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  2. This...I only use "good knives" and they are immediately wiped with a wet rag after any task and ready for the next task. If there's no next task, the can readily be put back onto their storage space...if I've cut anything that would involve washing them down, that's what happens anyway. In other words, there's never a dirty knife lying on a cutting board...(as Taylor would say) like...ever.
  3. For no particular reason (do I really need one?) a butterfly among the asters in the beautiful early-autumn sunlight. Taken in the gardens at my mom's nursing home.
  4. Miss Prissy's little one is growing well, and is now slightly bigger than the adult quail (and with similar coloration to some of them, which has occasionally given me a "moment" when I see him/her out roaming around). Our granddaughter, whose most recent fascination is with astrology, has dubbed named it Pisces. I remain devoutly disinterested in the topic, so while I've heard the explanation all I can tell you is that it involved the words "moon" and "rising." I was primarily amused that she would name a bird "fish," but her mom named a black cat Marshmallow, so... (shrug). I have to say, I don't enjoy the quail the way my GF does. They're quarrelsome and can be terribly vicious to each other, like chickens only worse, and are perhaps the stupidest of all domestic livestock (a category which boasts, as many of you will know, some highly qualified competition). A few months ago my stepdaughter just happened to be on the deck at the right moment to see an escaped quail come swaggering around the corner of the chicken run, and march right up to the big mastiff as if trying to stare it down and assert dominance. She had to go rescue it from the literal Jaws of Death (it helped that the mastiff was as surprised as anyone, the damned bird all but hopped into her mouth). I'd listened around that time to a CBC radio interview with researchers who had put some effort into figuring out ways of measuring relative avian intelligence, and when pushed by the interviewer they named domestic turkeys and quail as among the least intelligent of all bird species they'd looked at. We've recently weaned some baby bunnies (ie, separated them from mama and put them into a different cage). Ordinarily when we take the babies out of the cage, their mothers are either indifferent or visibly relieved; by this time the babies are about guinea-pig size and having 8-12 of them constantly trying to burrow underneath for a snack gets wearisome. This time one doe, pretty brindled Ivy, amused me by doing something different. When I pulled out the first two kits to go into the other cage, she immediately rounded on the others and began grooming them frantically. I laughed out loud, because she looked for all the world like a human mother glaring at a small and dirty boy and declaring firmly "You're not going out in public looking like that!" before vigorously applying a wet washcloth (and yes, as a boy I was on the receiving end of that a time or two). I need to start culling our surplus roosters ASAP now that they're reaching sexual maturity, because my GF wants us to focus on the gold-laced Wyandottes as our main working bird (the silkies, as I've mentioned, will largely be pets). Many of the fertile eggs we bought to hatch from our incubator were "barnyard mix," which is homestead-speak for "I have a lot of breeds and don't chaperone them." In practice, like us, many homesteaders/backyard chicken aficionados let their flocks run free until the young cockerels start pestering the hens, then consign them to the freezer. The bottom line is that you never know what you're going to get, and we do indeed have some very funky chickens. They're somewhat camera-shy (ie, very suspicious of what that human is up to) but I've done my best to get shots of a few with especially dramatic plumage. Several of them have the feathered feet you see in the middle pic. Mostly they're large grey birds, which my GF says means they're such-and-such a Polish breed, but the name eludes me at the moment. Presumably the others are hybrids of that breed. Others also have a large, bushy tuft of feathers below and/or slightly behind their eyes. Aside from location, they put me in mind of bushy old-man eyebrows (my personal frame of reference for that is my paternal grandfather, but Leonid Brezhnev is a more universally-known example). Here are a few of the quail, as well. We'd taken photos a few weeks ago to send to prospective buyers. I'll give the names where I know them, but I don't know the names of each breed, sadly. If one of the unknowns or "unsures" catches your eye, just ask and I'll check with my GF. First one's Red Range, second I'm not sure, third is Andalusian. The pure white one is... "Fairy," I think? Next one I believe is a Calico, and the last is a Red Tuxedo. In accordance with human stereotypes, the red breeds in general seem to be the feistiest.
  5. @haresfur and others, I did not expect people to want to copy me. I expected a heated discussion calling me names and decrying my methods. I have read that some bakers age their yeast on a regular basis. It gives the bread it makes a more complex flavor. It is not real sourdough but to me it does resemble sourdough very much. I did not mention the details of aging yeast but you should use 1 cup of dechlorinated water at room temperature, 1 1/2 cup flour and 2 tsp. yeast. Every day pour out half and add back the amount of water and flour you discarded, and in three or four days you will have yeast aged enough to use in a sourdough recipe. If you use just flour and water, without yeast, it will start to ferment on its own from natural wild yeast that is present everywhere, in about a week or two and you will have real sourdough starter. Using commercial yeast is a quck start way and some people will tell you it isn't real sourdough but I can't tell much, if any difference and using it with the addition of store-bought yeast will give you a good tasting loaf of bread and be more predictable. @Maison Rustique The first sourdough I got in the mail was dehydrated and it revived well. If you did not use high heat to dry it, it should revive and be as good as before. I kept it alive for sevral years and refrigerated without feeding it very often it when I did not plan to use it again for a while. You can also freeze sourdough starter. Just don't get it hot.
  6. Today
  7. Maison Rustique

    Dinner 2025

    It was so good the other night that I had it again.
  8. I was given a starter from a friend (she made it from scratch) who passed away a few years ago so it is special. With all the moving stuff, I did not have time to maintain it, so dried it. I'm anxious to re-hydrate and try it after I get moved.
  9. That scrambled egg looks well overcooked.
  10. 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.
  11. 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.
  12. 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.
  13. Bottom line: is there a difference in taste?
  14. 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.
  15. 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.
  16. 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.
  17. 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.
  18. 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.
  19. 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
  20. 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.
  21. It takes seconds to hand wash a knife after use and is a lot less wasteful of water and energy.
  22. I have a three loaf baguette pan and I just checked and it too fits in the Anova. Are those copper sheet pans?
  23. 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.
  24. @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 🙃
  25. Thank you. I've read the recipe and the sourdough starter instructions and will try it.
  26. 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.
  27. Yesterday
  28. @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.
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