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Everything posted by gfweb
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And at the same time...we have become obsessed with potential-but-not-actual conflicts of interest. Getting crazier when anyone cares about what twitter thinks esp an organization that isn't directly dealing with the public.
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I agree with @chromedome I'd thicken it after you reduce it and do that shortly before you serve it.
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I think that pre assembled meals being in stores solves a lot of the problems (losses) with the delivered meals. There is no question in my mind that having to find a recipe and assemble the fixings is a big barrier for beginners. This might make the concept financially viable.
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Pan frying to 145f might be different. It might be well dried out and not wet the crust. I airfried to 130 ...still very juicy and crust-wetting. But I wonder about pan frying to 145 anyway. The edges have to be way overcooked to get 145 in the center.
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Fooling around with breaded pork tenderloin thickness... The ideal thickness is 1/4 inch at most. Any thicker and the juices will make the breading soggy on the plate. Perhaps you could cook it past MR and avoid this issue.
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How can Bittman's shrimp not be over-cooked? Will he have an IP recipe for flounder next and claim it's perfect ? Am I all wrong here?
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I use the magnets from the back of name tags at meetings. Amazingly strong for such a light usage.
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True. But that's a complex mixture that has its own emulsifiers built in by the cow. Need to look it up but I think there are phospholipids in milk and certainly some amphipathic milk proteins
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@Alex please don't act in haste. This exchange was very out of character for eG. It is a pretty collegial place 99.8 percent of the time. Wasn't always, as we both know too well
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You need an emulsifier to keep the pesto together if there's an aqueous phase (from your post I'm not sure there is ) There's lists of food grade emulsifiers that sound like chemicals, but are just derivatives of fat. I believe more food sounding things like tartaric acid or phospholipids e.g. Lecithin will do it too. Not sure if xanthan works in a purely oil liquid.
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@heidih I recently had pickled kumquat. Fantastic accent to a kampachi dish. They were thin slices of what looked to be grape tomato-sized fruit. I would pickle some asap
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There's something to your idea. But I'd not couch it as a fast way to get eating over with...at least not here. But if you propose a microwaveable premade meal that doesn't suck...so one could eat well at work...and avoid all the crap we usually eat at lunch...that's different and worthwhile.
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Lab equipment is highly marked up too. Paid for with govt grants in large part. When I was in that life I couldn't believe what AH Thomas charged for common stuff with a scientific use. ..e.g. A binder clip that cost 0.05 in a stationary store was $5.00when renamed "chromatography clip"
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Fooling around with chicken skin stuffed with a sausage-like mix. 375F 20 min in the BSOa The result was crispy and firm enough to take several bites through without it falling apart. There is something to this I think. Now if I only had more chicken skin... Before After
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Starting a high profile new restaurant (after closing another)
gfweb replied to a topic in Restaurant Life
Woof! Great review, @gfron1 -
They kinda got left behind.
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I would have said just that. All of it LOL, but now I have a clean fridge door and I like it.
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Ive had a similar bad experience with mussels. Don't trust them
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Our fridge is non magnetic and that delivered us from magnet proliferation. They are in a box somewhere. And things look neater. The only magnetic surface is the stove backsplash. Four timers and a church key live there. I glued superstrong magnets to replace the junk that they came with. The magnets came from new-fangled name tags that I get at meetings and are great. I can pound th timer and it doesn't fall off.
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Chocolate fountains are kinda gross, to me. Mostly oil aren't they?
