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  1. Past hour
  2. Bacon and egg. Another 5-item cooked breakfast. Lunch: heavily dusted with pepper. Chicken curry and rice. Where do I begin? Some kind of Mexican thing, as authentic, I'm sure, as the previously shown curry. It filled the hole.
  3. The energy that goes into extracting the materials to build the machine, manufacturing and shipping it, and then disposing of it at the end of its life far outweighs any minimal savings in hot water or soap that you might save over the average life of the machine. I have an old dishwasher, use it all the time, but I don’t kid myself that I’m saving energy with it. Living without a dishwasher clearly saves energy.
  4. Today
  5. My situation is very relevant. The reason I don't have a dishwasher is that they are wasteful. The topic is about cleaning knives and I still have knives which I clean in a more efficient and less wasteful way. i did have a dishwasher in England 30 years ago and didn't put.my knives in it then, either. My choice.
  6. Bottom line: is there a difference in taste?
  7. Your situation isn't really relevant to the topic, then. I think we can assume the question of what to put in the dishwasher is only applicable to people who have one.
  8. I avoid putting anything with a wooden handle in the dishwasher. That means my Japanese knives, several crappy old knives, and my cheap as chips Kiwi. I'd put the Kiwi in if it had one of the newer plastic handles. I probably wouldn't put the Victorinox chef's knife in, but I don't have final say on all the matters. I wouldn't put my carbon steel or stainless clad knives in, even if they didn't have wooden handles. I have several knives we keep around just because we can abuse them and not worry about things like the dishwasher. So it is complicated. Good knives that only I use, hand wash as soon after a task as possible. Cheap knives where anything goes. A couple of cheap knives that are hand washed because of their wood handles. I suppose those are the ones where my strategy is different from @Porthos so his post is well taken. The old club of a western chef's knife might be a good one to experiment with, since I have a similar plastic handle one if it dies. If I have a pot of soapy water in the sink, I'll tend to just hand wash the knives so I don't end up cursing the fact that they are sitting in the dishwasher, dirty. But overall dishwashers are more energy and water efficient.
  9. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    Cacio e Pepe from a CI recipe - interesting approach by building the base through finely mincing the pecorino in the food processor and adding a little bit of hot water to get a cheese “paste”. You use the cheese paste with the hot spaghetti directly from the pot, freshly toasted and ground black pepper and some concentrated pasta water (spaghetti cooked in a small amount of water) to finish the dish. Overall good flavor but the cheese sauce started to form a few small clumps once it cooled down a bit.
  10. The only energy my washing by hand uses is supplied by me, apart from a tiny amount from a gas-fired water heater for a tiny amount of hot water. I don't possess or want a a dishwashers. They are unknown here.
  11. But if he's running a dishwasher load anyway, it actually saves water and energy -- albeit a very small amount each time, but over 47+ years, it adds up.
  12. Not copper. The bread pan have is steel. The pictured one was from King Arthur, but I bet you can find one on Amazon for less
  13. Continuing the chocolate theme, we have 巧克力脆皮榴莲冰皮月饼 (qiǎo kè lì cuì pí liú lián bīng pí yuè bǐng), chocolate crispy durian snowy mooncake. It is basically the same durian cake I mentioned before but coated in chocolate with nuts. I’ll pass. Chinese chocolate is not generally good, at all.
  14. It takes seconds to hand wash a knife after use and is a lot less wasteful of water and energy.
  15. I have a three loaf baguette pan and I just checked and it too fits in the Anova. Are those copper sheet pans?
  16. I don’t have lots of knives so I prefer to keep my limited selection at the ready. I don’t run the dishwasher after every meal so washing them by hand suits me.
  17. @ElsieD, the baguette pan from King Arthur fits in the Anova steam oven. I have some copper sheets which go under the pan which behave like a baking pan. I've made baguettes twice, not very successfully. I'm looking to Norm to help me figure out how to do this right 🙃
  18. Thank you. I've read the recipe and the sourdough starter instructions and will try it.
  19. I think I had an argument with fat guy about this 15 years ago. Or maybe it was about wooden spoons? my perspective…I’d rather give any and all of my knives a quick wash and dry and put them back where they belong.
  20. Yesterday
  21. @ElsieD Maybe you could try the recipe called King Arthur Flour Rustic Sourdough Bread. It is very reliable and I didn't attempt to keep sourdough going in the last year. What I did was to mix equal amounts of water and flour with a two teaspoons of commercial yeast, feed it for two or three days then use that "aged yeast" in place of actual sourdough in the recipe. It makes good bread. I bake mine on a double French loaf pan and brush them with egg and sprinkle with sesame seeds just before they ot into the oven.PS that recipe also uses store bought yeast to assure a quick and good rise without relying on the sourdough or aged yeast for anything but flavor.
  22. I have had zero luck maintaining a sourdough starter. I have tried a number of times with the same result. I still make bread, but not with sourdough starter.
  23. Thank you. Your post made me realize that I forgot to post the recipes for today on the blog. They are there now.
  24. I have run my knives through the dishwasher without ill effects (one wooden handle notwithstanding) for 47+years. However, I do so with the understanding of what not to put in, and how to position them to avoid damage. I've never had a blade deteriorate I have 2 knives that never go in: a 10" slicer with a rosewood handle and a 10" chef's knife with a rosewood handle. I'll never own Damascus steel knives. They are beautiful but would require more care than I wish to put into them. My knife block is filled with western-style knives. I have Forschner, Victorniox, Wusthoff, Henkel, and others. After I retired from participating in Ren Faires as a volunteer I stopped pursuing one of my hobbies, finding quality brand knives in thrift stores that were donated because the edges were dull and the owner didn't choose to deal to with them. Bringing them back life and giving them to friends was a pleasure. There are a few of those that made it into my knive block or knife roll that I use when traveling. My best "test case" is my 9 1/2" chef's knife that my Sweetie gave me for Christmas 1982. Just this year, for the first time, I had to smooth its wooden handle and then put 6 coats of polyurethane on it. The blade itself still takes and keeps an edge. I use an Edge Pro. I actually found egullet when I wanted to learn to properly sharpen knives; thank you Chad Ward. I position all knives so that the edges CAN NOT hit anything else. I fully understand that the prevailing wisdom is never, ever put kitchen knives in the dishwasher. If that is how you care for knives I have no argument with what you do in your kitchen. My choice to put them in the dishwasher is solely my own choice. I do not wish to engage in debate over my choice. I simply wanted to share my perspective and personal experience.
  25. Norm, I've tried using sourdough, but with less success than you. These loaves all look delicious. So do the photos on your blog dated 02 September.
  26. Jumped on sourdough bread during Covid. I've baked bread for years but had never done soudough. I like the taste of sourdough but honestly the babysitting got to me and now I normally just go with a classic french loaf, or a no knead boule made in a dutch oven or foccaicia. Not that I would ever turn down a loaf of sourdough - especially if it were enjoyed in San Fransisco. As a kid, when I was 9, we sailed from Vancouver to Southampton and stopped in San Fransisco. My mom was insistent that we found sourdough bread, so that and a few other things were are picnic before getting back on the ship.
  27. I thought I had been making sourdough bread for around forty years. I thought. Maybe I was fooling myself. The recipe was called King Arthur Flour Rustic Sourdough bread. It says it is sourdough bread and it is from King Arthur Flour for goodness sake. But here is the the problem. The ingredients are sourdough starter, flour, water, salt, and sugar and yeast. Yes store bought yeast. I read somewhere years ago that you can make sourdough starter using store bought yeast because it is a hybrid and cannot reproduce itself in its hybrid form but will revert back to its original wild yeast form. I had heard that when commercial bakeries made sourdough, they used the starter for flavor and regular yeast for dependability. Now I don't know if that is still true today as it might have been a while ago before fast rising yeast was developed. I found conflicting opinions on whether or not that is cheating. If I have sinned, forgive me. I want start doing more stuff with my sourdough starter besides the same loaf I have made since forever. It was easy, dependable and everyone, I mean everyone likes it. Now that sourdough has become popular, there is more information about it out there and also the recipes are easier to find. So I started fermenting flour and water to get 100% wild yeast. I made three starters. One with whole wheat flour, one with AP flour and one with rye flour. They all started and I grew them all for a while. I ended up keeping the rye starter but have been feeding it with AP flour since then, so now it is just white flour starter. In the pictures, the round loaf and the French bread loaf are the same sourdough recipes I have always used but without any yeast other that what was grown in the new starter. The recipe is one cup starter, 1 1/2 C. water, 2 teaspoons saltr, 1 Tablespoon sugar and about 5 cups of bread flour. I say about because, since everything else was measured by volume, 5 cups isn't always exactly enough. This time the dough was a little wetter and stickier than normal which means it had higher hydration and so the air bubbles are a little bigger than before. The round loaf was baked in a preheated cast iron Dutch oven. The recipes for the sourdough apple fritter bread and the sour dough pancakes with the notes and that came with them are at my blog. I am not sure I am allowed to post them here. I think the fritter bread would be improved with the addition of chopped pecans. The blog address is at the bottom of the page. I welcome your thought and comments.
  28. liamsaunt

    Dinner 2025

    It could be a nostalgia thing. Where I went to college, the most popular pizza place used to make pizzas with crazy toppings, and we all thought they were the greatest thing ever. My favorite had tortellini on it! I am sure if I ate it now I would get sick haha Last night, another recipe from Milk Street's The World in a Skillet: sweet and savory skillet steamed eggplant. Everyone really liked this one too, the eggplant was very creamy and flavorful.
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