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Shel_B

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Posts posted by Shel_B

  1. I may have mentioned this before. If you're looking for a canned tuna for sandwiches, simple quick meals or for additions to certain cooked dishes, give Trader Joe's a look. They have several varieties, all without added junk, and, if you don't like it, retrn it for a store credit or your money back, no questions asked. It ain't great tuna, but it's a LOT better than the junk we've been talking about.

  2. So far the best price for Ortiz that I can find is at Berkeley Bowl, and they are pretty reliable about keeping it in stock. They sell smaller cans of Ortiz and it is cheaper by the pound that way than buying a jar or large can at, say, the Pasta Shop. Still not cheap, but presumably because it is bonito--and therefore a smaller type of tuna--it has less mercury. Your cat must be awfully picky. I'm sure the fresh fish counter at the Bowl has something he will like.

    I've found that BB has pretty good prices for the tuna, as well as many other items. Stay away from Andronico's if you want to keep your paycheck <LOL>

    I don't give Buddy fish very often, just when I'm having some and then he only gets a little taste. His preference is salmon, and he goes nuts for the salmon juice. His tongue is laping the lquid so fast that it's just a blur ...

  3. I often buy Ortiz and one or two other higher quality canned tuna, but that gets expensive for some dishes and ocassions for which I want to use tuna. It's been a while since I purchased from the Starkist/Chick O' Sea/Bumble Bee triumverate, and I never will again. Even 59-cents is too much for 5 ounces of garbage.

  4. Mezz's Lokshen Kugel

    1 stick butter, melted

    1 pound broad egg noodles, cooked

    3 cups (1.5 pounds) cottage cheese

    3 cups sour cream

    6 eggs, lightly beaten

    1 cup (or more if you like) granulated sugar

    1/2 cup raisins

    1‑1/2 cups plain bread crumbs (dry)

    1 teaspoon cinnamon (I use Vietnamese from Penzey's)

    2‑3 tablespoons brown sugar

    Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Use some of the butter to grease a 3‑quart baking dish.

    In a large bowl combine the cottage cheese, sour cream, eggs, sugar, and raisins. Mix well. Add the drained noodles and mix well. Turn the mixture into the buttered baking dish.

    Combine the bread crumbs with all but 2 tablespoons of the remaining melted butter, the cinnamon, and the brown sugar. Cover the top of the pudding with this mixture and drizzle the rest of the butter over the top. Bake the kugel for about 1 hour, until the top is nicely browned and the kugel is bubbling. Makes 10‑12 servings.

  5. Hi, I have about fifteen kugel recipes, so, if you give me some idea of the ingredients you like, or dislike, I could probably find one or two for you.

    Margaret Fox, former owner of the well-regarded Cafe Beaujolais in Mendocino, CA, used her Grandma Ida’s Noodle Kugel recipe at the restaurant. Let's start with that one, and go from there ...

    For Kugel

    1 - 12oz pkg of wide noodles, cooked and drained

    16-oz sour cream, and a little more maybe for dollops

    16-oz cottage cheese

    ¼ - ½ tsp kosher salt

    1 cup raisins

    6 eggs, beaten

    grated peel of one lemon

    1/3 cup sugar

    For topping

    2 cups bread crumbs 1/4 cup unsalted butter

    3 Tbs sugar

    1 tsp cinnamon

    Put the noodles in a large bowl, add all the other kugel ingredients, mix well. Adjust sugar to your own taste. Put everything in a 9x13 inch baking dish, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate over night.

    About 1 ½ hours before serving, brown bread crumbs in frying pan with butter for about ten minutes, stirring frequently. Add sugar and cinnamon to bread crumbs and then sprinkle the topping over the kugel. Bake for about an hour @ 350-degrees F.

    Take out of oven, let stand 15-minutes or so before serving. Add a dollop of sour cream if you so desire.

  6. A couple of days ago I bought some Bumble Bee brand chunk light canned tuna, and several days before my GF bought the Chicken O' The Sea equivalent. Wedon't usually buy this product, but a couple of stores had a super sale on the products and we decided to give 'em a try.

    So, the tuna (both packed in water) contained soy! WTF ... Soy in a can of tuna fish?! Why?

    Further, every can we've opened thus far has not contained chunks of tuna, but, rather, flakes. And all were watery, containing about 1/3 the can volume of liquid.

    The taste was insipid, if that. The flavor was dull, the smell musty, and, overall, the product was completely unappetizing.

    Oh, yeah, the cans only contained 5-oz of tuna (and my guess is that some of that was water).

    So what's going on with canned tuna these days? Are all the major brands similar? We sometimes buy Trader Joe's canned tuna, and the difference is substantial, with TJ's containing no soy, substantially less water, chunks (and firmess) that is lacking in the major brands, and better flavor and aroma.

    As a parenthetical aside, my cat wouldn't even eat the Bumble Bee.

  7. I see so many people's ovens now that I cook in their houses. That bottom drawer is always stacked with pyrex and sheet pans. From the name of the thread I thought you were talking about storring directly IN the oven. I've made it a habit to check their oven for random stuff now before I turn it on. Especially the younger clients :wink:

    My mom stored all sorts of things directly in the oven, and, I must shamefully admit, when guests arde coming by and I need to straighten up quickly, the oven is a great place to quickly stash a few items. So is the dishwasher, BTW <LOL>

  8. ... Also, some beans, like kidney beans, are canned with sugar and have a distinctly sweet flavor

    Perhaps you're painting a generalization with too broad a brush. There are brands of beans packed without sugar, such as Eden organics, and I believe Trader Joe's have no sugar as well. There are only a few brands that I buy, and to the best of my recollection, none contain sugar.

    I'd like to mention that, here in Phoenix, many ethnic markets, most notably the Hispanic ones, carry fresh raw garbanzo beans in the pod. They just get popped out of the pod and cooked briefly. They are green in color and very tasty with more of a green vegetable flavor to them.

    A couple of years ago I discovered fresh, raw garbanzos. They're sold in the various farmers' markets here in the San Francisco Bay Area, and they sure are a treat. Highly recommended - great in salads.

  9. Could there have been too much fat, even in the 'lite' coconut milk for the gelatin to dissolve easily?

    Based on some articles I read since posting the question, it's possible that there was too much fat in the coconut milk or that I didn't let the gelatine sit long enough on the coconut milk. It's also possible that I did not use a wide enough diameter container for the liquid thereby not getting enough of the gelatine moist. I used a different cup for the liquid this time, and the diameter was about 1/3 that of the vessel I usually use.

  10. I don't know, but I've made the coconut marshmallows from Talanian's book which blooms the gelatin in lite coconut milk, and they turned out great. For marshmallows, I've folded the gelatin into the bloom, especially when its thicker like coconut milk or puree, just to be sure it blooms before adding the heated liquid, otherwise it does just sit on top. How much coconut milk did you use for the bloom? For the marshmallow recipe it's 2/3 c for 4TB gelatin.

    I used one packet of gelatine to a half cup of liquid.

  11. My gas stove has a drawer at the bottom, beneath the oven heating element. I was wondering how safe it would be to store a few items in that drawer. I was thinking about some skillets, baking trays, and so on. It would seem that those items would not suffer from any heat produced by the oven. However, there are also some Tupperware type storage containers that I'd like to find a home for, and if they's be safe in the drawer, it would go a long way to freeing up some needed space in the cabinets and on the shelves. So, how might such items fare in that environment?

  12. I tried two types that I picked up at TJ's, one of which was basil and I don't recall the other- m aybe parsley?

    I was not satisfied with the flavors, but that's part of the price one pays for convenience. It's up to the individual to determine the degree of compromise that's acceptable.

  13. I bought one because the arthritis in my right hand has gotten so bad that I have difficulty doing repetitive knife work.

    Not everyone is capable of learning knife skills that will allow them to chop onions (or anything else) rapidly. This is a handy (and safe) gadget for those that have disabilities or who are not well coordinated. They work and do the job quickly and neatly. I think they are worth the money.

    I'm a senior citizen, and so is my lady friend. She raised a family of six, and for fifty years she cooked three meals a day for her family. She's 82 years old and she deserves a break.

    Well, once a year she makes a huge amount of goulash for her kids' birthday. Last year she asked me to help her dice 8-lbs of onions for the dish. Although I was willing to help, her daughter, for whom she was making the goulash, offered us the loan of her Vidalia Chop Wizard. My initial reaction was to dismiss the Wizard as just another goofy kitchen gadget, and, in a way it is. However, after using it to quickly dice 8-lbs of onions, I liked that goofy gadget quite a bit, and let the daughter know how much I liked it. She bought me one of my very own for Christmas last year.

    Now, the Chop Wizard sits in the cabinet all year. There's little or no need to use it for an onion or two, or the more typical daily kitchen jobs. But come December, when it's the kids' birthday, that Wizared makes an appearance. Today is the party, and a couple of days ago I diced 8-lbs of onions, including peeling them, in about 30-minutes.

    The Wizard ain't high tech. it has no high quality engineering, and is not endorsed by any Food Network star. It's even cheaply made, and I have no thoughts of handing it down to my great grandchildren. But, it does the job quickly and efficiently. And it goes into the dishwasher, too.

    So, when you get to the point in life when your hands hurt, or your back gives you pain, and standing for long periods of time doing repetitive tasks at the kitchen counter is the last thing you want to be doing, think about that cheap little plastic gadget as a possible solution.

  14. Last night I made a panna cotta and used, for the first time, coconut milk as an ingredient. I tried to dissolve the gelatine in the coconut milk, but the results were poor. The (powdered) gelatine just sat atop the milk and didn't soften, and when mixed into the milk and warm cream mixture, endend up with a number of lumps and clumps. Is gelatine and coconut milk somehow incompatible? BTW, I used a light coconut milk. Might I have had better results with regular coconut milk by using the thinner, watery portion to dissolve the gelatine and adding the thicker cream later? Thanks!

  15. I have heard that there are two or three methods for attaching the disks to the bottom of pans. Does anyone know how the disks are attached and whichof the methods may be "better?" Is it possible for the disks to separated or detach from the pan under severe use or abuse? Thanks!

  16. Pain Pascal - Oraganic Demi Miche: I needed some bread to make croutons and this new product caught my eye. It made some lovely flavorful XL croutons, tossed with a bit of olive oil and seasoning and baked at 350. I made a big batch for a function and went back today to get another demi loaf to make more - great tossed into the seasonal tomato and other fresh salads. The ingredient list is organic whole wheat flour and sea salt. It is $2.99 for the half loaf - only way they sell it. The sign says you can bake it further to crisp it up. I must admit to being so enamored of using it for croutons that I have not explored it in other uses. Anyone else try this?

    Since I read this post several months ago, I've been geting the bread regularly. It's one of my favories. As it happens, one of the local senior centers that I fraequent has a del with several bread producers and sellers to get their day old and close to expiration bread, and it's passed along to us for free. So, since I almost always end up freezing bread as I cannot eat an entire loaf before it starts to go bad, this is a great deal.

    I love toasting it in the oven.

  17. I have one piece of enameled cast iron but it's not Le Creuset. It's actually a Martha Stewart brand piece from KMart.

    It would be interesting to see how well it holds up. Over the past few years there have been many reports of poor quality for enameled cast iron made in China. With that information in mind, and the good results I had with earlier LC, my latest "Dutch oven" purchase was LC. Staub also has a good reputation.

  18. Like others, I'm not a big user of prepared foods. That said, there's usually frozen blueberries, raspberries, sometimes mango chunks or halves in the freezer, as well as some vegetables like spinach, corn, peas, bell pepper pieces, and edamame and lima beans, sometimes green beans, and rarely, broccoli or cauliflower. Most of these are organic or pesticide-free items from Trader Joe.

    I also keep cooked rice in the freezer. I'll make up a large batch of brown rice and put it in a large zip lock bag, layed out flat, and then just break off a chunk whenever it's needed. Rice freezes very well, and since it takes a while to make brown rice, it's very handy to have around.

    And there's always room for leftovers ...

  19. Judy Rodgers mentions using clean cloth napkins to filter stock and other liquids. I tried that technique and had good results. I imagine a t-shirt, or even a clean handkerchief, would work as well.

    FWIW, I don't use laundry detergents with dyes or fragrance.

    However, a coffee filter seems like a good idea for some liquids - others, those that are thicker or filled with solids, seem to clog the coffee filter, and a cloth works better since it can be squeezed to force the liquid through.

  20. In a way this is more an academic question than anything, but curiosity has prompted me to ask. Toots makes a nice pot luck dish (eggs, spinach, corn, the ubiquitous cream of mushroom soup, etc) that we both enjoy for its ease of preparation and flexibility. She prepares it in an 11" x 7" Pyrex dish. I have a Corningware casserole with square dimensions, 8.25" x 8.25" approximately, which is slightly deeper than her Pyrex. The overall volume of the two dishes is about the same. Given similar volumes, how do the dimensions effect cooking time? Are there situations where dimensions are more critical than others? And what about shape, such as round v square, assuming similar volume? Just curious ... Thanks!

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