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Posts posted by Special K
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I'd gut the thing and start over, knocking out a wall to triple the size while sacrificing a spare/junk room.
Kayb, you can design my kitchen any time! I only wish I had a spare/junk room to sacrifice - I'd do it in a minute. All of your suggestions are wonderful.
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Readiing the "Kitchen Injuries" thread reminded me, I read this article in the paper last month about mustard for burns. Haven't had the opportunity(?) to try it yet, but I've got the mustard handy!
http://www.peoplespharmacy.com/2011/01/10/cold-yellow-mustard-relieves-burn/
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Thank you.
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Please don't tell anyone.
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After seeing the review in today's New York Times, I want Anna Ciezadlo's Day of Honey: A Memoir of Food, Love, and War.
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Another vote for the death of a refrigerator. We thought it had died earlier this year, but the guy who came out soldered together a make-shift replacement part. Maybe it won't last!
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Listening to nothing but the crackle of just baked bread.
Oh, yeah. And to hear it, you have to bend down reeeeeal close, so you get the full effect of inhaling that delicious aroma ...
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I find the spray with flour to be very effective for coating muffin tins
This reminds me of the Alton Brown episode "The Muffin Method Man:"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-D7zwa1vUk at the very end.
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It looks like he's taking a more political turn
So he is: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/01/a-food-manifesto-for-the-future/
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... a cheap-ass plastic mandoline that has done an amazing job
So Robbie, what brand is it?
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Believe it or not, chopping onions. I have found the technique that works for me. And I love that last moment in the kitchen at night, when the place is spotless and the dishwasher is running. Today's meals turned out well and were appreciated. Tomorrow's are planned and will be good. I look around, see that all is well in "my office," and turn out the lights. Another good day.
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I'm a big fan of culinary mysteries...things with titles like 'Town in a Lobster Stew' and 'Fatally Flaky'. Light and entertaining. Sure, actual literature is a big part of my reading diet, but you can't beat pure escapism.
Oh, Badiane, me too! I call them "snacks," and I freely admit that about every fifth or sixth book I read is a snack, usually on the bus, where I leave them when I've finished. A close cousin to the culinary mystery is the holiday mystery, and it usually contains a lot about food, too. The only culinary mystery author I can't read is Cecile Lamalle - good enough plots, interesting characters and situations, but then out of the blue she'll just throw in some really offensive and vulgar profanity, and I can't for the life of me understand why. Without that language I'd recommend the books to the high school librarian where I work, but with it, no way.
Anyway, I'm going to look for "Town in a Lobster Stew" today, thanks! Does this series include recipes, as a lot of culinary myseries do?
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You may be uninterested now that you can read it online for free, but starting prices are pretty low on amazon.co.uk - see here
... in fact I'd rather own a copy.
Ah, well, they can't deliver to my address. But I do sincerely thank you both anyway.
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You may be uninterested now that you can read it online for free, but starting prices are pretty low on amazon.co.uk - see here
Thanks. I don't seem to be able to read it online after all, and in fact I'd rather own a copy.
eGullet to the rescue again!
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Oh. My. God. Yes! That's it! Thank you so much - you are AWESOME! I haven't figured out how to read it yet online, but I'm working on it.
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Ooh, it's hard to decide! I've been in this small kitchen for 13 years now, and I've had to think long and hard about what could stay and what had to go. Then over the last couple of years all of the original appliances (ALL of them) died out and were replaced by what I really wanted, so now I'm very happy with the whole kitchen. I love the new dishwasher, range, refrigerator, and microwave; I love the new coffee/tea maker and the new water fizzer; I am deeply attached to both my stand mixer and my food processor and all of my good knives, cookware, etc., but I have to say that the most beloved item in the room has got to be the small but extremely useful wall-mounted pot rack that takes up very little room but which is LOADED with stuff and which frees up so much cabinet space. It's practical and I just like the looks of it. It's hung over a matching baker's rack which I use to house a (small) part of my cookbook collection. I'll try to remember to photograph it tonight.
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Sadly, no. I was just trying to find How to Cook and Eat in Chinese, by Buwei Yang Chao, having read about it in Jason Epstein's Eating. No luck. There's a used one on Amazon for over $1,000, though!
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I just finished Eating by Jason Epstein. Lovely - read it in one sitting.
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There was an excellent article in the "New York Times" about six months or so back about a new star being groomed for the Food Network. Some well-connected, young and thin female, about as far from Emeril as you could find on Earth.
Katie Lee? http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/magazine/14Lee-t.html?pagewanted=all
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I hate this practice. I have had things go wrong many times - once the server even argued with me, insisting that I didn't order X, I ordered Y, and that she remembered it clearly!
I can't remember what X and Y were, but I know that I would never have ordered Y.
Never went back to that restaurant, either.
I think it's just mean for managers to expect servers to have total recall.
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Two more recently: Pig: King of the Southern Table by James Villas and Pork and Sons by Stephane Reynaud. Love 'em both.
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Okra or Brussels sprouts. I keep trying them both, in different recipes, and I keep not liking them, despite how everyone tells me how delicious they are if cooked right. Really, I think that if you have to disguise a food to make it palatable, you might as well just not eat it. And okra and Brussels sprouts are just not palatable to me.
I feel much better now!
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I am reading Bill Bryson's "At Home." It's a vast collection of facts and mini-history lessons, not the kind of book you (or I, anyway) can really read straight through, but I think that the chapters on "The Kitchen," "The Scullery and Larder," and "The Dining Room" would interest most eGulleteers.
Hot Coffee with a Straw?!?
in Coffee & Tea
Posted
My mom does that. She says it keeps her teeth from being stained.