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Everything posted by Smithy
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@Kim Shook, what's in the Watergate salad? I like the colors.
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@FauxPas, your Easter dinner story is one for the books. It reminds me of something Lynne Rosetto Kasper said (more than once, I'm sure) during her annual Turkey Confidential call-in shows on The Splendid Table: the feasts that go without a hitch are fine, but the ones with disasters are the ones that make stories to remember and laugh at over the years!
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I've never tried Bourdain's recipe, but once I tried Jeffrey Steingarten's version I've never tried another. It's delicious, it works, and it's perfect. The recipe is in his book It Must Have Been Something I Ate, and the book makes for fine and hilarious reading. Click here for the recipe in question.
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You showed those limes just to get a rise out of @JoNorvelleWalker, didn't you?
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The sad truth is that when we moved into our current house there was a blind corner in the kitchen cabinetry with something much like this that had fallen into the crevices and been left by the previous owners. I, er, didn't know what it was and threw it away.
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Damn, Dave, you may start a run on these things. I see on eBay that the prices are all over the map. Did you get a sense of whether most still have good blades? Does a potential purchaser need to worry about dull blades on some of these previously-owned Moulis?
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Doesn't the CreamI recipe book have a coffee ice cream recipe? I need to find my copy and see, because I though I spotted one. I also need to find the booklet so I can look for the dairy-free ice cream recipe that demanded oat milk, since I bought a carton of the stuff and have had it cluttering my cupboard, unopened, ever since the party for which I bought it last fall didn't happen. lindag may be late to the party, but I've hardly touched my machine and I bought mine before she bought hers!
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My copy of The Sultan's Kitchen (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) by Ozcan Ozan describes Müceddere (that's how he spells it) as a rice pilaf with chickpeas, green lentils and caramelized onions. Your recipe doesn't list chickpeas, and he actually includes orzo and tomatoes in the recipe. I thought the book included a photo, but I can't / don't know how to / call it up on my Kindle copy to compare. But yes, yours looks a bit more cohesive than I remember it being. I wonder if you needed to rinse the rice more, or the lentils? Or maybe the tomatoes and orzo in my recipe make it looser...or I simply don't remember either! As for the Greek seasoning: it sounds to me as though you needed to add lemon, although maybe you did separately from the seasoning. I tend to distrust garlic powder and onion powder; some is good and some is vile. I don't have a Greek Seasoning mix I can recommend, so I'm not much help except to ask about lemon!
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The recipe calls for 3 minutes on high pressure, then quick-release. We're at 4000' and hot, so I cooked them for 5 minutes with quick-release.
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I mentioned that I've been putting the Instant Pot through its paces while we have shore power. Two days ago I was busy cooking chickpeas and pinto beans for various recipes I want to try. Ironically, I was cooking these beans so I'd have the equivalent of canned beans - for simplicity! 😆 Yesterday, then, I had time to try out a delightful carrot recipe from @JAZ's latest cookbook, The Super Easy Instant Pot Cookbook: Quick Prep, One-Pot, 5-Ingredient, 30-Minute Recipes (eG-friendly Amazon.com link). One thing that strikes me about a 5-ingredient cooking list is that the outcome depends very much on the quality of the ingredients: there isn't much opportunity to mask poor quality with such a short ingredient list. This wasn't poor quality at all. I'm not a big fan of carrots, but I'd eat them like this any day. My darling loves 'em and commented, looking at my face when I tasted, "this might even convert a carrot skeptic like you!" I also think it's a good example of the cooking adage that foods from the same family tend to go together. Carrots and cumin are related, and they seem to be very compatible. In case you're interested, the ingredients are butter, cumin seeds, carrots, and a touch of salt. Water for the pressure-cooking stage. That's all. I'm showing them still in the pot because by the time we got to dinner the poor things were a bit shriveled. The instructions DO say to serve them hot. I needed the pot for another recipe, so I tried keeping these warm in the oven. It wasn't enough to preserve the appearance, but the flavor was still great. The other recipe I tried was a chorizo and pinto bean chili. Once again, the results all depend on the quality of the ingredients. This chorizo was a bit hot and I think next time around I'd cut it with a bit of ground beef. Still, a touch of avocado (which we didn't have) or sour cream (which we did) tamed the heat. The sour cream garnish didn't make it into the photo collage below. My new placemats from The Pink Store did! The carrots were delayed not only by the need to use the IP for another dish, but also by a pop-up social event. We heard music coming from the group picnic shelter nearby. When the chorizo chili had reached the pressure-cooking stage, I went over to investigate. A fiddler and banjoist were playing. Sure, come on over! they said, so we brought over a guitar and fiddle, and we all spent the next hour or so playing music, punctuated by the usual jam-session game of "do you know this one?" until we found something we could all do. Meanwhile, the chili minded its own business in the pot, and the pot kept it warm. It's really nice to have a suite of easy, no-effort meals that cook themselves.
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Thanks for that insight. I didn't think much about the currency symbols because I took them for granted; the menus at this place have done it that way as long as I've paid attention. If I had thought about it, I'd have shrugged and said it was just another example of the funny misspellings throughout the menu...not that I could do half as well if I tried to write something in Spanish.
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US dollars and Mexican pesos.
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I'm pretty sure I saw those too, but thought them beneath photographing! 😄 These tortilla warmers are a surprise for me because they're so thick with padding...much thicker than any I've seen before this year.
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When we're in Columbus, we like to make the trek 3 miles south to the town of Palomas, Chihuahua, Mexico. There's a parking lot on the US side of the border, and it's only a couple of blocks to The Pink Store where we I can shop and admire goods from all over Mexico, and we can eat some pretty delicious food. At least, I usually think it's delicious. The margaritas still are! The shop is chock-a-block full of dishes, serveware, tortilla warmers, glassware, decorative vases and more glassware, and even a wide selection of swizzle sticks. If I entertained the way I'd like to I'd have looked harder at the pitcher-and-glasses sets. I especially liked the idea of a set held by a tabletop caddy. We really don't have room or use for it, but I liked the idea. I always have to remember to look UP as well, to admire the ornaments that hang overhead. (I'd especially enjoy having a star ornament. No place to put it, nor use for it. But I can fantasize!) My darling has much less tolerance for shopping than I do, although he did a little. He was especially hoping to find a visor, because he needs one for cycling and his current visor is about to fall apart beyond the ability of tape to repair it. "Do you want especially a souvenir from Mexico?" asked the clerk. When he said no, he just wanted something to keep the sun out of his eyes, she went in the back to look through their box of things left behind by other visitors! No such luck, but we appreciated the effort. The one thing of dishware that I'd really hoped to find was a set of clear glass salad bowls with blue rims to match the glasses and large salad bowl I have of that pattern. I saw them once, years ago, but had very high sales resistance at the time. I've never seen them since. Not shown: plenty of hand-tooled purses and clothing; furniture; even huge statues. It's a big place. Incidentally, their web site says they've opened a shop in Silver City, NM. That's a far trek for us from our present location, but might be more convenient to another reader. My darling chose a table with comfortably padded chairs, and we ordered margaritas. They are delicious, and I don't think they're especially powerful - which is fine with me. A little tequila goes a long, long way. We looked at the menu. It's been cut down since our last visit. It used to be a tri-fold laminated menu with offerings on essentially 5 pages. Now it's just a single sheet, front and back. The servers all wore masks, and spacing was good between tables. Here you can see three huge statues they have as floor decorations. I think a waiter told me once that if it isn't bolted down it's for sale. No idea how you'd transport something like this, though! I ordered a half-order of guacamole, and was surprised when it arrived looking more like pico de gallo. The avocado was under all that topping that we'd ordered. We could have had it plain, but I'm glad we got the trimmings of onion, cilantro, tomato and jalapeno. It would have been pretty flat otherwise. He ordered a hamburguesa con rajas and I ordered chiles rellenos. The rajas, sauteed green chile strips, were piled atop his burger and he didn't even notice. I, as usual, was confronted with far more food than I could reasonably eat at lunch! In the upper left of this photo you can see the sort of chairs we were sitting in. They were quite comfortable and were the reason he'd chosen that particular table. I asked later about how the chiles are prepared. The waiter told me that they're bought fresh and grilled on site to soften. Then they're stuffed and fried. I have to say that they weren't as good as I remembered them being from past visits, but that didn't stop me from eating them! I bought some place mats I'll show you later, and we walked back across the border. I was taken with a metal plaque that decorates the wall, representing Columbus and Palomas, and parts between. A US Customs Agent approached me. "Do you know the story about that?" he asked me. I told him what I'd seen, and he said, "yes, but there's even more! If you're here at sunset, the light makes a perfect reflection of it on the sidewalk!" He said he doesn't normally bother telling people about it, but since I'd been showing interest he thought he'd left me know. Maybe I'll go back at sundown to see it.
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Further to the Instant Pot quiche: this morning we had a brunch using the rest of the custard mixture from the recipe above. This time I used burrito stuffing from the freezer. I started to use some chopped roasted green peppers, also from the freezer. I'm glad I didn't. I've been using them sparingly because of their heat. This time I decided that they're simply too hot! I've been trying to use them, sparingly, since I processed them in September of 2020. Enough, already. They went into the garbage. I think they were poblanos but hadn't bothered to put that on the label. The business of timing and altitude is still a question for me. This time I gave it 25 minutes at high pressure, rather than the 20 minutes from last time around. I couldn't tell a difference in the texture. It probably is affected by, say, how much cheese is in the mixture. The salsa, by the way, didn't improve an already-good dish. Surprise!
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One of the joys of having shore power again is that I can use the Instant Pot and try out recipes I've been wanting to try. Last night it was the Pimento Cheese Quiche from @JAZ's new book, Super-Easy Instant Pot Cookbook: Quick Prep, One-Pot, 5-Ingredient, 30-minute Recipes (eG-friendly Amazon.com link). It's delicious. She notes in her book that scaling things down for a 3-quart pot can be problematic. I solved the problem by mixing up a full batch of eggs and cream and saving half for another variation on the quiche. My altitude compensation wasn't quite right; the quiche was a bit watery in the center, but it was still very tasty. Next time I'm going to take it away from vegetarian and toward the Tex-Mex by adding some cooked chorizo that's been sitting in the freezer until this morning. Incidentally, the pimentos in this were originally purchased to make pimento cheese. I hadn't gotten around to that yet. They were wonderful in this!
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A couple of posts ago I noted that "one fat clove of garlic" may not be specific enough for the tahini in Melissa Clark's Cauliflower Shawarma recipe. This is what I was working with: It's also possible that the age of the garlic was a factor. This was the second-to-last clove of the last head of garlic on the garlic braid we brought with us last fall. It's held up well for the winter, but isn't as good as when we set out.
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It feels like that was a lifetime ago already, doesn't it? I remember the great difficulty finding any sort of cleaning supplies; you were lucky that you had (or found) that. (I've never heard of that scent; I'll have to look for it!) It's been a very long and strange 2 years. That actually looks like a great little dinner after a long day's drive. We aren't always especially hungry then, although we'd be plenty hungry if that was typical of all our meals for 2 or 3 days running.
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I know exactly what you mean about the lane striping. The old lanes are still visible, even after sandblasting, because the lanes are poured individually. The paint stripes diverging from the original seams can be terribly confusing. It's especially bad in (a) crowded traffic (how I dread El Paso, and how I used to dread the San Fernando Valley!) (b) rain and (c) night. During rain and/or night driving the pavement seams are just as easily spotted as the painted stripes. Grr indeed. We do tend to eat while driving if we're anxious to leave quickly or have a long drive to go. During some leisurely drives I'll pack a lunch and we'll pull over at a roadside rest stop to eat them. Some highways don't have such roadside rest areas, or may not have room for us to park because everyone else has the same idea. Sandwiches, cheese and crackers, or salad goodies like carrots, cherry tomatoes and radishes are all easily eaten out of hand. If traffic's too heavy we wait, though. No eating when we're passing through congested areas!
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Columbus, New Mexico is a little town about 3 miles north of the Mexican border. Its main claim to fame is that Pancho Villa led a cross-border raid into Columbus in 1916, killed a number of people, and provoked the US Army to establish a larger garrison. From there, "Black Jack" Pershing led an expedition into Mexico in an attempt to capture the Villistas. Pershing didn't succeed in that mission before President Woodrow Wilson called him back in anticipation of World War I involvement. However, Pershing learned a lot about the use of mechanization vs. animals for army purposes, and credited the Mexico expedition with helping to prepare for the larger war. Pancho Villa State Park is situated at the site of the original army encampment. If you ever have a chance to come here, I recommend a visit or two to the State Park museum as well as the Depot Museum, across the road, run by the Columbus Historical Society. Last night as we sat out on our deck we were treated to bugle calls from the hill you see at the top of this picture. It was a bit strange hearing "Reveille" at sunset, but we also heard other calls: "Charge", "Retreat", some my darling couldn't identify, and finally "Taps". I am amazed at how well the sound carried from that little instrument, played on that little knoll. Then again, there's a reason that knoll was used by the original buglers. The musician was the grandson of a man who'd served here at the garrison before it was closed down, and he wanted to pay homage to his grandfather. I snapped the photo this morning, when he was playing "Reveille" - quite a bit later than would have happened in the Army, but I'm sure my fellow campers were grateful for the delay. Yesterday and last night I finally, FINALLY! AT LAST! managed to try a recipe that's been cluttering up my browser for weeks: Melissa Clark's Cauliflower Shawarma. The recipe is originally in the New York Times (behind a paywall) but the Seattle Times was good enough to rerun it here: This cauliflower shawarma reaches for spring. The seasonings are cumin, coriander, paprika, turmeric, a touch of salt and pepper, all mixed into olive oil with which you coat chunks of cauliflower and red onion. I doubled the coating and used half to coat a couple of chicken thighs. It all went onto a baking sheet and baked at 425F for 25 minutes. Meanwhile, I mixed up a tahini sauce per the recipe. This was the one place where caution was needed, and I'm glad I set it up as a side sauce for our personal tastes. It was much, much too hot with the garlic! Note to self: when a recipe calls for one fat clove of garlic, think twice before using a fat clove of the Russian Giant variety of garlic. I won't even pretend to be modest: I think it was a stroke of genius to cook the chicken and vegetables together. They shared seasonings, the chicken yielded some of its skin fat to the vegetables, and were all done perfectly at the same time. Tender, moist chicken is a wonderful thing. The seasonings were just as good on the chicken as on the vegetables. I'll be cooking this recipe again, and again, and again.
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We started escaping the heat. One way to do that is to head north, and we aren't ready to do that. We went to higher elevations instead. We arrived in the little town of Animas, New Mexico and spent the night in the back parking lot of the mercantile company that sells fuel, hardware, farm equipment and food. The town seems to be a quiet place. The mercantile's main shed, where the big equipment is held, never seems to be closed up at night. Maybe the fact that the Fire and Rescue building is right around the corner is a factor. The community park seems like a triumph of optimism over practicality at this time of year, but maybe it's better at other times of the year. We've seen ball games and practice sometimes when we've passed through. Despite the dry grass, we were glad to at last see signs of spring. We saw very few flowers, even along the freeway roadsides where rain runs off, until we were past Tucson. Have I mentioned that New Mexico is windy?!? 😆 When we arrived it was still in the high 80's, but we were able to open windows and let that wind help cool the Princessmobile down. By evening we were ready for chili, which has been in the freezer for over a month, for dinner. Before dinner, we sat out on our deck, enjoyed a few beverages and admired the road-painting machine that shared the back lot with us. The differing paint colors on the sides amused us. For those who might be reading this and are unfamiliar with American road-painting schemes, the lane-division lines are painted yellow. The roadside edge lines, what we call fog lines, are white. We had noticed on the way in that the road had some freshly-painted lines and some faded lines. Since we had no idea which way that equipment would be traveling, we made sure to get out ahead of it the next morning. This paint dries quickly, but not immediately. I made road-food sandwiches the night before, to allow for an earlier departure. Next stop: Columbus, New Mexico.
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They do look pretty. If they'll grow as far north as chromedome's location, maybe I can find them at our farmers' markets in Duluth this summer. I'll look around.
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I picked up Anissa Helou's book. I also was reminded that I already had Andrés' and Liebowitz's books.
