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FauxPas

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  1. Host's note: this post and the first several responses were split from the Freezer Friendly Meals for My Grandpa topic. Some refer back to that topic. We are redoing our kitchen plus repainting the whole house, new flooring. We just had a sheetmetal team creating ductwork throughout the house to support a whole-house heat pump. We also have just started installing irrigation on the yard and have a landscaper cleaning up and redoing beds and plantings. This house was a decent buy, but we knew it would need work. Things are a bit crazy and the next thing is having the existing kitchen ripped out. We will be without a kitchen for up to 3 weeks. We had a laundry room with a sink in our last house when we redid the kitchen, but nothing like that here, so we will be washing dishes in the bathtub, which I absolutely despise. We may have access to our induction range but the microwave and toaster oven are going to be our mainstay. I was not well prepared during the last reno and I don't want to repeat that. So I've started making freezer meals that i know can be reheated easily. We have an upright freezer in our garage. Today I made a Mexican chicken with Spanish rice and beans dish. This will freeze and can be reheated in M/W. The containers can be reused or recycled. If necessary, we'll wash them out on the deck. Here's an example, it's a Mexican chicken dish (chicken thighs with peppers and onions in a tomato sauce), Spanish rice and some mixed pinto and kidney beans. I want easy because it turns out my husband is scheduled for minor surgery in the middle of this mess and am looking for any suggestions. I can do meatloaf, chili, meatballs, etc but am interested in other things. I should definitely do some soups.
  2. @Smithy, I decided to try your travel partner's one true roast pork shoulder recipe. 🙂 For some reason, I never did any cooking with onion soup mixes before, but did try rubbing some on to a pork loin roast recently and it was pretty good. So this time, I followed the suggestion to use the diced potatoes underneath a pork shoulder roast. It was good! Though my roast may not have had enough of a fat layer on it, as some of the potatoes were a tad dry. It was all still very good though and we enjoyed it. So thanks to you two! We had a fair amount of leftovers from this meal and since we are renovating our kitchen early next month, I froze some for a quick microwave dinner later on. I have some prep containers with 3 compartments, so did roast, potates and corn in each one. It's the kind of meal my husband loves and I hope it will reheat well, but I wish I had added a bit of gravy to the meat. I guess I can do that before reheating but the whole idea is to avoid cooking and cleaning while we have no countertops and no sink, D/W, etc. Anyway, it was a pretty easy meal to cook and I hope it reheats well from frozen, have you any experience with that?
  3. They have added this correction: Correction: March, 10, 2022 Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this story misstated that the website egullet had closed. It is still in operation.
  4. It seems to be pitched higher than Julia Child herself (but then Julia's voice seemed to go up and down) and was a bit jarring at first, but I think that's mostly because I'm so used to seeing Sarah L in things like Last Tango in Halifax. I don't think I'll have any problems with the voice once I get into the series! 🙂
  5. Ooooh, I love Sarah Lancashire! I think this series will be luscious. 🙂
  6. Yeah, pretty hard to pass up this kind of offer when there are several interesting books included, right? There are a few there that I am pleased to now have in my e-library. Thanks again to @cdhfor letting us know about Humble Bundles! 🙂
  7. Actually, I just noticed that Big Flavors of New Orleans is also included in that Humble Bundle. Here is the complete list, ,copied after I downloaded to my laptop (no easy way to copy and paste the list from the Humble website). A Grandfather's Lessons Open Road Media EPUB 84.2 MB md5 Bake Until Bubbly Open Road Media EPUB 628.3 KB md5 HomeBaking Open Road Media EPUB 30.4 MB md5 Vegan Richa's Indian Kitchen Open Road Media EPUB 62.1 MB md5 Healthy Dish of the Day Weldon Owen EPUB 124.1 MB md5 PDF 87.8 MB md5 Bowl Open Road Media EPUB 49.2 MB md5 Prep School Open Road Media EPUB 46 MB md5 Craft Coffee Open Road Media EPUB 13.5 MB md5 Kevin Belton's Big Flavors of New Orleans Open Road Media EPUB 16 MB md5 The James Beard Cookbook Open Road Media EPUB 2 MB md5 Japanese Farm Food Open Road Media EPUB 44.6 MB md5 Rustic Spanish Open Road Media EPUB 6.4 MB md5 More Fast Food My Way Open Road Media EPUB 55 MB md5 Pasta Night Open Road Media EPUB 4.8 MB md5 La Vie Rustic Open Road Media EPUB 11.5 MB md5 Slow Cooker: The Best Cookbook Ever with More Than 400 Easy-to-Make Recipes Chronicle Books MOBI 4.2 MB md5 EPUB 1.6 MB md5 PDF 42.1 MB md5 The Art of Eating Open Road Media EPUB 2.2 MB md5 Cooking at Home Open Road Media EPUB 6.1 MB md5 Grandbaby Cakes Open Road Media EPUB 70.1 MB md5 Vegan Reset Open Road Media EPUB 55.3 MB md5 Soup of the Day Weldon Owen EPUB 20.9 MB md5 PDF 245.3 MB md5 Elegant Pie Open Road Media EPUB 106.1 MB md5 Smoke & Pickles Open Road Media EPUB 19.2 MB md5 Sunday Casseroles Open Road Media EPUB 6.9 MB md5 Vegan Richa's Everyday Kitchen Open Road Media EPUB 280.9 MB md5 James Beard's Theory and Practice of Good Cooking Open Road Media EPUB 7.2 MB md5 Saveur: The New Classics Cookbook Open Road Media EPUB 4.3 MB md5 Sheet Pan Open Road Media EPUB 13.6 MB md5 Mamushka Open Road Media EPUB 11.5 MB md5 Recipes from Around Our Family Table Open Road Media EPUB 11.3 MB md5
  8. There's also another Humble Bundle (the ones that @cdhintroduced us to) which includes Mamushka along with 29 other cookbooks for a price of $22.88 (or more, if you wish). You can also get Mamushka and 12 other books for $12.70. https://www.humblebundle.com/books/creative-cooking-open-road-media-books?hmb_source=&hmb_medium=product_tile&hmb_campaign=mosaic_section_1_layout_index_3_layout_type_threes_tile_index_1_c_creativecookingopenroadmedia_bookbundle# Edited to add: I'm still trying to figure the Humble site out. I think those prices are Canadian, so maybe even less for US purchasers?
  9. Yes, like @ElsieD, I think of coffee cake as a basic cake with a cinnamon-sugar layer and a streusel topping with more cinnamon and sugar in it! Lots of cinnamon flavour, a little bit sweet. But enough butter in the batter to make it luscious. I like some nuts in the topping as well. I've made this Classic Coffee Cake from Simply Recipes a couple of times and I think it's pretty close to the average recipe.
  10. One of the local farmers delights in telling this one at the weekly Market:
  11. Oooh, I've been to that observatory a couple of times, we used to live not far from there! The road up Mt Hopkins made me quite nervous, it's not very wide at all in spots. The connection between that and beans is that tepary beans are grown in the region near the Observatory. The Tohono O'odham grow them and that's where I used to buy them from, though I see Rancho Gordo also sells them. I wonder where RG purchases from, does anyone know?
  12. It's a great program, isn't it? Nice way to manage e-books. And these Humble bundle books are said to be DRM-free (Digital Rights Management), which means that Calibre could easily convert between the different formats. 🙂
  13. Google Books uses the EPUB format. (So does the Kobo e-reader sold in Canada, which I think also reads PDF files directly.) Kindle can read PDF but you have to send the books to your Kindle's email id. It's not hard to do but it will take a few steps: https://goodereader.com/blog/kindle/here-is-how-you-can-read-pdf-files-on-the-amazon-kindle You can also use the e-reader program called Calibre to convert in some cases but that also takes a bit of work to get things set up. https://calibre-ebook.com/
  14. I think you want the MOBI file format for Kindle.
  15. Sorry @btbyrd, I understand your point. I guess I would add that methane leaks do happen at all stages of gas extraction, storage and transportation as well as in home usage. And yeah, CO2 is going to be sticking around for a very long time so its effects get compounded. My badly worded post is just trying to say that a gazillion homes using natural gas are definitely worsening an already critical situation.
  16. Instead of natural gas, we should just call it methane, because that's the main component and even if much of it is being vented from the home, it's still going into the atmosphere. And I think we all know the effects of methane on planetary warming and the very real problems that is causing.
  17. ...or other kitchen or household items, just like this Irish woman! She's dressing as some item each day in January. https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/as-it-happens-monday-edition-1.6325537/this-irish-woman-is-dressing-as-a-household-item-every-day-for-a-month-1.6325739 Her Instagram has even more awesome outfits. My faves are the Kerrygold Butter and the Guinness, I think. I love her sense of fun, also her quirky wardrobe. Next month (February), she will be dressing as items from other people's households. So feel free to submit requests! 🙂 I was thinking Cholula sauce might be fun, but maybe too easy?
  18. Yes! I really liked the Trader Joe's halibut fillets for this. Used to keep some in the freezer pretty much all the time. A little pricier than some other fish perhaps, but we liked them a lot.
  19. Canada's supply management system for poultry does mean higher prices for consumers in general. But I also think ordinary supermarket chicken in Canada is definitely superior to the ordinary supermarket chicken found in many parts of the US. We don't have much for high-end products here because the basic product is already pretty good. Air-chilling seems to be the norm, I don't think I ever see added broth, sodium, etc on a fresh product. Wings are mostly pre-cut, divided into drumettes and wingettes. So yes, the average product is pricier but it's pretty good quality. (And I did have a hard time finding fresh wings when we were in Arizona. I used to go to a butcher in Tucson, but their wings were ginormous, too big really.) Still (and while Vancouver Island is generally considered to be a fairly pricey place to shop) the prices you quote on grocery items often seem quite high to me. I can get a local (BC farm) whole chicken for $4.34 kg right now here in town. Granted, that's a sale price, so I have to shop around to find those kind of prices. Another local grocery is closer to the price you quoted. But I only buy fresh whole chicken on sale, given I can get a whole rotisserie chicken at Costco for $5.99. 🙂
  20. I hear ya! It's been a while but I remember it as being painful. 🙂
  21. I'm pretty sure you are right about only the salted version being available in grocery stores. BC does also have private liquor stores and I wonder if the Richmond stores carry more Asian products. Check the BC liquor store link though. It shows the amount of stock availability in each of the stores and even places like Vanderhoof, Dawson Creek and Queen Charlotte City on Haida Gwai show it as being in stock. From my (admittedly limited) previous experience, I've found the stock searches on the website to be fairly accurate.
  22. For a lot of Chinese products, depending on where in greater Vancouver I was living/working, I would go to Richmond stores before I would go to Chinatown. That's where the largest group of ethnic Chinese are located. Richmond is almost 75% Asian and 55% ethnic Chinese. I think it's the largest ethnic Chinese community in North America. Here's a cooking wine search for T&T supermarket in Richmond, I think these might be salted wines listed as Shaohsing or Shaoxing, though. It may be that only liquor stores can carry the non-salted wines. But they have 3 stores in Richmond. https://www.tntsupermarket.com/catalogsearch/result/?q=cooking+wine
  23. Did you search the BC Liquor Store website? I see two Shaoxing wines, each available at over 40 stores. The 3 stores closest to you don't have it but there might be others not too far away? Or you can ask a local store to bring it in for you from another location, they used to do that and it could be quite fast. https://www.bcliquorstores.com/product-catalogue?search=shaoxing wine&sort=_score:desc&page=1
  24. Sorry, I'm really not sure. As I said, I've never done them. Do you think the time would need to change much between fresh and smoked? Maybe someone else can give better guidance on that. 🙂
  25. I've never cooked them, but I found a couple of suggestions that said you can cook the frozen ones. Set the IP for about 45 to 50 mins and give it another 10 to 20 mins before releasing. https://www.ehow.com/how_5016098_cook-ham-hocks-pressure-cooker.html And on reddit, one user asked and another replied:
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