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daniellewiley

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Posts posted by daniellewiley

  1. Oy. You Americans.  I feel like I should know this... but don't.  What's an onion board?

    Onion board is basically a sort of cracker-like (but much bigger and significantly thicker than cracker-sized) crunchy bread with lots of bits of onions baked onto it. Very nice stuff! :biggrin:

    Onion board is also known as "pletzel" in Yiddish. The ones I fondly remember from my childhood weren't so much cracker-like as kinda like someone took a bunch of bialy dough and made a large, skinny, squarish foccacia-like thang with it. A little flaky, a little chewy, baked golden-brown, generously flecked with browned bits of onion. Insanely good with standard bagel-fixings.

    Edited to add: here is a picture of an onion board--this one's a little bit fatter than the ones I remember from when I was a kid.

    Edited *again* to add: Oh wait! Now here is a picture of an onion board that looks a whole lot more like my childhood memories.

    (Yes, I'm obsessed--why do you ask? :laugh: )

    At Zingerman's Bakehouse, they made Onion Board with the bialy dough, so you are right on. I LOVE onion board!

  2. Those Sonoran dogs -- dark charr all around -- also raise another issue: donenesss. Warmed through? Grill marks? Burnt to bursting? Discuss.

    In our house, welldone rules. My husband used to have a system at Yankee Stadium. We'd have to get our hotdogs first thing, b/c that's how you got the welldone ones. And, now, at the Toledo Mud Hens ballpark, he lurks around at all of the stands trying to find the one with the most welldone franks. He's kind of a hotdog stalker.

    (I notice myself switching back and forth from hotdog to frank. I grew up saying frank - that's what my dad says. Here in the midwest, it's always hotdog, and I don't think my daughter would know what I meant if I said "frank.")

  3. Here you go, Danielle.  I started making this in the mid-60's.  With all this sour cream, don't eat it just before seeing your OB GYN!

    (And somebody tell me if it's not Kosher...)

    Rice, Green Chilies and Cheese Casserole

    Thanks Ruth!!

    And, I'm very lucky to have an OB who could care less how much I gain. Plus, with only 5 weeks left, how much damage could I do?? :biggrin:

    As soon as it cools off enough here to use my oven (hopefully before I give birth), I am cooking this!

  4. There was a question about Kiev. I won't pull any punches: I thought the old Kiev sucked, but I haven't been to the new one. Maybe Kiev used to be good in days long gone by, though; that, I couldn't say. But my memory of the old Kiev is from the time a few years ago when I had some potato pierogis that had exactly the consistency of the flour-based paste used for glueing things in kindergarten.

    Oh, that's so sad about the Kiev! You'll have to trust me that it did use to be a lot better... but then again, it's been several years since last I was there, so who knows what's happened to it since then? But at least now I know that, if the latest incarnation of the Kiev still sucks when next I'm in NY, I can at least go get good pierogies at Teresa's.

    Makes me sad too - don't think I ever tried the pierogies though. We always got kielbasa and eggs, or kasha varnishkes or mushroom barley soup.

  5. Rule in our house.  If you are old enough to catch them, you are old enough to know how to sharpen a knife and clean them (with very close supervision, mind you).

    Yikes! Dylan is 3.5 and caught her first fish two weeks ago. I think we'll let Dad clean them for a while yet. :laugh:

  6. At the hotels we stayed at in Italy, there were always meats available, and also some delicious stewed prunes that were absolutely addictive. This was at maybe 4-5 hotels in both Tuscany and Emilio-Romagna.

    The hotels I stayed at in Italy that provided breakfast had bread and cornetti accompanied by jam (marmelata) and butter, with water/juice/caffe latte/tea/hot chocolate/milk to drink, and perhaps some fresh fruit. No meat for breakfast in those hotels. What level of luxury were the hotels you were staying at? We stayed at relatively inexpensive hotels, mid-priced at times. Some were classy, some weren't, but none were expensive luxury places.

    We went in February, so I was able to get us into 4 star hotels everywhere at a really low rate.

  7. In hotels of course the universal breakfast buffet is much the same - whether you are in Cambodia or Chad.

    As others have pointed out, breakfast buffets in Europe are quite likely to look more like what we'd consider a luncheon buffet in the US. All sorts of cold cuts, pates, salmon and other smoked and/or marinated fish, assorted cheeses, sliced tomatoes, olives, and breads.

    And those wonderful machines that you throw an orange into, and out comes fresh juice. Boy would I like to have one of those in my kitchen.

    In southern Europe this is very different. In Northern and Eastern europe, these big buffets you talk about is always there. But in like Spain, France and Italy Nothing more than a cup of coffee is ussually eaten for breakfast. But the breakfast buffets at hotels are still there. In modified form though! Not with the meat, cheese and vegs. In France you'll get served piles of sweet croissants, pain au chocolate, ussually dry french bread, beure and sweet maremlade.

    In Spain, breakfast is just some white bread with olive oil and a cup of black coffee. Italian hotel breakfast is dried out cookies, biscotti, marmelata sweet things.. more dessert than breakfast.

    At the hotels we stayed at in Italy, there were always meats available, and also some delicious stewed prunes that were absolutely addictive. This was at maybe 4-5 hotels in both Tuscany and Emilio-Romagna.

  8. Hi,

    I am spending a few days in Ann Arbor, and I'd like some recommendations for good food.

    I am not interested in high end food but more in good ethnic food -- I'd especially like info on good Korean or Vietnamese food which are lacking where I live (london).

    Also, I am particularly fond of BBQ so any hints there would be great.

    Our favorite Korean place is on South University, right off of Hill. It's called Kang's. It's a big red building - very down and dirty, but wonderful food.

    Other fun cheap eats are Blimpy Burger, Red Hot Lovers - neither one is ethnic.

    On Fourth Street, there are two inexpensive ethnic restaurants side-by-side. Earthen Jar is vegetarian Indian food buffet. Jerusalem Garden is middle eastern.

  9. I'm happy to help with any cooking, but I'm going to hold off on being in charge due to my large belly and need to sit frequently. :biggrin:

    One thing - I know we have one shellfish allergy - I'm allergic to regular fish, and quite allergic at that. I'm usually pretty good at eating all of the side dishes, etc., if that's what's on the menu, but I just wanted to throw it out there.

    And yay that Kris is coming!!

  10. Here are my daughter's clues. She's only 3.5, so I'll type them for her to record them for posterity.  :raz:

    1. At the Indian buffet, she had 3 servings of goat curry.

    2. Last night at a Chinese buffet (she likes buffets), her favorite thing was the octopus. "This is deLICIOUS!"

    Brace yourself, Danielle: most of the research on kids and food suggests that, when your kid hits five or so, she'll likely not only deny that she ever liked these things but will regress all across the food board. Don't push -- that's the best way to make sure she hates the stuff! -- and hang in there until seven or eight, when she should be back on the foodie track.

    She got picky about a year ago, but it's for things that are really silly. Like, she suddenly hates oatmeal. Hopefully she'll take after me and never quit trying new things. The octopus she requested - she thought the pieces were pasta, and asked for the "noodles that Poppy is eating." I told her it was octopus, and she didn't blink.

  11. Our tour of Zingerman's Bakehouse is scheduled for 10 am and will take about an hour, then we'll go next door to tour Zingerman's Creamery.

    When we're done there we can head down to Kerrytown for lunch and supply shopping at the Farmer's Market, Sparrow Meats, Monahan's Fish (and Zingerman's Deli, of course).  Then back to my place for the cooking extravaganza.

    So should should try to be to your place before 10?

    Anyone else going from the Cleveland area?

    Hey Kris - We're coming up from Toledo, if you'd like to meet up just over halfway for a caravan - we are basically right on your way - you'll be taking I-80 to Toledo and then grabbing 23 up to Ann Arbor.

  12. 1. Eating raw clams, raw oysters and smelts with my dad on Montauk when I was three.

    2. Making a Chocolate Rum Roll - all by myself - for my 8th grade English class.

    3. My whole family was outside one day when I was about 6 or 7, and I got mad at them for one reason or another. I ran in the house, locked them out, and proceeded to make brownies from scratch. I ran to get my mom crying when I tasted the batter and realized that I had used 1/4 cup of salt instead of 1/4 teaspoon.

  13. However, I will disinterestedly observe, purely in the spirit of community-minded, nonjudgmental opining, that putting ketchup on a hot dog indicates a serious character flaw. For example, my wife does this -- and look at the nut she wound up marrying.

    I wholeheartedly agree, and feel that I can admit, here in the safety of eGullet, that at a ball game last week, I told my daughter that she's not allowed to have ketchup on hot dogs. Luckily, she just smiled and asked for mustard.

    phew.

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