-
Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.
All Activity
- Today
-
Steamed Pork Belly with Pickled Mustard Greens from “Phoenix Claws and Jade Trees” and Stir-Fried Water Spinach with Chile and Sichuan Pepper from “Land of Plenty” - pork belly is first parcooked in water, marinated with dark soy sauce and then the skin quickly deep fried. Afterwards, the sliced pork belly is steamed with meigan cai, garlic cloves, cooking wine, dark and regular soy sauce and sugar. The sauce is thickened at the end with tapioca starch. Ong choy is stir-fried with dried chilies and szechuan peppercorns and finished with toasted sesame oil. Served over rice
-
Do you mean the curing involved the spices you named, or that's what came after the cure? More to the point...how did you cure that salmon? It looks delicious.
-
@YvetteMT, sometimes, nothing but a good beef chuck roast will do. And yours looks like just the ticket!
-
Home cured salmon with a spice blend from World Spice including Indian coriander, fennel seed, cumin, guajillo, cardamom seed, Indonesian cinnamon, turmeric, and cloves. Served over Kalamata olive bread and goat cheese.
-
I was craving a roast of red meat and since there are no elk/deer/moose roasts in the freezers.... I bought a beef chuck roast. And holy cow this hit the spot! Chuck roast, carrots, parsnips, potatoes, pearl onions and gravy.
-
I am fond of the pan. 😉 Thanks again @rotuts!
-
well it having been established as we all know : Fond (total ) = Fond ( pan ) + Fond ( stuff ) Q.E.D. Fond (pan ) gets ripped off of Fond ( stuff )
-
Tuna marinated in soy, pixian bean paste and miso, then seared. Served over package wavy noodles with avacado, cilantro and garlic crisps.
-
I'm certainly seeing what you mean about needing to make stuff in advance and then having it ready to go for...something. Today I made the Creamy Sesame-Ginger Dressing, then realized I didn't quite know what to do with it. By late afternoon, after I'd finished chores, I was hangry. Still didn't know what to do with that dressing! But I had a bunch of roasted vegetables, and put it over them. Quite good. More detail in the Salad topic.
-
I spent a little time today making a new-to-me salad dressing, and a lot of time shoveling snow and doing other outside chores, and when I came inside I was too hangry to think straight. Dinner was a sandwich with salami, turkey, and 2 kinds of cheese, griddled on my panini press, and a roasted vegetable salad described here. Unfussy. Easy. Appropriate for dinner when the time arrives and I haven't prepared. Interestingly enough, while I was looking for items with which to make a rice dish using those roasted vegetables and some kind of meat, I excavated packages of meat and fish that definitely will be making appearances here before too many more days. But none of them was thawed, and I needed quick and easy tonight.
-
I didn't get to that today after all, although I tried some of the dressing with mashed potatoes from the refrigerator and found it was a worthy lunch. I did start to pull potatoes from my frozen bucket in the garage, but they are so hard-frozen together that I figure I'll go after them with a chisel tomorrow. 🙂 What I did do today was make her Creamy Sesame Ginger Dressing, with the intent of having more than one dressing available in the refrigerator. After that I worked on outside chores, and when I came back inside (having given up on the potatoes) I was HANGRY. And not sure what to eat, but it needed to be quick. I pulled together a salad of already-roasted vegetables -- handy things to have in the refrigerator -- and chickpeas, heated them in the microwave, tossed in some spinach, and dressed with that sesame-ginger dressing. The dressing is another keeper. I had doubts about it when I was tasting it by itself, but atop those vegetables it's a fine dressing indeed.
-
@C. sapidus I like the look of that pan.
- Yesterday
-
Started by s-l-o-w-l-y brown-frying four large onions down to almost nothing: Green chicken korma: Pureed most of the onions with cilantro, mint, serrano chiles, and raw cashews. Sauteed ginger, garlic, bay leaves, green cardamom pods, and cinnamon stick. Seared the chicken, sauteed with ground cumin and coriander, simmered with the puree, lime juice, and sugar, and then finished with coconut cream. This is a Muslim-style curry so I wanted to test it for friends. Test passed with flying (green) colors! Peas and carrots with cumin: Sauteed the remainder of the brown-fried onions with garlic and ginger, added ground coriander, cumin (whole and ground), and chile powder, and then reduced with crushed tomato before adding the peas and diced carrots.
-
OH you're right. Math is not my forte 🤣
-
I think the only truly from scratch banana pudding that I have made is using Tosi's recipe linked above. It is certainly a notch above the standard box I am accustomed to being loaded over Nilla Wafers. It also is about 5 notches richer and one notch in the belt heavier. I recommend trying it, but know the portions do not need to be large!
-
I recommend making your own banana pudding, truly makes a huge difference. I like Alton Brown’s banana pudding recipe. I use his pudding recipe, Peppridge Farm chessman cookies, and homemade whipped cream. Biscoff and vanilla wafers are also great for the cookie component. https://altonbrown.com/wprm_print/refrigerated-banana-pudding For banana liquor, I used 99 Bananas 99 proof, to taste — used much less than the recipe called for.
-
Wait, not to be nitpicky but wasn't it only 7 years ago? See here.
-
-
Also, by posting here I was able to narrow down the date when I got the Ninja from Ronnie. My Ninja is 10 years old. 😳 Lol bet they are like "girl, go buy a new one you idiot" 🤣
-
US Southerners tend to call what others call stuffing, dressing. Cornbread dressing, oyster dressing, rice dressing (which is rarely stuffed into a bird afaik). Eggplant dressing. But made from white bread, it is stuffing. I don’t make the rules! 😁
-
Ninja has already contacted me. Sent me through another troubleshooting exercise and then asked for pictures of my Ninja and of the serial number. Time for a glass of wine.
-
I'm sorry for being such a rube, @patti, but which part of that meal is "the dressing" ?
-
liouzhous joined the community
-
I am humbled if I have inspired you in any way. I’ll just sit here quietly and bask in the glow (while also smiling/laughing at the lunch ladies showing you their appreciation of YOUR appreciation by piling on the love, er, I mean, food. While my husband was unloading the food at the fridge this past week, a young man (30s, I’m guessing) gratefully took a bag with two meals in it, and started in on one of the plates immediately (forks are included). With a very pronounced southern drawl he told me that for two weeks he’d been trying to get there when we dropped off meals and he was happy he finally made it (he came by bicycle). He complimented the food several times, telling us how hungry he was and that we’d done a good job. I told him his accent let me know that cornbread dressing was right up his alley! Oddly, he seemed suspicious that I thought he had an accent. 😆
-
Who's Online 3 Members, 1 Anonymous, 781 Guests (See full list)
-
Popular Now
-
Recent Forum Images
