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@Duvel you passed on Ox Cheeks ? Ill light a candle .
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I don't have a problem with Canadian ryes, when necessary, though they're definitely distinct from many American distilled ryes. And there's only one way to find out how the Australian-distilled ryes work!
- Today
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Not seen here at Costco in Tucson, but surprisingly the Costco in Guadalajara carries it. That Costco is less than an hour away from our MXN home). We bought it and it was excellent, similar to salmon but milder. Here's a picture of the steelhead I bought in early October at the Guadalajara Costco.
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several states (west coast) and the Federal government list steelhead trout as 'endangered' - so one rarely find wild caught. at our local PA Costco it is fresh/never frozen - farmed in Norway. most/all? of the salmon Costco carries is farmed, from Scotland - but "previously frozen' pricing is similar tho....
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Pete Fred replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Another cookie via bon appétit, this time the Chocolate Chipless Cookie by Shilpa Uskokovic (Tickety-Tok, and possibly paywalled recipe)... Again, a portion of the flour is toasted, but this time in brown butter. For me, this was much more successful because, errrr, butter. I experimented with the thickness and preferred less spread than their version. The chocolate chipless moniker is perhaps a little gimmicky, but as a brown sugar cookie I liked it. -
I'll connect you both through e-mail.
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Tradingview PC joined the community
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Stopover in Munich … of course including a visit to the Hofbräuhaus. Wanted something from their seasonal menu for lunch, but was still too full from the breakfast sausages … Luckily, they had something “light & liquid” 🥳 Good times !
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JNJ Custom Homes joined the community
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letsvpn joined the community
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My supply of American rye is dwindling, not to be replaced, but I understand that some Canadian rye, like Alberta Premium are a reasonable substitute. Some distilleries are producing rye in Australia but I have no idea how they would work in Manhattans.
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Don't know your particular situation, but you probably should be aware that vanilla extract contains approximately as much alcohol as rum. I believe they do make non-alcoholic vanilla extract, which I think is glycerine-based. As a side note, some people don't mind a few dashes of alcohol-based bitters in mocktails, but others avoid them all together. Fees Brothers make glycerine bitters.
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Fwiw, steelhead is called "Ocean Trout" in Australia (not that we have very many Costco stores; nearest is about 2.5 hours from me). It is usually a bit cheaper than salmon - both of which are almost all farm raised, sometimes from Norway. I like it. The best, though was when I had a neighbour who liked to catch them when they were running, but didn't like to eat fish.
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I had that idea earlier today and sent him a message on Facebook but haven't heard anything back yet. On another forum someone who had this same issue with Greyas said he contacted "someone famous in the world of chocolate, who is friends with owner" and the molds came. I think the someone is Luis. Unfortunately I don't know Luis personally.
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Talk to Luis Amando - I'm sure he'll help you.
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I'm out of province at the moment, so here's a roundup of the past few days' ongoing pistachio-related carnage: https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/various-pistachio-containing-products-recalled-due-salmonella-6 https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/certain-roasted-pistachios-recalled-due-salmonella-0 https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/certain-roasted-pistachios-recalled-due-salmonella https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/certain-roasted-pistachios-recalled-due-salmonella-0
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We have belonged to multiple wine clubs, but as the years have gone on my subscriptions have dropped to just 2 clubs. Sunce is one, and the only single-winery club to which I still belong. They're lovely people, good marketers, in their 2nd? 3rd? generation of winemakers. I hadn't heard from them in a while and have been rather worried that the fires and drought in their part of California had taken a toll; however, Janae called the other day to say that it's finally cool enough there but not too cold here to ship my allotment. This bottle is from that shipment. I'm back on a blended-wines kick, having been a hard-core Zinfandel fan for some years. This wine is rather light -- note the 13.1% ABV -- and that also suits my tastes these days. Barbera and Nebbiolo make a nice blend.
- Yesterday
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@rotuts My order of steak nuggets lounged in a small takeout container, looking like the desiccated remnants of a backyard barbecue from the previous week. The morsels did little to stimulate my appetite: They were thick, un-sauced, unevenly charred and losing moisture with every passing second. Get the Eat Voraciously newsletter for delicious dinner inspiration, delivered straight to your inbox. If these limited-time beef boulders are supposed to be Arby’s answer to chicken nuggets, they lost the battle before I even popped one in my mouth. They rivaled White Castle’s chicken rings for the crown of fast food with zero visual appeal. They looked like something I might mix into my dog’s bowl. I share all this as preamble for what happened next: I took a big bite of nugget and was shocked — and I don’t use that word loosely — at how tender it was. The meat was smoky, too, and apparently not the kind you get from a bottle. A cross-section view revealed distinct smoke rings, the pink-to-reddish hues that can result from genuine low-and-slow cooking with smoldering hardwoods. (You can get a similar reaction from celery powder, a curing agent that is indeed smuggled into Arby’s steak nuggets, but the technique isn’t foolproof.) The bites didn’t have the bark you would expect from aggressively seasoned barbecue, but they had enough onion and garlic powder to trip your umami taste buds. 🥂 Follow Dining & drinks What struck me was how unadorned and unadulterated the nuggets looked: just sliced-up chunks of beef, seasoned, cooked and tucked into a paper container with all the fanfare of mess-hall grub. The nuggets may be the closest thing to barbecue ever served at a fast-food joint, which, I grant you, is a ridiculously low bar. A look at the author's first steak nuggets order from a Maryland Arby's. (Tim Carmen/TWP) More than a decade ago, Daniel Vaughn, the smoked-meats maven at Texas Monthly, submitted himself to a tour of fast-food “barbecue.” He added the quote marks to signal that, yes, he understood the difference between the real thing and the slathered offerings served up at McDonald’s, Burger King, Sonic and the rest of these wannabe smokehouses. He predictably dismissed these sad imitations, but he also reported that Arby’s actually slow-smokes the meat for its “smokehouse brisket” sandwich. (The quote marks are mine here.) The chain even created a 13-hour “commercial” to prove it — or to test the stamina of those who like to watch paint dry. Arby’s isn’t bragging much about its process for the steak nuggets. They may “have the meats,” but they don’t have much information on how they prepare them. So I pinged a representative to learn how these morsels move from commissary (or wherever the company prepares them) to restaurant to the container that I grab at the counter. Anyone who has ever hosted a barbecue feast knows how quickly beef goes downhill once you remove it from the smoker, rest it and start slicing into it. I was hoping to gain some company insights, but the answers I received revealed little. I was able to extract a couple of things: The nuggets are hand-cut from the round section of the animal, and they’re "seasoned, seared, and smoked in a real smoker for 2 hours.” A quick glance at the ingredients also suggests that at least two additives help the beef retain moisture. More than anything, Arby’s nuggets (nominally) remind me of burnt ends, the charred chunks of fatty brisket that are all but synonymous with Kansas City barbecue. These bark-heavy trimmings were essentially a local delicacy until 1972 when Calvin Trillin, the essayist, humorist and world-class glutton, wrote a piece for Playboy about Arthur Bryant’s in his hometown of Kansas City, Missouri. “The main course at Bryant’s, as far as I’m concerned, is something that is given away free — the burned edges of the brisket,” Trillin wrote all those years ago. “The counterman just pushes them over to the side and anyone who wants them helps himself. I dream of those burned edges. Sometimes, when I’m in some awful, overpriced restaurant in some strange town, trying to choke down some three-dollar hamburger that tastes like a burned sponge, a blank look comes over me: I have just realized that at that very moment, someone in Kansas City is being given those burned edges free.” From left: Arby's steak nuggets, steak nugget bowl and steak nugget sandwich. (Marvin Joseph/TWP; food styling by Lisa Cherkasky) Later in the same essay, Trillin mentions that Snead’s Bar-B-Q in Kansas City “cuts the burned edges off the brisket with a little more meat attached and puts them on the menu as ‘brownies.’” In the intervening years, these traditions have evolved, as they always do, even with American barbecue, a cuisine that doesn’t surrender its ways without a fight. Brownies are still on the menu at Snead’s — though they now include ham and sausage options! — but burned edges have morphed into burnt ends, a dish so popular that pitmasters will now sacrifice whole briskets to create their version of the smoky little nuggets. Some are served sauced. Some not. Arby’s nuggets are, more or less, the latest iteration: Poor man’s burnt ends. Burnt ends for the masses. Burnt ends for those without easy access to a K.C.-style barbecue joint. They’re served with a tiny tub of Arby’s hickory barbecue dipping sauce, a sweet-and-tangy concoction that, while not subtle, doesn’t completely bulldoze the minimalist charms of the nuggets (even if you may accidentally bulldoze someone yourself if you try to dunk a nug while driving in traffic.) I can’t say the same for the steak nugget sandwich: The bun, toppings and garnishes neutralize the meat, forcing the nuggets to cede control to the fried onions, mayo, pickles and Havarti cheese. The steak nugget bowl, in which the beef blocks are dropped into a container of white cheddar mac and cheese, showcases the meat better, if mostly because you can compose your own bites. It’s hard to fathom that these nuggets will find a permanent home on the Arby’s menu, despite America’s ongoing protein craze. (A nine-piece order — $9.29 at my location, though prices vary — has about 30 grams of protein, or more than a third of what the average American man needs per day.) They seem too primal for the prissy, wax-paper-wrapped, hermetically sealed world of fast-food restaurants. Which may explain why some folks have taken to calling the nuggets “squirrel knees” and “moose knuckles” in social media reviews. Personally, I like this (relatively) straightforward injection of beef. It’s a bold move in an industry that tends to favor kooky mash-ups and sugar-rush monstrosities.
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gift card only got the top. no Arby's near me. just saying
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Really, the gift article should be readable. However, here's a taste of what else he had to say, from the article:
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does your Costco carry steelhead trout? looks like salmon, slightly different, really good. our fav use for the rostissed chick is 'a meal' + chicken salad, then simmer down the carcass for chicken noodle soup base. when it gels, you get super stock for the soup!
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Did you try the gift link that @Smithy shared? In my experience, WaPo gift links require the reader to create an account by entering an email address. You may not wish to do that but there’s no charge.
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Went to Costco Tucson on Monday for fresh salmon, lamb racks and the mandatory $4.99 rotisserie chicken. Struck out on the lamb racks; a Meat Dept. employee came out to help me look. He didn't find any either, went back to check the butchery area, then returned to say, "I can't believe it: not an ounce of lamb in the store!" Dejected, I left with the salmon and rotis. There is no other place to readily find lamb near me in Tucson. I've been checking their online same-day delivery app and saw Out Of Stock on the lamb racks the rest of the week, until this afternoon. I will likely wait until post World Series and Football weekend, and head there Monday. Our local Costco has Express Self-Checkout lines. Have used twice and they are F-A-S-T!! Of course we only buy 4 or 5 items each trip, bring our own bags, but we never had to wait in a line to access these checkouts. Costco's rotis chickens remain large and tasty. We got 5 meals out of it for the two of us. A Thai chicken salad; an Indian-spiced hot sandwich topped with raita; two meals (4 servings) of white bean chicken chili; and a chicken salad sandwich with pecans and dill.
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Although I grew up initially in an Apricot Orchard , ( 2 acres ) , gravel and dirt roads near by. both my parents were teachers, and benefited w sabbaticals in Europe thanks to a Senator who saw something in the Future ( Fulbright ) I lived two years in France and two in Spain and went to local schools .... I saw Thanksgiving as more or less what we had : roast Turkey , sage stuffing , mashed potatoes , pan gravy peas w +/- pear onions , baked thick sliced sweet potatoes , boiled , cooled , then broiled w a marshmallow and brown sugar. much later , living in the East , I discovered various Ethnic additions : Friends of Italian heritage had the basics then added Lasagna etc. @gulfporter I like the idea of fresh kielbasa and kugelis What a feast ! BTW that apricot orchard no longer exists . they were very common there then in Los Altos , CA 1950 ++
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I would not mind reading the rest . just saying , PayWall and all. Cut and Paste for review purposes ?
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