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liuzhou

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Everything posted by liuzhou

  1. I worked that out! 🍾🍷
  2. The restaurant used white (green) grapes but I suppose any type would work. I have green grapes in the freezer now in readiness for making it later in the week.
  3. A mixture of malted barley, yeast and hops works well for me. 🍻
  4. liuzhou

    Lunch 2024

    牙签牛肉 (yá qiān niú ròu), Toothpick Beef. 24 hour marinated beef slices in soy sauce, oyster sauce, Shaoxing wing with garlic, cumin and chilli flakes, then threaded onto toothpicks. Quick fried and finished with white sesame seeds. Usually eaten as a snack or as a 'tapa' in bars, they are available cooked from some supermarkets but I make my own to get control of the chilli level and the cook on the meat. I find the supermarket ones under-spiced and over-cooked. I go for a medium rare, which only takes seconds. Threading the toothpicks takes makes longer.
  5. liuzhou

    Irish bangers

    Ha! I learned it from an uncle almost 70 years ago. He was Irish! Where he got it, I don't know.
  6. liuzhou

    Irish bangers

    Boiled sausages Are the worst. In your stomach They do burst. Fried sausages Are the best. In your stomach They do rest. Everybody knows dat!
  7. Thanks for this. It triggered many memories and good to see familiar sights after far too long.
  8. It's a desert I encountered in the 1980s in a French restaurant in London very near my home. Simple frozen, peeled grapes in a one part Pernod to four parts water pond. I was always glad my house was just round the corner. Now I can only have it at home, which is probably for the good!
  9. Some last minute supplies for Wednesday. There is a local brand of digestive biscuits, but seriously only McVitie's make the grade. Great with cheddar. (Don't grate with cheddar!) and For with my manchego. These are BIG. Here they are with a regular black olive for scale Then this To be used as a desert with frozen grapes. All I need to do now is decide what to eat. Probably fish, but what type? Decisions! Decisions! Possibly not with this gravy! The back story. The lyrics.
  10. I'm confused by this and @donk79's comment. On the link I posted, at least for me, there is a download button which should show you the complete 30-page PDF of the paper. If you can't download it and are still interested. please let me know. I can post it here or send by PM.
  11. Yes. My grandmother in France had something very similar, too. The article has an American viewpoint but they were all over Europe, too.
  12. What do you mean? Why do you want a university account?
  13. liuzhou

    Space Chillies

    Those who know me know that I have more than a soft spot for the food of Hunan, where I lived from 1997-1999. I have a hard spot! It has been reported that the average Hunan person consumes around 50 kilograms of chilli peppers a year. That’s an average of around 140 grams a day, every day. Before I lived there, I would have thought that highly unlikely and started looking for the flaw in the mathematics. I soon learned that, if anything, it’s an underestimation. Hunan grows many different types of chilli but one is considered the Rolls Royce of chillies. Or as the Chinese put it, 辣椒中的爱马仕 (là jiāo zhòng dì ài mǎ shì), the “Hermès of Chillies”. Note this is not a direct reference to the Greek god or to Percy Weasley’s owl in the Harry Potter franchise. It is to the French luxury goods company and reflects the high price these varietals fetch – up to 600 times the price of regular chillies. It is considered to be highly fragrant (I agree) but it has a low yield with only 14,200 tons being grown in 2023. Its ‘real’ name is 樟树港辣椒 (zhāng shù gǎng là jiāo) meaning Zhangshugang Chilli, Zhangshugang being a town in Hunan and which holds the sole right to grow the type. It is said the unique weather and soil conditions make the peppers crispy, tender and strong. The name has been trademarked and has been approved by the Hunan Department of Agriculture and Rural Affairs as an agro-product with geographical indication. Not only that; they may be the only chillies to have travelled to space! I don’t know. However, two years ago, 163 grams of Zhangshugang chilli seeds were carried into space by the Shenzhou XIV spaceship to see whether that improved their germination, flavour, spiciness or anything else. Early analysis is reported to be positive. So, at great personal expense, travail, inconvenience and hardship, I bring you these wonders of the capsicum family which I purchased today. They are at their best in late spring and early summer, so a bit cheaper in December. Zhangshugang Chillies Having bought them purely for educational purposes, I will now discard them and certainly not be using them in my dinner tonight. Perish the thought.
  14. Interesting article here on "innovation that helped change the status of the kitchen in the American home". From a 1916 advertisement for Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets via Wikimedia Commons
  15. Potato starch is my go-to thickening agent.
  16. liuzhou

    Dinner 2024

    How about these dumplings? The Chinese reads 'Hardworking Children'.
  17. I made my own from scratch 30+ years ago. I can get all the required ingredients here in China, but living alone means I don't need so many! It's not worth the trouble making a big batch and my friends aren't interested. Also, there is a slight problem in that, like almost everyone here, I don't have an oven. My daughter still makes them back in England.
  18. I have a confession to make. I fell by the wayside and into shameful temptation. I only meant to eat one, but suddenly my box of Scottish mince pies I bought and promised myself I'd keep unsullied until Christmas Eve became empty! So, I ordered another but as punishment for my sin, the only supplier in China is out of stock. (Maybe he ate them, too.) He did apologise and offered to instead send me a box of the more expensive Glenfiddich Whisky type, but at no extra cost! There is redemption! I've also ordered some Gordal olives to go with my manchego. And some digestive biscuits to go with my cheddar.
  19. liuzhou

    Dinner 2024

    Lentil stew with Piquillo sausage. Gansu lentils stewed in chicken stock with onion, celery, and garlic. This I did in my rice cooker. Piquillo sausage fried separately in a wok, then chopped up and added to the stew. The sausage gave the dish a nice chilli bite. I decided to eat it with some wholewheat bread with a spoon. Actually, this wasn't what I intended but the frozen cod I definitely took out the freezer to accompany the lentils somehow wriggled back in. It's in the fridge now for tomorrow.
  20. 敦煌市 (dūn huáng shì), Dunhuang is an oasis city in Gansu Province. It lies in the southern section of the silk road and the Great Wall passes by. It is probably the most important Buddhist site in China, with over 700 temples in caves, particularly the 莫搞窟 (mò gǎo kū), Mogao Caves which are highly decorated with Buddhist images, and which contained priceless Buddhist texts. A very important religious and cultural crossroads between east and west and the road from Tibet to Mongolia. Buddhist image dated to c475 CE, Mogao Caves “But what’s this got to do with my dinner?”, you rightly ask. Well, there is an ingredient which I never associated with Chinese cuisine and which none of my Chinese friends has heard of. 小扁豆* (xiǎo biǎn dòu), literally ‘small, flat beans’, are Vicia lens, lentils and they are grown in the Dunhuang area. The lentil originated in the Middle East and travelled to South and SE Asia and to Africa before extending its range to Europe, then the Americas. I’m guessing they migrated east along the Silk Road to Dunhuang. These are a small greenish-brown variety. Dunhuang Lentils The few that are eaten in China mainly seem to go into porridge mixes with other grains and seeds. Of course I use them in more traditional western dishes such as lentil soup and stews and curries. My friends are baffled by red lentils and, although I can source them, so far as I can tell, they are all imported from India, Pakistan or most frequently, Turkey. Turkish Red Lentils * You have to be careful with this name. 小便 is also xiǎo biàn but the tone on the second character is different – this means ‘urine’. A slip of tone and you might order ‘urine soup’.
  21. Wow! I know exactly where you are/were. My family had an apartment just round the corner from Les Deux Magots forty years ago. Do you know the history of Les Magots? A hangout of Hemingway, James Joyce, Picasso and Julia Child among many others.
  22. Tara! It's pomelo with 老干妈 (lǎo gān mā) chilli crisp.
  23. liuzhou

    Dinner 2024

    驴肉炒饭 (lǘ ròu chǎo fàn), donkey fried rice with a chilli and garlic dip.
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