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  2. If you cook the chickent thighs sous vide, all the prep work will be done! See Serious Eats for possible cooking temperatures. My personal experience is that spicing (mustard, lemon) can wear out over a long cook, so you may want to refresh your spices, or, cover raw chicken with s + p, cook it sous vide, chill it in ice and then refrigerate. (Serious Eats says you can hold the cooked chicken for up to 4 days.) On the day of serving, make the spice/sauce In a very, very, very hot pan add a few drops of high heat oil (Grapeseed), wipe out with paper towel. Brown the skin for only 30-90 seconds (the chicken is already cooked) @rotuts ? @weinoo ?
  3. MaryIsobel

    Dinner 2025

    You're an amazing Dad. I hopee Charlie appreciates all your efforts!
  4. Looks like epis to me - cut with scissors as I recall. King Arthur recipe
  5. Dr. Teeth

    Dinner 2025

    Pasta with lentils. I ate a bite before remembering to snap a pic
  6. I'm fixing to develop a copycat of the Bouchon "rolls" they serve (warm) with brunch. looks like: two issues: 1 - the bread itself 2 - the technique at first I thought they did the scissors-snip thing to create the 'outcroppings' - but on closer exam it appears they make individual taper/torpedo shape rolls and overlap / glue them together & let rise . . . note also what looks to be the 'cut surface' . . . like each was cut on diagonal from one long baguette(?) then 'stuck together' the crust on these is not hard-crisp; the softer crisp could be an artifact of baking/holding at humidity? it's the crumb where I have no good experience. the crumb is fairly 'fine' - no big holes/etc ala 'good rustic bread' the texture is not soft/mushy like a typical 'dinner roll' - it's 'firm' - tears easily - stands up to a knife spreading butter&jam my thinking is a well machine kneaded baguette dough - thinking the extra kneading may produce a finer crumb. any ideas / experiences / advice along the line?
  7. Smithy

    Lunch 2025

    After months -- maybe a year or more? -- of not making hummus or tabbouli due to a mental burnout, I got back to it yesterday and today. The impetus for the hummus was a half-can of cooked chickpeas sitting in the refrigerator. I hadn't frozen them and was afraid that they'd start going off as had a bunch of other stuff in the refrigerator. I was too lazy to dig out a food processor or blender, so tried mashing them by hand. With a fork. And then stirring in tahini, water, and lemon juice with some salt until I thought I had it about right. I am AMAZED at how much those little devils swelled up; what began as a cup or less of cooked chickpeas became more than a pint of hummus. And no, it isn't as smooth as if I'd used a food processor, but it's just fine. The tabbouli -- well, I confess to having bought several bunches of parsley and cilantro and keeping it too long. This time, I used it before it could go off. The mint came from my garden. I could thin that hummus even more, but I'm pretty happy with it as it is. And I'm happy scooping it all with Tostitos Scoops. It's late afternoon. This may be dinner as well as lunch.
  8. Norm Matthews

    Dinner 2025

    My son and I went to a Cuban restauant a couple days ago. He wanted to order a Creole Lobster dish for us to share but changed his mind when he found out it was $60.00. He ordered a Cuban sandwich and I ordeered aa appitizer of three empanadas. We shared both. While we were waiting, he looked up the lobster recipe on his phone and asked me if I could make it with lobster and shrimp. I said I would and made it yesterday
  9. Steve Irby

    Lunch 2025

    I split a couple of dozen raw ersters (9th Ward phonetic spelling) with Charlie "Boudreaux" Irby. Actually I ran him off after three since they were running a little small and I was pretty hungry.
  10. No, they use the internet for that! Look, he cooked at Franny's and other good restaurants (though I'm not sure how much). Do you have this? That's a hard no!
  11. to be fair to the author , allowing you to decided : re: Kale. for review purposes , from ' Six Seasons of Pasta ' Id try it , when MarketBasket caries Tuscan kale . and , looking over the various Ragu Rx's , Im reminded again , my Pork iPot Ragu lacks a carrot. I know that would improve it , as the carrot is in Classic Meat Ragu . but I keep forgetting to get one.
  12. Not everyone loves mooncakes, but I do, because for me they represent friendships, celebrations and sharing. This is the set I made this year to give to friends. I'm pretty happy with them, but the star was unexpectedly the black sesame and pineapple. The subtle technical challenge is making the filling dry enough to mold, but not so dry as to make it unenjoyable in the mouth. My black bean mandarin filling was a touch too dry, but the sesame, which I thought was too loose, turned out perfect.
  13. this pic from the above book ( e-bub version ) inspired me to think about my two pasta dishes . the Campari and the Pork iPot ragu . Im adding a little finely sliced raw spinach to my Campari Linguini tonight , as a result. go figure . And Im not sure Id ever add Kale to Macella's tomato sauce .
  14. ATK/CC/MS make most of their money via cookbooks , and various subscriptions. and , of course , being experts at churn. I agree w @weinoo that their is not that much new in the pasta world and I agree w @blue_dolphin a cookbook , in hand , and be a joy for inspiration , esp w the photography .
  15. Sounds like you think people buy cookbooks only for the recipes!
  16. Well, some of us are. I just don't understand how a recipe might be written differently than a recipe is written. I also don't understand how, unless a recipe/dish for pasta comes out amazingly different, that it hasn't been written in one way, shape or form previously.
  17. I’d say we’re in a place where people enjoy cookbooks for a variety of different reasons. We're engaged by different styles of writing and presentation and publishers capitalize on that. Learning what we need to know about a topic is one reason but certainly not the only one.
  18. Apparently Ina Garten makes all her money off cookbooks and not TV. I would not have thought.
  19. By the way, according to Amazon (to answer a question above):
  20. I mean, I know - I get it - chef's, if they can, will write cookbooks because they need to make some money, which their restaurants probably aren't. But if we haven't learned all we need to know about pasta, it's uses, sauces, how to make it fresh or dried, etc. etc. from Marcella, Giuliano, Pellegrino, Katie, Roscioli, Julia della Croce, Simeti, Carlo MIddione, Lidia, et al. - then what is this world coming to?!
  21. I discovered that this site shows several recipes from the book. I always like that--nice to try before you buy!
  22. Maison Rustique

    Dinner 2025

    For what was hopefully the last of our hot weather for a while, I had a stuffed tomato (I've only got 2 home-grown left!) with one of my tinned fish meals. I didn't like this fish as much as the previous, which was Barcelona, but it was still tasty. I've still got the Provence/Nicoise version to go and plan to get some more of these to keep on hand. I haven't yet tried one on rice or pasta, but think they would be great. Or perhaps over a toasted baguette slice.
  23. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    Stir-Fried Rice Cakes from “A Very Chinese Cookbook” by Pang & Pang - stir-fry with sliced rice cakes, thinly sliced pork chop (marinated in a mixture of soy sauce, shaoxing wine, toasted sesame oil, white pepper and cornstarch), garlic, shiitake mushrooms, carrots, snow peas and sauce with oyster sauce, soy sauce, dark soy sauce, chicken broth and toasted sesame oil
  24. Welcome @Sweet-Tempered I’m in the Austin area. Good luck to you!
  25. I assume it’s storebought but the recipes don’t precisely use that language. Each recipe’s ingredient list gives only the weight in grams and ounces and three shape options. The words homemade, dried, storebought or pasta do not appear in the recipe ingredient lists. The introduction lists recommended brands of dried pasta, including gluten-free options. There are no recipes in the book for homemade fresh or dried pasta nor recommendations for finding recipes.
  26. Do the recipes call for homemade dried pasta or storebought dried pasta?
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