
Katie Meadow
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Everything posted by Katie Meadow
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May recovery be smooth. So far, 2024 has not been a walk in the park.
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The perfect medicine: Hot and Sour Soup. Or, if you happen to get a cold in New Mexico, Green Chile Stew. Luosifen hasn't made it to Northern California yet. I don't know about river snails, but our garden variety land snails seem to be fighting a losing battle. They are going the way of the dodo, at least in our neck of the woods.
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I have no idea what town it was in.
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Cooking from "Dining In," "Nothing Fancy," and "Sweet Enough" by Alison Roman
Katie Meadow replied to a topic in Cooking
My lemon slices didn't get burned. They didn't get caramelized, either. They just got a teeny bit dried out at the edges but pretty much remained inedible/raw but hot. No idea really how you would get them to caramelize or sweeten up. I assume that's not what Alison intended. -
Cooking from "Dining In," "Nothing Fancy," and "Sweet Enough" by Alison Roman
Katie Meadow replied to a topic in Cooking
I missed this post! And I just wrote a term paper on that tea cake, see above. How funny. I used yogurt mixed with creme fraiche instead of sour cream. And I didn't find the cake needed extra time in the oven. Maybe my oven runs hot, and also I used a dark metal loaf pan. -
Cooking from "Dining In," "Nothing Fancy," and "Sweet Enough" by Alison Roman
Katie Meadow replied to a topic in Cooking
I don't have any of Alison Roman's books, but as @weinoo curmudgeonly notes, lots of her recipes are available in various places. I don't know for sure if her Lemony Turmeric Tea Cake is in one of her books but we baked it the other day and it is fantastic. Since my turmeric was old and probably less flavorful than it might have been, I couldn't really identify the taste of it, but it did make for a great color.(That's the color I want for my iPhone case.) It's more of a quick bread than a cake, baked in a loaf pan. Really really good. Not totally sold on the lemon slices over the top. I think you could use Meyer lemons for the top and caramelize them before adding and baking. They were not terribly edible as instructed. And thanks so much for the beauty secrets link. I'm going to get the Boy Brow right away! I come from a long line of women with insufficient eye brows. The day before my mother died, she requested from her hospital bed that I go back to her apartment to get her eyebrow pencil. She looked good when she expired at 94 years old. -
@Shel_B I save my high fat European butter for fresh bread or buttering toast or crackers. When I bake I just use regular butter. It's cheaper, considering how much butter goes into some bakes, and It has NEVER occurred to me when eating one of my quick breads or cakes: "Oh if only I'd used Irish butter!" Well, maybe if I was making shortbread I would splurge with high fat butter, bur for simple snacking cakes or muffins, no.
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One of my weaknesses. Never seen them at any farmers' market, so I have to go to Oakland Chinatown for my fix. Parking is horrendous, so we don't go very often, only when we really crave char siu or roasted duck or the best fresh pot sticker skins and fresh noodles.
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Living in CA does present some challenges. Getting good maple syrup is one of them. On our first trip together my husband and I went to Vermont and Maine among other northeastern places. In Vermont we went to the Maple Syrup Museum. Does it still exist? They actually had samples for tasting the different grades. Swoonworthy, to say nothing of spoonworthy. I'm assuming the sugar maples are heading north in anticipation of warm Vermont winters.
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Well that's interesting. Real unadulterated grade A is a far cry from this stuff.
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Cooking from "Dining In," "Nothing Fancy," and "Sweet Enough" by Alison Roman
Katie Meadow replied to a topic in Cooking
I love a good pineapple upside down cake but don't make it in a springform. A regular cake pan works and so does a cast iron skillet. Also those maraschino cherries should stay on the supermarket shelf. Fresh pineapple is essential. My only observation of your mosaic is that it isn't enough fruit! I don't think you should be able to see any cake top when the cake is turned out, but I'm sure it was delicious. I think a good one is harder than many recipes make it seem; the amount of caramelization has to be generous, but not enough to make the cake too soggy. -
My husband loves maple syrup but he's also very frugal, so for years we've settled for TJ's brand, since really great stuff from Vermont is valued in gold bars. Then all of a sudden they didn't have it and he purchased something else, admittedly better. When the TJ's syrup returned to the shelves he bought that. Both of us agreed that it was not the same as it used to be. It seemed overly sweet and thin, like watered down. Is it us or is it them? If you have been using TJ's maple syrup have you had a similar experience with the stuff now on their shelves?
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Pineapple vinegar is another mild one that could be used as a sub.
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I never heard of these Korean dogs. But the more I learn about them the more I just want an old-fashioned state fair corn dog. Thanks, but I'll take my mozzarella on a pizza. As for rolling a panko breaded hot dog in sugar, well, the end is nigh.
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In my experience, browning, sweating and caramelizing all require different times. Sweating I think simply means cooking on very low heat until they are very soft without letting them get any color. Caramelization can take up to a half hour on low heat, but the goal is to make them sweet and they will definitely get golden-brown. "Browning" takes the least time of the three and doesn't need to be done on super-low heat. Just my three cents about onions.
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The NYT has a recent recipe for Alemandrados, almond-lemon macaroons. My contribution has always been charoset, but if I were given the dessert task I think I would make them.
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I was kidding! I know you are a storehouse of knowledge and your explanation of Hercules is the only even half plausible one yet, except of course for mine about the lion! I don't blame anyone for making stuff.up. I have a good friend who is also a fount of information, arcane or otherwise, and gets teased about the fact that if she doesn't know the answer she tells you anyway-- ESPECIALLY when it sounds sort of good. .Have you ever played the Dictionary Game? You chose a word from the dictionary that people with you swear they don't know and you write the definition on a piece of paper.. Then everyone writes down what they think is a good definition of the word. The answers get read out loud and everyone tries to guess the real definition. Some people are really great at sounding like their absurd idea is convincing.
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Why not? Because you made that up!
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Yes, the only challenging part to fried saltines is adjusting the heat and getting the saltines the hell out of the pan quickly. When they sit on paper towels after frying they continue to darken. We've tossed a lot of mistakes into the garbage..
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An aperitif with yerba mate? No wonder it wasn't a keeper. Hercules used yerba mate to kill the Nemean Lion. He didn't slay the lion; one taste of tea was enough to make the lion run for the hills.
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That book by Alice Medrich came out a long time ago. I think more recently published books, especially baking books, are aware now that it's important to give weights along with quantities
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I do have a clue about this. You are kinda nutty. A small onion is small. A big one is big. Good morning! My only observation is this: Berkeley Bowl onions are big.
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My reasons for 3/4 of a century of buttered toast for breakfast is simple laziness combined with lack of interest in meat or salad before noon. If someone wants to cook something more ambitious for me I will most likely eat it. The idea of cooking in the morning makes me want to go back to bed. And yes, breakfast is often a problem when we travel. I really like old fashioned B and B's where someone actually feeds you. Going out for breakfast or brunch is not my thing either, at least not on a routine basis. If my husband is willing to bake biscuits or make me french toast I'm a happy camper. I can stay in bed eGulleting like right now, then go down for hot carbs and coffee with steamed milk. The exception is when I'm sick. I want pho for breakfast. That happens very rarely unless I have leftovers in the fridge. My husband would look at me like I was insane if I asked him to go out and get me some soup in the morning. He's much too busy being Queen Bee, doing Two Not Touch or reading the paper.
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Tacos, or perhaps more accurately, filled taco shells and flour tortillas
Katie Meadow replied to a topic in Cooking
Maybe. What I was getting at was the fact that, although there's nothing like a fresh warm flour tortilla, they seem more amenable to being reheated on a comal. In NM I was surprised by how delicate the flour tortillas were. I'm so used to TJ's ones that I had forgotten that style.