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  1. Past hour
  2. I had forgotten about it! Hopefully I can track it down and watch. In my spare time. Ha!
  3. Maison Rustique

    Dinner 2025

    Not an especially great-looking photo and a supper best eaten alone. Baguette, a bit of cheddar, brie, tomato, spinach, arugula and olive oil. My teeth felt like they were coated with gooey cheese and greens.
  4. Today
  5. Neely

    Dinner 2025

    Dinner tonight was a packaged confit duck leg with my caponata, duck fat sauteed (?) baby potatoes and I also made an orange sauce.
  6. Dante

    Dinner 2025

    Bell pepper, poblano, and quorn curry with yoghurt sauce over couscous.
  7. You mean like deep-frying, open flame grilling, broiling, serving stuff raw, ..?
  8. I think it is relevant because why would any author include a cooking method which is known to have a potential negative health impact. In addition, in many countries outside of the US (especially Europe) microwaves are still seen as an inferior cooking approach and so any author who uses it as one of the key ways to cook pasta would have a significant credibility issue
  9. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    Hoisin-Glazed Lamb Burger from “The Ultimate Burger” by ATK - patties are made with ground lamb, five-spice powder and hoisin sauce. After cooking the patties in the pan you brush them with some more hoisin sauce. Toppings are quickly marinated (in rice vinegar) carrots, cucumbers and scallions
  10. I watched the first episode of this show which was on cast iron. In the episode, Vivian describes it as a kind of variety show so it’s a little of Vivian talking about cast iron, trips to a vintage cast iron shop and to Smithey Ironware in Charleston, interspersed with two cooking segments. Recipes are available on the website. I might have preferred more on cast iron, like a longer segment on refinishing old cast iron with the guy who runs the vintage shop or more cooking but the variety format doesn’t really do justice to either one. That criticism aside, I enjoyed watching and will check out the upcoming episodes. Next week’s is on pasta and after that is an episode on fats.
  11. Really good to hear you are getting back to normal in some ways! I love your decor. So cute that Ronnie and your friend brought pumpkins for you - and the cows, ha. 🙂 I love your porch so much.
  12. In my experience, stock making is the ONLY culinary usage for silkies. They have little meat, although a few shreds may be incorporated in the soup. But generally, by the time the stock is made, the meat isn't worth eating. The flavour is all in the stock.
  13. Something they said (I am NOT going back through the video) suggested that the flavor was good but the meat itself was too tough, or there wasn't enough of it, or something like that. As I recall they said it might make great broth because of its flavor. Would you say that's the main culinary usage for the silkies? With the meat as a side benefit so as not to waste it?
  14. They claimed that silkies are used medicinally, which is true but overemphasised that they were given to pregnant women to improve lactation. While they are given to pregnant women, they are given to non-pregnant men, too. Every soup I've been given in a Chinese hospital (for every meal) has been silkie. Also, they are not only used medicinally. They are sold in every market for making chicken stock. I buy them regularly and I've never been pregnant or lactated. ETA: Also what @KennethT says. The cook them incorrectly.
  15. The biggest issue I see is the fact that they treated each variety the same. Silkies, for example, would never be pan roasted like that!!!! That's not the point of using one. You use silkies for the broth they make. They would have been more ridiculous if they tested a SE Asian "kampung" chicken that way - they probably wouldn't even be able to cut through the joint. Kampung chickens need to be simmered until tender, which can take like 40 minutes to an hour! Eating a pan roasted one would be like eating a rubber band, but when cooked the way they're supposed to are super flavorful.
  16. Fair enough about the title. In the video the speaker did say something more like 'every chicken breed we could get' which isn't the same thing as the title. What was the nonsense about silkies?
  17. Yesterday
  18. yeah, that would be a pretty terrible idea.
  19. Not to step into the middle of the debate/arguments, but my microwave in both houses is over the range. I would find it very difficult to reach up to remove anything with a significant amount of hot water/food without spilling or dropping it.
  20. The title of the video is ridiculous. These are nowhere near "every chicken in the world". They also talk some nonsense about silkies. And Bresse is never pronounced Bressé.
  21. Maison Rustique

    Dinner 2025

    @rotuts, reading your pasta description, it took me a while to realize you didn't mean Campari the liqueur, but you meant Campari tomatoes.
  22. Dr. Teeth

    Dinner 2025

    Scallion pancakes (frozen from the Asian market), pork nappa dumplings and sweet and sour nappa stir fry
  23. @Honkman your points about micro-pastics are timely . N.B. : timely . they do not have anything to do with a discussion on how one might cook pasta .
  24. In today’s world where we have more and more data on the impact of microplastics on our health, I would avoid anything unnecessary which will increase your exposure to such microplastics at home significantly. I doubt you will find any reasonable serious cookbook using it
  25. When I make some kind of traditional chicken curry for a dinner party, I make the chicken curry traditionally - usually at least the week before if not even more, then once finished, I transfer everything to a zip lock bag, then hold in the waterbath at like 160F until pasteurized. Then, I quick chill and put the bag in the fridge where it can safely keep for at least 3 weeks. Then, I'll reheat in the waterbath at like 140F or sometimes I'll set the bath to 130 and leave it in there longer so I don't have to worry whether it's fully reheated or not. This way, the curry is at the texture I'd want traditionally, the chicken is fully but not overcooked, and it was all done long ago so no stress.... I'm actually planning to do some of that this weekend as we're having people over on the 25th....
  26. @Norm Matthews I'm glad that you enjoyed the video. His other videos are well worth watching. I subscribed to his channel years ago and I have learned a lot from watching them. He keeps things simple and explains why something works in language that isn't so technical that it goes right over the head of most home Cooks. It's good to pay particular attention to his videos on shaping bread and slashing. I've learned that there is a small window when the bread has risen enough to slash. You don't want it to rise too much because you wanted to have enough to give it oven spring so that your slash opens deeply in the oven. I found giving it a good mist of water when I first put it in the oven and maybe 5 minutes later keeps the crust soft enough that it will continue to open up. What I got from the article on preferment was that almost all the methods, biga, poolish, Masa Madre and sourdough combinations are all preferments. I think that I have used them all with varying results and success. Now, I prefer to just keep it simple and mix up flour, water, and a little yeast and leave it overnight. The next day when I make my bread I subtract the amount of those ingredients from the total amount of ingredients in the recipe. It hasn't failed me yet.
  27. @Tropicalsenior I enjoyed the first video a lot. What I liked the most was number 7 "Sourdough should" Like people telling you what sour should be or else it isn't "real" sourdough. I think @MaryIsobel should watch it too as it addresses "my sourdough died" as probably a mistaken diagnosis of the reality of the sourdough condition. The one on preferments left me more confused about what it is and if it ever isn't something, if you know what I mean. I want to keep the bake wth Jack so I can watch the other episodes..
  28. I use a smallish volume of water. Enough so the pasta can swim and swell but no more. A small volume concentrates the starch so that sauce addition is more effective and doesn't dilute it too much.
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