4 oz. fresh blueberries
Mix the first four ingredients (dry) together.
Blend together the wet ingredients then add to the the dry all at once. Stir just until slightly lumpy, you don't want the batter to be too smooth.
Pour about 1/4 cupfuls onto a hot lightly buttered skillet/griddle. Then drop blueberries into pancakes - I used about 6-8 blueberries for each pancake. Flip when bubbles have burst. I like high sides on my pancakes and I get them fairly high with this recipe.
The batter makes about 8 pancakes. This morning I had them with warmed maple syrup but they're extra special with blueberry syrup! Didn't have enough to make some!
That is the same recipe I use (except my original called for oil instead of butter, which works great) and it makes the BEST pancakes!
#330
Posted 08 February 2005 - 07:32 PM
This was a special request from my husband:

Roti paratha fried in french butter together with an egg on top. Thanks again, Ling, for that scallion pancake recipe!
I am spaghetttti
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