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  1. Past hour
  2. The article I cited was published in 2009 but pet foods and animal feeds produced in the US and other countries were being recalled due to melamine-adulterated ingredients imported from China in early 2007 and melamine in chicken feed was very much in the news at the time @budrichard posted his comment in this topic. Melamine contaminant found in chicken feed US says some chicken feed tainted Tainted poultry has entered food supply So I agree with your conclusion that it’s possibly related to his comment!
  3. johnnyd

    Lunch 2025

    Why thank you, Dd. Think of it as a savory porridge made with rice instead of oats - proteins and veg garnish instead of berries. A thousand year-old recipe that put to use a leftover staple, the toppings make it a meal. Cheers, John
  4. Possible. That was an incident happened around 2009. It seems to me that China today is a very different country. China is a different country every 5 years. dcarch
  5. Ddanno

    Lunch 2025

    I really want to compliment you because it looks great, but I've never been able to get over the texture of congee (and the first time I tried it, it was full of the demon herb coriander, which probably didn't help) That looks lovely though.
  6. Given the date, I suspect @budrichard was referring to the “Melamine Incident” where both food products, particularly dairy products, and animal feeds exported from China to countries around the world were found to be adulterated with melamine, apparently in an attempt to appear higher in protein.
  7. Today
  8. johnnyd

    Lunch 2025

    Leftover rib meat from neighborhood butcher's bbq on Sunday went on some congee I whipped up using poaching liquid from a recent Hainanese chicken rice escapade. Topped with scallions and Hainanese chicken side sauces, ginger/garlic oil, palm sugar dark soy, and thai chiliin lime juice.
  9. C. sapidus

    Lunch 2025

    I roasted garlic cloves, sauteed white onion, and split them evenly between the following: Shrimp and chorizo in a chipotle cream sauce with tomato paste and cumin Roasted chile Poblano rajas in an herbed cream sauce (thyme, Mexican oregano, bay leaf) In corn tortillas with crumbled feta cheese. Very satisfying. The funny thing is - my original intent was to make eggs. I supposed it is good to be flexible.
  10. Not sure where you got your information from. US export chickens to China, not the other way around. Here in NYC you can get true free range (not cage-free) chickens in Chinatown. Chinese famous "White cook chicken" requires free-range chickens. dcarch
  11. Of course, BD. Carbon steel and its variants are definitely out now following a few days of "I'm only going to use the SS DO and see what happens". It's almost perfect, works well for my current cooking style, keeps foods contained, deglaze anything stuck without worry, no need to season, etc. Here it is, it's actually 6Q, not 8Q like I thought. Several years ago, a coworker remodeled his kitchen and gave me his wolf cookware set (I thought I posted about it here but I can't find the topic, oh well - I gave a family member most of the pieces since I didn't have room for it at the time and I kept the 2qt saucier and this DO). The DO is still a bit large for making 1-2 portion soups, which is what I'm going to focus on for now. I've borrowed a family member's old "Williams & Sonoma Hestan Essentials Pan" to test shape and size later this week.. it's 5QT, not nanobond, and has that saucier style rounded bottom. I really like the shape but it is large and quite heavy, so will go look at 3 and 4 qt rounded-bottom pots to see which size I would prefer. I'm keeping an eye on all-clad second hand store as well.
  12. You didn’t ask me but I follow the Zuni Cafe Cookbook recipe which uses ~3/4 teaspoon sea salt/pound of chicken. It goes in the fridge, loosely covered for 24 hrs-3 days. Before roasting, it’s blotted dry, but not rinsed. The upper surfaces are usually nice and dry (as is the goal) but there’s often some moisture underneath and inside that needs to be blotted off.
  13. @weinoo, sorry to have a sieve for a brain, but I don't remember what you said - I put rather a lot of salt on the chicken I've dry brined. I'm thinking I should wash it off before cooking. Right?
  14. There was nothing actively wrong with it, but tossing apple wedges in butter and sugar (and cinnamon and booze!) to caramelise, and served with a nice crème anglaise, would've been the same amount of effort and achieved something similar... but better.
  15. @Pete Fred thank you for that ref. on British Puddings . An interesting read.
  16. Rats! Those photos look just fabulous. I was sooo looking forward to making what I was imagining to be something very tasty. ☹️
  17. The Guardian recently ran an article where an American writer tried his hand at making some endangered British puddings (i.e. dessert rather than starch thickened custard). His favo(u)rite was Malvern pudding, which is simply apples and custard. My trees had three apples left on them - exactly what was needed, it turns out. So, having never made Malvern pudding before, I was compelled to give it a try... It was fine, but ultimately no alchemy ocurred to make it more than the sum of its parts.
  18. This batch of dough had been in the fridge since Sunday and taken out last night around 8:30 AM. Baked a number of small sourdough rolls. Moe had been smelling the bread baking since just after 4:00AM and couldn't wait until they had cooled so I cut one just out of the oven with an electric knife and slathered it with butter. That will keep him going until breakfast.
  19. dans

    Breakfast 2025

    I was cutting up some ham pieces for a ham and cheese omelette when I spied a half of an heirloom tomato from last nights dinner. I changed direction and made a caprese omelette with mozzarella and basil. Since the ham and cheese were already cat, I had them too. next time I’ll try salting the tomatoes early to reduce the water content.
  20. Dr. Teeth

    Dinner 2025

    Couple of household staples. Kale pesto and a NYT plum torte
  21. rotuts

    Dinner 2025

    youve see Lunch , now dinner : more naan-ish pizza ; Benton's bacon , always a treat. I might have added 30 seconds , and more B.B. next time . plated. lower sodium salami . still plenty of salami flavor , even when i remember to soak in ice water for 30 minutes. this is not something I need to do these days , but in my experience , those days might be coming, so why not work it out now ? ( I take HCTZ ) and a thank you to @Duvel for pointing out salami ( vs pepperoni ) . Salami has interesting flavors . tabasco add heat and tart. this one was done in the AF a little longer . I like the char. when using naan-ish , the issue is the crust. a little two long and the crust becomes cracker like. finished , on the plate. I love the flavors of the chipotle tabasco.
  22. To my horror, one local (not very good) bakery chain is disgracefully selling innocent people the execrable Luosifen mooncakes again. However they are faking their advertising. The Chinese character on the cake's top, 螺 is that for the luo part of luosifen, but the image of the cut cake is something else entirely. The real cake interior looks like this: Foul.
  23. liuzhou

    Dinner 2025

    Last night. Shepherd's Pie. I forgot to take a photograph, so this is one I made earlier - looks exactly the same.
  24. Honkman

    Dinner 2025

    Noor’s Black Lime Tofu from “Flavor” by Ottolenghi - as most of the time with Ottolenghi a few components done in parallel and than everything brought together. Thinly sliced red onions are pickled in apple cider vinegar and superfine sugar. Cubed extra-firm tofu is mixed with cornstarch and deep-fried until crispy. The base of the dish is made from onions, garlic, cumin seeds, tomato paste, sugar, finely grinded black limes and water. The deep fried tofu, parsley and baby spinach are subsequently added. The dish is served over rice and topped with the pickled onions
  25. Yesterday
  26. Maison Rustique

    Dinner 2025

    Just realized why I love potatoes so much. They are perfect vehicles for my 2 favorite food groups: fat and salt. Supper is a baked potato with butter, onion, sour cream and shredded cheese. Yum!
  27. There are two doughs in this process - a water dough and an oil dough. Each gets formed into a ball. The oil dough is smaller, and then you flatten the water ball into a disk, and encase the oil ball inside similar to wrapping a baozi. Then you roll out, coil up, roll out a second time, and coil up a second time. So, yes, it is a form of laminating I suppose where the oil dough would serve the purpose of the butter layer, but steam isn't released in this process like it is in laminates. FWIW I thought I would try and do the math on this but I doubt I am correct. encased ball smooshed down = 3 layers. First rollout and coil up averages 3 coils...That should be 27 layers. Second rollout and coil up with same 3 coil average...isn't this a basic exponential equation? 27x27x27=...but that seems way too high. Anyway, you get the idea and someone else can do the math for us.
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