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  1. Past hour
  2. I had to look for a recipe. Those Hungarian potatoes sound fantastic!
  3. Today
  4. Duvel

    Breakfast 2025

    Rice paper „bagel“, filled with chorizo, egg and onions, topped with everything bagel mix and baked in the airfryer …
  5. Thanks All It does appear a small chablon on the bottom of the biscuit, maybe that helps stop it from breaking while cutting
  6. liuzhou

    Beer Garnishes

    Many years ago, there was a trend in the UK for serving Sol beer in the bottle with a wedge of lime in the neck of the bottle. This apparently baffled Mexicans, not so much for the lime but that the idea that Sol would be popular. Back there it was, maybe still is, considered to be of very low quality. Some wag responded by pushing a photograph of a bottle of Newcastle Brown with a sausage in the neck. I have searched for that image but sadly failed.
  7. I just discovered this thread and thought I’d post a photo of a beer I had recently in a Mexican type restaurant. Now I don’t know if beers like this are common in Mexico or the US but it was definitely way out there for my hometown of Melbourne. Actually it was quite good. Beer with lime and shrimp
  8. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    Chicken Breast with Sesame Vinaigrette and Pan- Roasted Winter Vegetables with Miso, Ginger and Honey - chicken breast was cooked sous-vide (147F, 3 hours), very quickly pan-seared and served with a vinaigrette made by pureeing soy sauce, rice wine vinegar, garlic, kewpie mayonnaise, canola oil, sesame oil, red pepper flakes, toasted sesame seeds and scallions. For the vegetables, carrots, parsnips, brussels sprouts and shallots are quickly pan-seared in a cast iron skillet, mixed with butter, white miso, ginger and honey and finished in the oven. Served with some fries
  9. liuzhou

    Fruit

    I really like them a lot. They should be juicy.
  10. Smithy

    Fruit

    My neighbors' neighbors had a commercial grove of them in central California, near where I grew up. I wasn't impressed with them when I tried them, but I'm a bit of a traditionalist (give me good Satsuma Mandarins, please) and it may also have been an off year. Those I tried weren't very juicy, although the zipper skin was as gratifying as with any of their brethren. What is your take on them? (If you commented on their quality uptopic, I apologize for missing it.)
  11. A favorite of mine, and easily scalable/customizable is a potato casserole with potatoes, sliced hard boiled eggs, some kind of sausage (hard or soft), and a random dairy binder. I grew up with this using cheap grocery kielbasa and cream of whatever soup (something innocuous and forgettable). I lived for a time in Budapest and there's a traditional Hungarian dish, called Rantott Krumpli (aka layered potatoes) that was identical in concept but generally used a specific spicy hard sausage and the binding was sour cream with a local red pepper paste. Best served with a highly vinegered cucumber salad with lots of garlic and dill. I wonder if a riff on this, with your local flavor profiles, would work? Chorizo would be perfect, maybe add corn? Cajun spices in a bechamel? Something like a crab boil in casserole form.
  12. With chocolates, there is a thin layer of chocolate (called a foot or a chablon). Most experts say it should be untempered so as not to be so firm. Then the filling is spread on top of the chocolate. The chablon makes it easier to pick up each piece to be dipped and keeps it from sticking to the guitar so much. Some people add another layer of chocolate on top of the filling(s). As pastrygirl suggests, the biscuit layer may not be as crisp as it appears; it may be more like pie crust than a cookie. I would probably risk cutting something like that.
  13. There's one way to find out! What is 'biscuit' to a French patissier? I know it can be a type of sponge cake but the video looks more like a pate sucree. The caramel may soak in & soften the base as it and the other layers set up. Liquid sable or a crumb crust might work - would definitely be guitar cut-able.
  14. liuzhou

    Fruit

    It seems the information I previously found on the giant tangerines mentioned upthread was incorrect. Rather than having been developed in Israel, it appears they were first bred in 1972 in Japan as a hybrid of Kiyomi and ponhan citruses. In Japanese, they are デコポン (dekopan). They are sometimes referred to as sumo mandarin or sumo citrus in English. An alternative name in Chinese, is 凸顶柑 (tū dǐng gān), literally 'protruding top tangerine'. They have been introduced into Australia and in limited numbers in the USA.
  15. To my untrained eye, the biscuit looks very very thin and it is also well docked so perhaps it isn't as crispy (but not a soft sponge biscuit either). At the end of the layering and then cutting on the guitar (where they are taking them apart), it looks like there is a chocolate backing/coating under the biscuit. Im not sure it that means they first score the back with the guitar and then flip it to cut through? Would you do that (as a chocolatier)?
  16. At that price, I decided to take one for the team. It was, shall we say, interesting -- although I picked up more funky herbal notes than the WE reviewer noted. It paired surprisingly well with a Niman Ranch apple-gouda sausage. Also, I felt buzzed after only about 5 ounces, which led me to accurately predict that it was 15% alcohol. I'll stay out of that issue for now.
  17. Smithy

    Dinner 2025

    Today was busy, with successfully-completed chores but not much down time. That won't sound unusual for working folks, but this mostly-retired woman found herself quite hungry, and with no desire for elaborate cooking, at the end of a packed day. Boy, I love my panini press. Dinner: A griddled salami and cheese sandwich with crisp outsides and crisp edges where the cheese had oozed and hit the griddle. Accompanied by a green salad and some woefully, horribly over-roasted vegetables from a couple of nights ago. Some of those vegetables are atop the green salad, where they provide more crunch than flavor. Well, maybe carbon / charcoal has nutritional value. 😉 But the rest of the salad is great, and the sandwich is unbeatable.
  18. Ditto what @Smithy said! I love turnips and need to make this!!
  19. Yesterday
  20. Turnips and turnip greens! I'd never think of putting those into a pasta dish! Thanks for the report....and for the prompt for me to make compound butter. Assuming I can find some freezer space. 🙂
  21. Watching the video, I can certainly see why you want to make something similar. You can see the difficulty of cutting the marshmallow--it has to be just the right texture for the wires to go through it (mostly) cleanly. The video's caption states that the layer is a biscuit. Just in case...somewhere on this forum @pastrygirl has posted a video showing how to replace a guitar wire. She helped me through my first (and so far only) guitar crisis.
  22. I sent this to friends in Massachusetts who have six sheep.
  23. Phoodle #1286 4/6 ⬜🟨🟨⬜⬜ 🟨🟨🟨⬜⬜ 🟨⬜🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 https://phoodle.net obscure
  24. Neely

    Breakfast 2025

    Typical breakfast with canned baked beans.
  25. It is this video. It sure looks like a baked biscuit at the start... https://www.instagram.com/reel/DGIU8oRuGaJ/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
  26. Pinot Noir. Strong, tasty.
  27. Please report back on your experiments. It would be great to include a biscuit in a candy bar. Even better if it was easy to cut everything to the size you want. Understand the cost issue... my dream chocolate kitchen has a lot more equipment than my actual chocolate kitchen. 🙂
  28. For some reason, I could not copy my result. I got it in 5.
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