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Shalmanese

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Posts posted by Shalmanese

  1. It's so interesting seeing how far you've come in just 8 short years! I remember giving a bunch of tips to some guy a long time ago about how to do a tasting menu but I had no idea until now that it was you! :D.

  2. 11 hours ago, liuzhou said:

     

    However, I remain convinced that, in a true blind tasting, few people would know that they were eating anything other than a hard boiled egg. They may notice that they are slightly firmer, but without being rubbery and that the taste is a bit more intense than a regular egg, but not ridiculously so. I have described them in the past as "exaggerated eggs".

     

    There's no way I could imagine the average person could not 100% reliably tell a century egg from a regular egg in a blind tasting. The intense sulfurous aroma and taste are a hallmark of century eggs and is extremely obvious. 

    • Like 1
  3. 11 hours ago, FrogPrincesse said:

    Thank you for the recommendation. I haven't hear of emmy's jam so I'm adding them to the list.

     

    Frog Hollow, meh. I sampled their jams (including the apricot) at the ferry building. The texture put me off - very large pieces of fruit in syrup essentially. I know Ferber does some of her recipes that way, but it's not my preference. I love Frog Hollow's fruit and fruit tarts though! These are fabulous.

     

    Ah, I'm a big fan of the giant chunks of fruit approach so we might be looking for different things in our jams. My feeling is that I can always make my jam more pureed with judicious application of a knife but never less.

  4. 19 hours ago, liuzhou said:

     

    I've been living in China for twenty years and have never seen that. I'm not saying it doesn't exist, but it isn't common.

     

    Regular tomatoes are always sold in markets and supermarkets in the vegetable areas, However, cherry tomatoes are sold by the fruit vendors.

     

    BTW, as I'm sure you know, tomatoes are fruit however they are sold or served!

     

    The Chinese name for the dish is 糖拌西红柿. Might be more of a Northern thing or maybe it's one of those homestyle snacks that everyone knows how to make but they wouldn't think to serve or talk about it to a guest?

  5. One other common Chinese dish is tomatoes, cut into wedges and then sprinkled with sugar. Served immediately, you get the crunch of the sugar against the tomatoes but if left for 15 minutes, the sugar draws out the juices and you get a tomato syrup. In the west, tomatoes are treated like a vegetable and paired with salt but in China, it's more often thought of as a fruit and paired with sugar.

    • Like 2
  6. 5 hours ago, kayb said:

     

    When you say "fresh ground corn," you're speaking of just-off-the-cob kernels? Not corn that has been left on the stalk to dry before havest?

     

    If so, I can only marvel at how wonderful it must taste. At first glance, I thought the mushrooms and bacon were all crispy bacon bits on top, which also would have been marvelous.

     

     

     

    He never said fresh ground corn. He's using dried corn grits and fresh, whole corn kernels from corn on the cob. I do it all the time when I make polenta to amplify the corny flavor (although I use frozen, fire roasted corn from Trader Joes).

    • Like 1
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