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Everything posted by blue_dolphin
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I can try that. Seems a lot of in and out of the oven, though.
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Thanks so much for doing this. The group is indeed very friendly and supportive. A lot of people seem to ask for recipes without taking the time to read the instructions on how to search and retrieve them and they always get kind and helpful responses from others. Love the sharing of what people have cooked.
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Scrambled Red Shakshuka and Jerusalem Sesame Bread (K'ak Al Quds) both from Falastin Instead of cracking whole eggs into the sauce, they get scrambled, poured into the sauce, folded gently and cooked covered on the stovetop for 4 min. A nice option vs watching the yolks overcook while waiting for the whites to be done.
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Jerusalem Sesame Bread (K'ak Al Quds) from Falastin. The recipe calls for half bread flour and half all purpose. I used all whole grain bread flour. These are only supposed to have white sesame seeds but I didn't have (or couldn't find) enough so I used half black sesame seeds. Crumb: The recipe makes 6 breads. I baked 4 and froze the other 2 pre-bake as the header notes say they can be baked right from the freezer. I'll also be freezing some of these and reheating in the CSO, which I suspect will be a better choice, but we'll see.
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Yes, that's it. After frying, they're tossed with walnuts, parsley, mint, Aleppo pepper and lemon juice and spooned over the hummus.
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Over in the Air Fryer topic, I recently posted some comments from the Wirecutter's air fryer review where they chose a Cuisinart convection toaster oven as their top option. This is what they had to say about the convection oven vs pod-style air fryer:
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I appreciate your insights as someone who’s used these gadgets and who has a pretty good sense of my cooking style. I think I’ll continue to observe this thread and others while managing my air fryer FOMO 😉 Thank you for the very thoughtful reply!
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Could you say a bit more about things at which the Vortex excels and the Breville fails? I don't have an air fryer. My little CSO surely lacks the wind power of those machines but when I put frozen stuff like onion rings or fish filets on a pizza screen, I get a nice crispy result. What air fryer delights am I missing out on? To get an air fryer, I'd need to get rid of something else so I'd love to know its very best points. Is it worth getting rid of the CSO? Unlikely! My most used appliance Instant pot? Not going nowhere. KitchenAid mixer? Same Paragon induction burner? No way KitchenAid food processor? I don't use it a ton but it can be handy. Would it be worth replacing with an air fryer? Philips indoor grill? Can the air fryer make pretty brown stripes on things? That's the least used of my countertop appliances but I do rather like it. If I could replace the microwave with an air fryer, I'd go for it but they'd have to make one that mounts over the stove where my MW lives.
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Joining the blurring nomenclature, I noticed that in the most recent Wirecutter review of air fryers (annoying paywall, I’m sure) they chose a Cuisinart countertop convection oven as their top pick: They acknowledge the difference between the two sorts of appliances this way: I don’t have an air fryer so I don’t know if they’ve got it right or not. Clearly, there’s a huge price difference between their budget pick Cosori Pro pod fryer @ $85 and a toaster oven that runs close to $300.
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If you are looking for a reply from someone who uses the same cooker, maybe share some more specifics (manufacturer, model or a photo)? There are a lot of older threads here about countertop convection ovens like the Brevilles, some of which include "Air" in the name and claim to function like air fryers but they are not new so you must have something different.
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Grilled pear, gruyere and gorgonzola on sunflower seed sourdough rye Not a bad idea but could be improved.
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My cousin was telling me about her lunch with friends at the Chicago location last week. Not quite as pricy as the NYC menu linked. They enjoyed wandering around the store with their glasses of wine and had good things to say about the food and service. It's one thing to offer a round of drinks in the bar when people are just relaxing and talking but being booted from a table while people are still eating as happened to the NYTimes writer isn't nice.
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That (small spuds, buried in salt) seems to offer more moisture control and seasoning than simply placing (nestling?) a big tater atop a bed of salt. I get the salt would allow more air circulation than directly in a pan. Presumably less circulation than if it were right on a rack. Curious the salt is so crucial.
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I bought a bag of Lucy Glo apples at Trader Joe's today. Two lb bag for $4.99. They are very nice apples. Good sweet/tart balance. Not the crispest apple ever but not at all mealy. The skins are a little tough or chewy. Noticeable but not off-putting for me. I think the apple I just ate is less colorful than the one that @BeeZee shared 2 years ago and I had another one that was even paler so there seems to be some variability. I gather there is a Lucy Rose sibling that's all looks and less flavor. Not sure I'll be looking for them but I'll buy these again if I see them.
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I stopped by a local farm to pick up a few squash this morning. I got a small kabocha, a couple of delicata and a carnival. I think they're all pretty common. I snapped a few photos of several varieties that were less familiar to me. This one is called One Two Many Pumpkin. It's a white pumpkin with colorful veining. Normal pumpkin color on the inside. Red Warty Things. Yes, that's really the name. Goosebumps: Galeasux d'Eysines. I thought this was one of the most unusual, both in name an appearance! Lumina - white on the outside, orange inside Ambercup. I think this one is getting fairly common. Jarahdale. These were quite striking, almost looked like they were glowing. I managed to capture the sign for these but there are some other squashes photo bombing the photo. These were very lumpy and blue. Banana squash. My photo doesn't capture how massive they were. Maybe in comparison to those normal sized acorn squash on the left. Rascal. Fun name Speckled Hound Blue Hubbard Porcelain Doll Cinderella
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Yeah, try it again and definitely ask for an explanation. I've been a member of that Fine Cooking Community group for quite a while and the number of new members seems to be going through the roof lately so I suspect they have to be careful of malicious bots and such. They have a searchable index (though I generally search with Eat Your Books) and PDFs of all the regular issues and many special issues on a Google drive. Finding a recipe is a 2-step process. First search for the recipe, then download the PDF of the issue it’s in. Not as handy as the FC website was but most stuff is there.
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I've been meaning to try that one, though the prune and Armagnac version sounded pretty good, too!
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And I would be delighted with Moe's breakfast any time of the day...maybe with a glass of wine, depending...😉 LGD and eggs are a match made in heaven! The original mash had a lot of scallions - white parts cooked with the potatoes and cauliflower and the greens added later. I would have preferred leeks but using the scallions two ways was a good call. For a cup of mash, I added half an egg, a bit of diced country ham and a handful of grated parm to make four 1/4 cup pancakes. Since the cauliflower made this wetter, some panko would have been a good idea, I just let them cook a bit longer. Today's breakfast sando: thinly sliced and browned leberkaese and a fried egg on toasted sunflower seed sourdough rye with mustard: Unlike some people around here who make their own, I bought a little dolphin-sized leberkaese loaf from the German sausage peeps at my local farmers market.
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I have only heard that vegetable referred to as winter melon. Maybe an American corruption of the name. The link that @ElsieD posted yesterday lists many of the more common winter squashes around these parts, though there are others.
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Yes! In The Greens Cookbook, Deborah Madison's recipe for Winter Squash Soup with Red Chili and Mint also makes a stock with the seeds, skin, fibers and trimmings from the squash along with some aromatics, etc. and I've been using that trick ever since I first made it, either on the stovetop or by making a quick stock in the Instant Pot.
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Yard Sale, Thrift Store, Junk Heap Shopping (Part 3)
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Kitchen Consumer
I started the subscription when I got my first job but quickly realized they were too expensive for my budget. Over the years, I've picked up some in used bookshops and more recently via online used booksellers. My collection currently stands at 20 volumes. -
Yesterday's breakfast was some spiced chickpeas (balilah) from Falastin and pita from Shaya. The chickpeas are delicious. The recipe uses lemon zest, diced lemon pulp, lemon juice and thin slices of lemon plus plenty of parsley and mint, green onion and red onion, toasted and crushed cumin and coriander seeds and Aleppo pepper with olive oil, of course. I'd brought both to a gathering on Thursday evening and these were leftovers. Today I had French toast with a little bourbon maple syrup, breakfast sausage, a sliced persimmon and two mugs of black coffee. The other half of the French toast slice was staying warm in the pan when I took the photo.
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The Kitchen Recycling and Reuse Discussion
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Food Traditions & Culture
Same here. I'm still trying to figure out what works best. I bought a countertop container (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) to collect the food waste in. It would be big enough for a few days worth but even with the lid, I end up with fruit flies pretty quickly so now I'm keeping it (and attendant fruit flies) out on the carport. When it's hot, it gets pretty disgusting by the end of the week. I see people on Nextdoor saying they keep the food waste in their freezer until trash day. No. Sorry. My freezer is packed already and I'm not dedicating a shelf to garbage! I'm thinking I might just as well start composting it myself. Since I don't eat too much meat, I could compost the majority of the food waste. -
I don’t think I’ve used buttercup squash before but I bought one the other day, thinking it was a small kabocha and learning the difference after the fact. I peeled it and roasted in wedges but then read that the peel is edible. It seems less sweet than a lot of winter squashes, which would make it more versatile. Can you say more about your “roast, bag, freeze” process and how you serve it?