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petite tête de chou

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Posts posted by petite tête de chou

  1. The vinaigrette I make for my vegetable pasta salad is so tart and raw tasting that it actually makes me wince a bit. I shake together dijon mustard, red wine and basalmic vinegar, salt and pepper, herbs and a pinch of sugar in a wide-mouthed canning jar, then add my oil. I bring it right to the point where anymore vinegar (or other acids) would create a watery dressing (to be avoided). We really like really tart things in this house. Really. :biggrin:

  2. A well-seasoned dry salami is, easily, my favorite sandwich-type meat. Especially if it's a bit gamey and contains whole spices. Paired with bit of mustard, a thin slice of stinky cheese, pickled onions on the side and a pint of ale is a bit(e) of heaven.

  3. I want to serve meatballs in a spicy peanut sauce for a family gathering.  Some folks don't care for spicy foods.  Any suggestions for a second dipping sauce for this cautious group?

    I did find one for honey mustard and bourbon, but I'm not sure if that is a good match for the beef.

    Sweet and sour sauce with orange juice and zest would pair well with the beef.

    I've used a blackberry-chipotle barbeque sauce on ribs and chops that you could omit the pepper from.

  4. We now have kabocha seedlings popping up unexpectedly all over the place. Like asparagus, it feels like Christmas every day. (If you've ever seen an asparagus patch in action, you know what I mean.) The seeds got into the ground courtesy of our compost, and our family's regular consumption of kabocha squash.

    We've also got a few other seedlings of indeterminate origin, so it should be interesting to see what they develop into.

    Laura: You can prune that rosemary by taking out the lower branches and forming a ball if you want. That's what my neighbor did.

    http://www.papagenos.com/blog/template_permalink.asp?id=140

    My rosemary is only about two feet wide and tall, and most of it is quite straggly, but the ends are very healthy and harvestable. Considering what I read on that gardening website (thanks mtigges) and here, it seems my rosemary was lucky to survive yet another winter without any protective intervention on my part. It's planted in my garden exposed to the elements year round!

    I think I should wait until the end of the season and prune it all right back, give it some more love over the winter in the form of mulching or even a burlap wrap, and let it come back with new branches next spring. Meanwhile, it might be a bit unsightly, but I've still got gorgeous fresh rosemary for my cooking! And thanks for the pruning advice, sanresho, but given the state my rosemary is in, I'd have a hard time shaping this rosemary without losing all its leaves that are growing on its extremities.

    Since those tips are so healthy you might consider air-layering a few branches. What kind of mulch are you using? I live in the damp too and have found quarter-minus gravel is a great mulch for my Mediterranean plants.

  5. New Clue in honor of watching an old favorite---I rewound four times, so I hope I heard it right:

    A Mexicali Chili Barb

    A Double Chubby Chuck

    Two Orders of French Fries

    Two Cherry Cokes

    Deserted before the order arrives, to go look for liquor.

    American Graffiti! What a perfect, all-American film to watch over the Memorial Day weekend. LOVE it. Paired with The Last Picture Show it would make a great a double bill.

  6. My daughter loves mayo sandwiches, just mayo & bread nothing else. At first I told her no you need something else on the sandwich - at least a piece of cheese. But than I thought about it, it's not so different than a buttered roll, so I made it for her. Hey maybe she'll out grow it she's only 5  :biggrin:

    Don't be so sure. I still enjoy an occasional mustard sandwich and I'm quite a bit older than five. :biggrin:

    I eat steak with my fingers about 90% of the time (all home-cooked). Something is terribly appealing about greasy, meat-fingers and a smeared glass of scotch...not to mention the wee bit of danger associated with a sharp knife oh-so-close to my fingers. :rolleyes: My husband can't stand to watch me cut, slurp, chew and otherwise cave-man myself over a plate of bloody meat *with my fingers!*

  7. I love crispy fish skins sprinkled with a mixture of ground chilis (cayenne and pasilla being my favorites), salt and a wee bit of sugah. Wash them down with an ice cold, lemonfied lager. Oh my yes.

  8. NEW MOVIE 186. Our villain gets sprayed with eggs, milk, showered with sugar and dumped with flour and eventually gets baked in a big cake.

    New Clue: Our villain is played by an accomplished actress who in another movie killed a family pet - a bunny.

    101 Dalmations and Fatal Attraction. Glenn Close plays her psychos with such panache, eh? My favorite is her Marquise De Merteuil from Dangerous Liaisons.

  9. Already offered and answered, WAY back.  A very memorable line, and I've never looked at chocolate mousse the same again.

    Darn. It *did* seem familiar. Perhaps I should've used the raw-liver-chomp-fest as a clue instead. Compelling yet repulsive. :biggrin:

    For those who don't know, the film we're talking about is Rosemary's Baby.

  10. 182. A whole odd-looking roasted river fish paraded among dinner party guests before being placed on the table

    CLUE: The fish is probably from the Amazon river

    So many memorable images from this film it's hard to pick one, but here goes:

    CLUE: At the same party, our hero attempts to play Opera on his phonograph and is kicked out

    Fitzcarraldo?

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