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Smithy

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Everything posted by Smithy

  1. Smithy

    Lunch 2020

    Guilty pleasure, when lunch is usually a salad and the summer tomatoes are so good: instead, taking a slice of that tomato and piling it on a sandwich with baby greens, mayo, mustard, cheddar, salami, all on toast. I'll worry about the calorie count somewhere else.
  2. Well, what the heck. How could I turn down a book by Nathalie Dupree that has a preface by the late, great Pat Conroy? I clicked on "Mastering the Art..." wondering whether I'd already purchased it. No, I hadn't. (I have now.) What I HAD already purchased was her biscuit book. In 2012. Yeesh.
  3. Smithy

    Osso bucco

    Confession time. I bought a tool like this in the fun and rush of an evening's cooking class. 2 years later, I have yet to use it. Perhaps we need a spätzle topic, with tutorial? Please help me justify this purchase. I love the sound of "SO simple and the perface "sop" for all good sauces!"
  4. Smithy

    Mandolines

    That's funny, and goes to show why we're lucky to have choices. When I tried a V-slicer (don't remember the brand..Oxo, maybe?) I found the apex of the V to be a pinch point. Stuff jammed in there. I took it back.
  5. Smithy

    Breakfast 2020!

    BLT is my favorite sandwich! I usually add dill pickles and sometimes avocado, but with really good bacon and such a tomato as that I might just stop at the basics and let those flavors shine on their own.
  6. "Aurora peppers"? @TicTac, please describe them if you haven't already. My gardening is rather minimal. There are lush basil, rosemary and sage plants in a few pots. I planted 3 cherry tomato plants in pots, and they're starting to bear fruit. They're also huge: taller than my husband, in once case. That may have happened because we had that pot in a less-than-optimally sunny spot and then moved it, but all the plants are indeterminate. I was warned that they'd grow tall. They are. But oh, look at the first cluster, down near the base of one pot! There are many more such clusters, surprisingly symmetrical, along all three plants: they're young, but they're daily growing.
  7. It's lovely drizzled over potatoes (baked, fried, probably latkes, probably scalloped). As @heidih noted above, it can sub for garlic and oil, although it isn't quite the same. However - if you can't eat garlic, can you eat this? How do you get along with onions, leeks or scallions?
  8. I thank you, both for the summaries and the links to deeper explanations. I have a couple of observations and questions, after reading and considering this material. 1. On the one hand, my bread courses have all said that ideally salt should be added after the flour, water and yeast (or sourdough starter) have been allowed to sit together, because salt interferes with yeast growth and development. Yet these articles say that salt helps with the gluten formation. That seemed contradictory at first, but after some thought I think I've resolved the apparent conflict. Salt is necessary but timing is also important because of two opposing effects on two very different factors: yeast growth and gluten development. Do I understand those two issues correctly? 2. I'm surprised at the statement that a pH of 5 - 6 is ideal for gluten development, and this makes me wonder what commercial bakers do, if anything, to compensate. City water is generally controlled to around a pH of 7 (maybe slightly less) and the EPA drinking water standard is a pH range of 6.5 - 8.5. Do bakers simply give the gluten extra time and/or mechanical activity to compensate? Perhaps the optimal gluten development pH isn't that important because there are workarounds. Further insights would be welcome.
  9. As prices go this is more in the "slightly more expensive" than "crazy good" category, but I want to point out a book anyway. I fell down the rabbit hole of eG Foodblogs, and found the fine 2006 entry divina: Over the Tuscan Stove. Judy/divina hasn't been around here since 2009, but her web site shows that she's still alive and teaching - well, will be when things reopen from the pandemic. And she has a cookbook out. Secrets from my Tuscan Kitchen, by eG member divina, is $3.99 in Kindle format from Amazon. I do not need another cookbook. I do not need another cookbook. I have another cookbook.
  10. Smithy

    Shawarma Sauce

    I forgot to ask: can you remember any of the flavor or texture notes? For instance, was the red sauce smooth or chunky, tomatoish or hot like a chili sauce or not like either of them? Could the white sauce have been the classic tzadziki, or was it something different?
  11. Smithy

    Shawarma Sauce

    I think of shawarma (other spellings around here include shwarma, schwarma, or even shwerma as I first heard it called) as being a Middle Eastern food, so it's interesting to think that there might be Russian variations on the sauces. I shouldn't be surprised, though. If you check out this topic on Shawarma you'll find a lot of argument discussion about the proper ingredients and it's clear there are regional variations. You may find something there that sounds like what you remember. Don't be shy about resurrecting that old topic!
  12. I'm another fan of Better Than Bouillion, although I still have part of a jar of Wyler's bouilion cubes taking up space in the cupboard. I like the convenience of scooping out a spoonful of the Better Than Bouillion when I realize I need it; the Wyler's requires enough foresight for me to boil water to dissolve the cube!
  13. Can you (or anyone else) explain this, please? I haven't run across this bit of information before, and I'd like a chemical explanation.
  14. You'll get there, @Kim Shook. If you want to vent and laugh a bit, feel free to post more of their instructions for our merriment. 🙂
  15. I sprang for the Ruhlman book thanks for the heads-up. Pepin is already back up to $9.99! Incidentally, I have Epitaph for a Peach on hard copy from when it first came out. I recommend it.
  16. You may have given me the excuse I need to buy one of these things.
  17. I know the smell you're describing! There's something very distinctive about citrus mold, isn't there? I can pick it out from yards away. That a rattlesnake nest smells like rotten potatoes, now...that is new information that I hope never to need.
  18. I haven't seen anything about Prime Day this year. Under the current circumstances I'd be more surprised if it happened than if it didn't. Still, I'm curious as to whether Amazon has addressed the question either way. Has anyone seen an announcement?
  19. That's exactly what they mean: 3-prong, and don't defeat it by tying the ground and neutral together, or by plugging into a 3-prong to 2-prong converter. I'm sorry for your discomfort. You're quite right that the instructions are oddly translated. I think they're hilarious - but if I'd just reacted with "laugh" you might have thought I was laughing at you. It's a lovely-looking machine!
  20. So, does that mean she gave bad advice then, or that there are better techniques now, or tastes have changed, or...what?
  21. Smithy

    Tri-Tip

    Let's see if this works... https://youtu.be/gmxHmuV4vTU
  22. Until this post, I didn't know about The Duke's Mayonnaise Cookbook! It looks like fun. A cookbook with a forward by Nathalie Dupree is off to a good start.
  23. I've put in the updated spreadsheet; it's still pinned to the top of this forum.
  24. Well, Jo could always pretend the jalapenos are zucchinis, and treat them accordingly. Leave them on someone's doorstep in the middle of the night. Put them in a guest's unlocked car. Ask @Shelby, she has dozens of such tricks!
  25. Yes, I need to try this. More info, please! It looks like a good gluten-free crust idea.
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