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- Past hour
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Sorry, please translate TSP in this context? I know it can't be "teaspoon" or "trisodium phosphate"....
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All of your dinners look delish! Could you please tell me all the ingredients of the tacos? (I'm going to try this).
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Tuna salad with kimchee, pickled jalapenos, Tony Packo's sweet hot pickles, capers, mayo, white pepper, cayenne, gochujang, and hot sauce. Served on potato rolls with butter lettuce. I like the proportions roughly equal parts tuna and pickly things.
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- Today
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What did you buy at the liquor store today? (2016 - )
weinoo replied to a topic in Spirits & Cocktails
It’s really the pickled onion which makes it a Gibson! -
So, Jonesin for some scallops/ but they were 40-50$ /LB --Went to Resturant Depot--25$ lb ( Captains Call ) NO TSP added---cooked on beef tallow Pretty killer Scorpion marinated cauliflower w Asian brown sauce too
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What did you buy at the liquor store today? (2016 - )
lindag replied to a topic in Spirits & Cocktails
Yes, in this drink I just prefer vodka. i though that the vodka wads what made it a Gibson as opposed to a martini. so is it just called a vodka martini? -
What did you buy at the liquor store today? (2016 - )
weinoo replied to a topic in Spirits & Cocktails
The only issue I can see is that most recipes for a Gibson call for gin; have you ever tried that? -
Some weekend dinners. Fluffy egg and cheddar sandwich with arugula and bacon Fish tacos. I dredged the fish pieces in spices and wondra flour and pan seared them rather than deep frying it. Linguini with clams
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@pastameshugana Thank you, I also like to fill them with savory options, they are nice and crisp and hold up well.
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What did you buy at the liquor store today? (2016 - )
lindag replied to a topic in Spirits & Cocktails
I've fallen for Grey Goose Vodka! I had tried many different brands just not this one. Now I enjoy a Gibson during my happy hour. -
The legs are shelled, yes.
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I haven't had king crab in years but I know my daughter buys it over the internet. She said that she pays $80 a pound. And that is in the shell. It looks like the package that you have there is shelled which would be a good deal.
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Kelwin joined the community
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Chilled coconuts like this are often sold on the streets by itinerant vendors in summer for people to drink the coconut water they contain. This type isn't particularly meaty. The vendor will drill a hole in the shell and supply a paper or plastic straw. Very refreshing in the tropical heat. Today, I picked up this from the supermarket. They (or some supplier) have not only drilled a hole but fitted a tap so you can carry it home without fear of spillage. They have also supplied a straw which the tap is cunningly designed to hold. Then they have wrapped it nicely in a life-affirming wrapper. The large writing reads 加油 (jiā yóu), which literally means 'add oil', but is used as encouragement at sports events and the like to urge on your favourites. They claim it's Thai, but I'm not sure I believe them. Maybe. However, there is no Thai on the packaging other than Young Ham Nom Coconut, Nam Hom being the transliteration of the incorrect Thai name* of the type of coconut, but they also grow in Hainan, China. Apart from that there is only Chinese and English. * The Thai name is หนุ่มมะพร้าวหอม which transliterates as 'Nom maphrao hom'.
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Tortellini en brodo, with zucchini, tomato and diced chicken . House made chicken broth in the instantpot, grated Parmesan on top.
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I re-appraised the sourdough I bought a couple of days ago. At the time I posted it I had tasted a slice and reported that it didn't have much sourdough flavour. What I did with that slice was toast it and buttered it. Later, I buttered an untoasted slice and the sourdough taste came through no problem. Same loaf; same butter. I don't remember that difference between toasted and untoasted in any sourdough I've had before. Is that normal?
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This grabbed my attention a couple of days ago, as I was idly flicking through my local delivery app. It wasn’t the 王螃蟹 (wáng páng xiè) king crab that surprised me – I’ve long known they are available in China. It was the price listed. ¥9,999! I know king crabs don'’t come cheap but the most expensive I’ve previously seen were around ¥2,000 / $275 USD. ¥9,999 is $1,372.86. Then it twigged and I read the description. Nothing to do with king crabs, at all. The delivery app insists on the listings only containing items for sale (a no spam policy) but occasionally some companies get round that by advertising something they don’t stock at a ludicrous price to stop any idiot actually ordering it while getting their real point across in the description. The “description” in this case consists of information on the Chinese weighing conventions, which I think everyone knows anyway. We sensibly use metric, but mixed in with some old Chinese names. So, for example 500 grams can be described as such or as a 斤 (jīn). This used to be a variable weight depending on location but has now been standardised at 500 g throughout Mainland China. 1 kg is a 公斤 (gōng jīn), which confusingly literally means ‘common jin’ which it isn’t; jīn without its gong is the one I see most often! Anyway, back to king crab of whatever weight. These creatures, which aren’t true crabs*, like to hang out in very cold waters. Those in America tend, I’m lead to believe, to be caught mostly in Alaskan waters but some from Argentina. (?) Those here are always from Russian waters except for once when I saw one from Chile. It was the most expensive I've seen. I suppose because of distance. Although I can’t buy them whole locally, I can for delivery from further afield in northern China, suitably nearer to Russia! Those are usually around the $80 - $140 mark, depending on size, However, frozen king crab legs are available in supermarkets. These come from Russia, too. A 500g box can be between $30 and $50, again depending on size. * The only thing carcinologists agree on is that they aren’t true crabs (the Brachyura family). Some believe they are related to hermit crabs; others determinedly disagree. I don’t care.
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cummingsfrank joined the community
- Yesterday
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I do the same thing as @PatrickT
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Agree with @blue_dolphin - this is what I do with all of my loaves now. After baking, I allow the loaf to cool thoroughly, slice it, bag it, pop it in the freezer, and simply remove what I want to eat on a given day. If destined for use as bread, I seal the slices in a sandwich bag and allow them to come to room temp in the bag before using. If destined for toast, they can go directly into the toaster (sometimes requires more than one cycle).
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On one of his podcasts, Dave Arnold said that 1 freeze/thaw cycle was ~ equivalent to one day at room temp for bread so I would recommend slicing the whole loaf, reassembling to minimize exposure of cut edges and freezing. Thaw as needed. Then, if plans change, it will still be good.
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I have a bread question - but not about baking. I bought a boule of rye sourdough at the supermarket (best by date is 4/8 - 2 days from now). I plan to use 2 slices per day for the next 5 days to use for sandwiches. Should I just slice what I need and keep the rest of it at room temp or should I slice the whole thing and freeze the unused slices, defrosting the day of use? Or something else entirely? If only slicing what I need, should I cover the sliced end with plastic wrap to keep it from drying out or will that promote it going moldy faster?
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I have frozen lemon grass that Ive peeled to get to the inner stalks. then vac'd and froze. I take a stalk out , cut it down the center line so that there are 1/2 ' leaves I pound it a bit , then add it whole to items id like a little lemongrass flavor. especially rice . the do the same w frozen ginger : a slice or two , pounded a bit , and added to a dish especially rice. removed before eating. it adds a pleasant flavor that i enjoy . lemon grass is a bit easier to purchase these days , MarketBasket has it . but id do the same w that as I do with frozen.
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Me neither. I'd be very surprised if it's ever frozen in SE Asia. Absolutely. Same here even though we're only a stone's throw from Vietnam. I did grow it but haven't done since I moved house. Must restart. The best I've had in China was in an Indonesian style restaurant in Nanning where they used it as skewers for grilled chicken. Really flavoured the bird meat. They grew it and other herbal exotica in the restaurant garden which you were encouraged to visit.
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