Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. rotuts

    Dinner 2025

    Air Frier Mortadella & Swiss & Soft Scrambled egg , on TJ's Fz Naan : the Naan is right pout of the freezer , mortadella and swiss AF'd torched soft scramble delicious.
  3. OlyveOyl

    Lunch 2025

    Flour tortilla, well seasoned meat, melted cheese and tomatoes. Pistachio crumble, raspberry jam, ricotta.
  4. That's always perplexed me. I'm no historian, but without organised agriculture you're getting calories anywhere you can, and hunting uses up rather a lot of those. So the liklihood is forage first, hunt later/when you can to my mind. And yeah, paleo influencers can 🤫
  5. Today
  6. Yass , I've learned is a town in Australia south of Sydney.
  7. LOL Okay, then... "Although most of us on this forum do not eat bees..." FWIW I've deliberately eaten ants, fried locusts (grasshoppers? don't remember for sure which it was) and mealworms. The latter was at a kid-centric event at our local Museum of Natural History, when to my surprise my kids wouldn't step up and try 'em. I told my daughter "that's where the 'meal' part comes from!" (To be clear, I know that's not true, I'm just prone to Dad jokes). Which reminds me, I'd intended to post this here a few weeks ago and then forgot. Because direct evidence is scant and incomplete, scientists have turned to interesting side routes in an effort to decipher the diets of our remote human and hominin ancestors, through things like analysis of plaque on teeth and isotopes in bones and other remains. One mystery that cropped up in that pioneering work is a bizarrely inflated level of specific nitrogen isotopes correlated with meat-eating. There's a traditional image of "cavemen" being primarily carnivorous, though current research is now tending to debunk that (in your face, "Paleo" diet influencers!). So this finding with the nitrogen isotopes runs counter to much of the contemporary scholarship, at least on the surface. But there's been a big question mark about it, because the levels of those isotopes were high enough to make the whole thing questionable. This new work provides a highly plausible (if disgusting to the Western eye) explanation. https://arstechnica.com/science/2025/07/fermented-meat-with-a-side-of-maggots-a-new-look-at-the-neanderthal-diet/
  8. You might not eat bees. I've eaten them both here in China and also in Vietnam.
  9. I'm putting this here in Food Science because, although we don't eat bees, we certainly depend on them for much of what we *do* eat. It's about an advance in supporting bee colonies through supplemental feeding. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/08/250822073807.htm
  10. We moved to a more upmarket area as my career progressed a few years ago. I was impressed to find pigs ears in the local Co-Op. Ooh! It took me a few beats to realise I was in the dog food section.
  11. I become more scared to open this thread every day
  12. I’ve managed to determine what some of Lay's, the secretive pizza place’s pizzas may be, not from the company selling them, of course, but from customers’ comments. Here is one. Purple sweet potato pizza. They don’t mention durian, though.
  13. Some might say it's just amazing!
  14. Is it a corn maze or a maize maze?
  15. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    A rare repeat for us - Southern-Style Pork Vindaloo and Green Bean Verakka with Cardamom Cornbread from “My Two Souths” by Asha Gomez - thoughtful combination of Indian and Southern US influences in a very tasty dish
  16. MaryIsobel

    Dinner 2025

    Looks delicious. Sablefish is my next favourite to halibut! I find ling cod to be very similar in taste and texture so I love that too.
  17. KennethT

    Dinner 2025

    Sambal grouper... The grouper was pan fried and then put in the new CSO500 in air fry mode at 350F for 10 minutes. Best. Grouper. Yet.
  18. C. sapidus

    Dinner 2025

    Fish and farmer's market bounty tonight. Mrs. C did everything except the mushrooms. Sablefish pan-fried in ghee and bacon grease: Very tender. Friends in Alaska said this was their favorite fish. Eggplant, sliced thinly and prepared the same way. We also had a sliced tomato but it escaped the picture. Mushrooms in pasilla chile sauce, topped with chopped shallot and feta cheese. The sauce was a blend of pasilla chiles (roasted and soaked), roasted garlic, a long red chile from the farmer's market, Mexican oregano, cumin, cilantro, chicken stock, and a touch of sugar (which I like with pasilla chile sauces).
  19. Yesterday
  20. Thanks! We use a plucker, but some hand work is required to get every last feather.
  21. I don't do a lot of preserving but we actually got good peaches in my neck of the woods. So 10 quarts skinned, peeled, pitted and in the freezer. 13 quarts of strawberries were hulled and roasted for roasted ice cream. The strawberries were only done up because they were excellent this year. Those two items were bagged in the appropriate portions and frozen. We also have delicata and sweet dumpling squash to deal with when they mature. In addition, we share a small garden with my SIL who lives in the boonies so I gathered up some plum tomatoes, skinned, cored, ran them through a blender and cooked down to a sauce. The sauce was then run through a food mill and run through the blender to smooth it out. There are what seems like a ton of tomatoes yet to come.
  22. That sounds less gross than an actual FP.
  23. nb A "proper" Frito pie is made in an upside-down bag of chips. This lets all the alleged goodness of the frito dust permeate the whole.
  24. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2025

    I made it into a pizza, too. Coincidentally posted exactly 5 years ago today over here. I think peaches & pork get along quite well!
  25. MaryIsobel

    Breakfast 2025

    Wow - that looks fabulous - peaches are just coming into their own around here so will definitely pick up some proscitto.
  26. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2025

    I like fruit in savory dishes and thought it was quite good though I wouldn’t recommend eating anything that causes itching. The shiitake powder in the mushroom dredge gives the crunchy coating an umami boost and the peaches are very much a spicy pickle element so the combo worked well. The country ham-wrapped and roasted peaches from Deep Run Roots is another savory recipe I like that includes peaches and you should probably avoid. This is an old photo, but peach wedges get wrapped in thin slices of smoked country ham (I subbed prosciutto) and roasted. They're served on gingered goat cheese (goat cheese, buttermilk & grated, fresh ginger) with a drizzle of balsamic honey and a sprinkle of spiced pecans. I should make this again while peaches are in season.
  27. Ddanno

    Breakfast 2025

    Peaches in anything savoury makes me itch. Was it good?
  1. Load more activity
×
×
  • Create New...