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Tri2Cook

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Everything posted by Tri2Cook

  1. Well, that did it. Nothing I eat today is going to taste good because it won't be fluffy peanut butter.
  2. Lucky various folks! That sounds amazing. Anything peanut butter gets my attention and then you went and made it fluffy! I'd love to see a picture... and my next store trip will include buying marshmallow fluff so I can start attempting to mimic it.
  3. Tri2Cook

    KFC 2012–

    I guess that makes three of us.
  4. Peanut Butter Fluff? Fluffy peanut butter? Please say you're willing to provide a little more information on that...
  5. While I greatly prefer cherries over raisins, I'm not looking away from homemade cookies even when raisins are involved.
  6. Don't know if that would work or not. The siphon completely saturates the chocolate with bubbles very quickly which gives you time to chill it before they all collapse. The only reason I was looking for another way at the time was because I sometimes had a hard time getting chargers for my siphon where I live. Of course, since I rarely do it anymore, there's a store in town that keeps them in stock all the time now.
  7. Back when I was doing largish amounts of aerated chocolate for use in plated desserts, I used to think about ways to do it without the siphon and never came up with anything. I haven't done them recently but I'm very interested in seeing if you come up with something that works. It's also incredibly difficult (impossible?) to get the bubbles anything like that picture you linked without putting them in a chamber vacuum sealer and pulling a gentle vacuum to expand the bubbles further. I don't have a chamber sealer and I have no trouble getting results I can live with but they're not as nice and bubbly as that picture.
  8. A tiny amount of cocoa butter such as being discussed here isn't going to stay fluid enough to shake after a few seconds or so in a cool water bath or the fridge.
  9. I thought I was going to be helpful and then it finally dawned on me that you said "At Home" as I was flipping through the Greweling book I have... which is not the "At Home" version.
  10. Me too... and preferably both rolled into one. Even if it needs to be a couple books and cost more, that'd be better than it being milked out with a couple years or more between each. It would be the only Modernist (whatever subject) I'd be tempted to purchase.
  11. I wonder if Modernist Pantry would consider bringing it in. Buying the large bulk packaging of commercial ingredients and repackaging it in smaller quantities is what they do. Even if they wanted a certain amount of pre-orders to consider it worth doing, if it's something difficult to get otherwise, there's no harm in that.
  12. But those are exactly the things that drive you crazy. The easily seen problems everybody would instantly notice are generally easily fixed.
  13. Guess I need to take a picture before mine is gone. I ate it with potatoes and cabbage Saturday and again on Sunday. Ate it last night and tonight sliced thin, steamed a bit and piled in a toasted, buttered everything bagel with horseradish mustard but I think I can convince myself to eat it again... strictly for the photo opportunity, of course.
  14. Adorable isn't a commonly used word in my vocabulary but... I agree.
  15. That's exactly why I do a 5% brine. Comes out of the sous vide bag not overly salty with no presoaking necessary. I'm considering trying a 3% brine just for comparison purposes but I've been happy with the 5%. Of course, I realize most of the discussion here is revolving around commercial corned beef and varying the salt level of the brine isn't an option.
  16. It's really them. I still follow their blog, they've been posting about it for quite a while now. Every now and then, they do a post about their latest flavor creation or some special thing they're going to do there. I believe there's even been a shared recipe or two but I could be thinking of something else. I'd have to look back through the posts to be sure about the recipe thing.
  17. Dredging this from the depths to ask a question (completely overlooking the fact that this is from over 8 years ago and you may not even use this anymore). When you do fruit flavors with this, do you just add puree? If so, is getting enough in the mix for good flavor difficult without getting it too thin?
  18. The Love Bunnies have arrived! I started mine but I only have 2 of that mold so I have to do them in batches. I've had those molds for almost 3 years now, I've used them, taken pictures of the results, looked at your pictures when you do them every year... and this is the very first time I've noticed that the bunny in the driver's seat has a tight grip on the other bunny's ears.
  19. I wasn't actually suggesting it was easy to make, I was thinking more that she definitely has the skillset to do it. But I agree with you that, for the most part, very little of the fancy food and pastry stuff is as difficult as the end result suggests once you break it down into components.
  20. Last minute plan change. Decided I didn't want the bread and I'm not really feeling the more traditional treatment of the potatoes. So I did my own eGulletized version of the Cracker Barrel hash brown casserole... no convenience products (unless we want to go to the extreme definition, I did not make my own sour cream or cheese) involved. Diced the spuds and steamed them. Made a cheese sauce that I combined with sour cream, lots of finely diced onion and a hefty dose of black pepper. Mixed the sauce and the spuds along with additional cheddar cheese, topped it with even more cheddar cheese and it's in the oven now.
  21. I just call those "fries". Anything smaller than a steak fry and larger than those literal potato strings that cook up crunchy (what I think of as "shoestrings") are just "fries" to me. The only differentiation I make in that range is straight or crinkle cut.
  22. When I say "steak fries" I'm thinking longish planks maybe 1/2" or a little less in thickness and roughly double the thickness in width. I think the reason they're at the top of my preference list is a childhood thing. There was a place I walked past on the way home from school at one point in my childhood that sold fish and chips. If I happened to have some money, I'd stop on the way home from school and get an order of the fries. They were served in a cardboard boat. If you wanted, they'd toss some of the crunchy batter crumbs from the fish on top. I always wanted. I'd soak the whole thing with the bottle of malt vinegar they had on the counter and eat them while I walked home.
  23. I agree it's a work of art, I'd strongly question it being beyond your capabilities.
  24. I'm more picky about how they're cooked than how they're cut but steak fries with malt vinegar is a favorite if it's an option. Other than that, I don't really care as long as they're not super-thin crunchy strings. I want some interior fluffy spud with my crispy exterior.
  25. That looks amazingly delicious. Nothing wrong with the paper plate. If you can't eat a sandwich on a paper plate, why do paper plates even exist? Honestly, my desire to not spend money on paper plates winning over my desire to not wash dishes is the only reason I don't use them more often.
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