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Northern Minnesota yah sure, you betcha
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I wish we had a "wow!" sort of emoji, but we don't. That giant mooncake you describe sounds like some of the attempts at the "world's largest" pancake, omelette, or whatever record-setter we see posted on this side of the pond periodically. (Sorry, I'm too lazy to go look for links to the latest.) The mooncakes often have enticing outer shells. I think their patterns are beautiful! But the ones that look the most tempting are those with a lot of nuts inside, as in your most recent photos. Not that I'm likely to have a chance to taste any of them soon. Thanks for this topic.
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As predicted here, I acquired and roasted more heirloom tomatoes for my current-favorite Tomato-Cheddar Cheese pie. I roasted the tomato slices (scattered with thinly-sliced shallots, salt and pepper; then drizzled with olive oil) until they'd thrown off most of their liquid. This morning's viewing: The lot has been loaded into a freezer container, and I think it will make a lovely winter pie. Of course, I say that and then forget about it all until the next year, or the year after. 🫠
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In case that's a serous question, given your location, here's the company: Smart Chicken. Air chilled, humanely raised, etc. They've been around longer than AI, I Believe, although they don't predate HAL (2001 Space Odyssey) so who knows?
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Two I've already baked atop a pilaf. Altogether disappointing: edible, but the pesto I threw into the rice mixture wasn't noticeable. More to the point, the chicken skin was flabby! (I've gotten spoiled by the really crisp fried chicken that a couple of our stores do, that are my special treats.) I think that may have been poor temperature management on my part, though. I'm sure I've managed in the past to cook chicken atop an oven pilaf, removing the lid at the appropriate time so the chicken skin gets crisp. With that in mind, I'll probably grill the next batch after marinating for a while. i haven't done anything about it, but grilled chicken is a wonderful thing and I have plenty of fixings for accompaniments like tzadziki or tabbouli. Beyond that, I dunno. I'll have to start with a general flavor direction (Greek? Italian? Mexican? Egyptian? etc.) and go from there. The possibilities with chicken are immense. And of course I'll have to remember to remove them in time to thaw! What would you suggest? Edited to add: now that I think of it, I'll definitely use some of it for my version of Chicken and Cauliflower Shawarma, in which I cleverly added chicken thighs to the recipe. It's a sheet-pan roasting process that produces good, crisp chicken along with good, spicy/crisp cauliflower and onions.
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Have you had a chance to try that pan yet? Is it more or less this one from Williams-Sonoma? If so, it looks like a good one...similar in size and shape of my "workhorse" pan that I described above. I found a better photo of it: Again, it was a garage sale special but I really like its size, shape, performance and heft.
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I applaud @blue_dolphin and other folks who (a) have access to farmers' market chicken and (b) are willing to pay the fair prices. I don't have access to farmers' market chicken, that I know of, but I do love chicken. Imagine my surprise then I spotted this the other day: Whotta price! I bought 2 packages. I've parted them out and frozen them in packages of 2 and 4. I'll try to do them justice.
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Hard to know whether to file this under Breakfast or Lunch. I missed breakfast so this is the first meal of my day, but at noon. In the microwave I heated a slice of the tomato cheddar pie I wrote about here. While it was heating, I cooked 2 eggs over easy on the stovetop. Slid the eggs onto the pie; scattered shredded cheddar atop the eggs; dug in. Brunch, I suppose. Delicious, for sure.
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Dinner was sort of a continuation of brunch. I had work that involved leaving at noon and getting home at maybe 6pm. I know I get peckish along about 3 or 4 pm, so I made myself a sandwich of salami, cheese, tomato and lettuce (with the obligatory mayo and mustard) on toasted sourdough. I ate half for breakfast, at about 11:30 am. I took the rest with me, had no time to eat it, got home at more like 7:30 pm, with 2 animals clamoring for care before I could take care of myself. Once again I used my panini press to transform the other half of the sandwich. I took the lettuce out for grilling, slathered the surfaces with butter, and let rip between the plates while I threw together a salad. After the half-sandwich was properly heated, I loaded it up with the lettuce and with sauerkraut. Simple, easy, delicious. Plenty.
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Smithy replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
@Pete Fred, I thought at first you were talking about Malva pudding, a South African specialty that includes apricot jam. Now I see I was misreading "Malvern" for "Malva". Personal mystery solved. 😄 -
Don't leave us hanging like that! Is it the pork or the eggplant that's crispy? Got a recipe, or a general procedure?
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I too am on a tomato kick. Tonight's dinner, despite my attesting in today's lunch post that I probably wouldn't want more than a salad, was a slice of tomato-cheese pie and a salad of broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, peanuts, and barberries tossed with a salad dressing based on the dressing from this recipe. I posted about the first effort at this pie in an earlier dinner post. This time I did things differently. About a week ago I roasted the sliced tomatoes per the recipe, then stuffed them in a container and froze them until I could use them. I thawed them yesterday, thinking I'd get around to baking the pie, but all I did yesterday was prepare the elements: made the pie dough, shaped and blind-baked it, then refrigerated it; made the cheese / mayonnaise mixture and refrigerated it; put the thawed tomatoes into the refrigerator. Today was assembly and baking day. I pulled the blind-baked pie shell out and let it warm in the oven as the oven preheated. The tomatoes had thrown a lot of liquid out. I left the liquid out of the pie and drank it instead. (By the way, it was delicious!) I loaded the tomatoes into the barely-warmed pie shell, topped them with the cheese / mayo mixture, and baked. Before baking: After: And garnished: Marvelous! How much of that was due to the intensified tomato flavor because of freezing and thawing, the use of the proper pie pan size so the tomato layer was thicker, or sheer luck? I don't know, but I won't hesitate again to have everything prepared and ready for assembly. If I can lay my hands on more heirloom tomatoes before the season ends, I'm going to give them the same treatment and post about it in the Preserving topic. Then, later, I'll groan at myself for adding more stuff to the freezer. 🙂 As far as the salad goes...well, it's edible but won't win any prizes. It's based on this recipe: Healthy Broccoli-Cauliflower Salad from theplantbasedschool.com. I have only myself to blame. I cringe at the use of "healthy" when somebody means "healthful"! But I forged ahead and made their recipe to the best of my abilities. The dressing isn't very different from my basic broccoli salad dressing, except that it's heavy on Greek yogurt and light on mayonnaise; mine is heavy on mayonnaise and thinned slightly with milk or cream. The difference seems to be crucial. I'll eat the salad, but I won't repeat that dressing. But the pie, now, that's a keeper. For reference, here's the recipe one more time: Roasted Tomato Pie with Cheddar-Parmesan Crust (WaPo gift article, I hope) and here's a PDF of the recipe in case that link doesn't work: Roasted Tomato Pie With Cheddar-Parmesan Crust Recipe - The Washington Post.PDF
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I'm on a serious tomato-and-cheese kick right now, probably trying to cling to summer's glory for a few more days. I've consumed all the bacon I cooked a few days back, so today's lunch was an open-faced alternative. Toasted sourdough, slathered with mayonnaise and Zatarain's Creole mustard, topped with several slices of Margherita Brand Thin-sliced sandwich salami and some sliced cheddar. That went into the microwave for, oh, 25 seconds to melt the cheese and slightly melt the salami. The whole was topped with a slice from my last heirloom tomato, then a good-sized lettuce leaf. It was messy but delicious. I probably won't want dinner beyond a salad. (I must say, Amazon's price for this salami is lot more than I pay locally! I hope it isn't a sign of times to come. Maybe it's because it's a new batch? To be released in October (eG-friendly Amazon.com link).)
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Smithy replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
The waffles do look crispy! Thanks for the video, but thanks also for summarizing the ingredients and weights in this post. -
I will never again forget that my food processor has a dough blade in addition to a chopper blade. It worked fine for mixing the same pastry dough as before, with no hazard to my fingers.
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At last, the BLPT sandwich I set out to make here for dinner a couple of days ago. The supply of bacon I cooked then has dwindled in other sandwiches, salads and little snacks, but I managed to save enough for this delicacy! It's a good way to use the heirloom tomato, too.