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haresfur

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Everything posted by haresfur

  1. Someone on here (@andiesenji?) has a whole hedge. I wouldn't worry about them getting too big. They sucker so just chop off anything that gets too big. They also grow slowly, at least to start - took forever to get mine big enough to plant in the ground. A wattle fell over and took most of mine out a few years ago but I'm back to way more than I need.
  2. I have a tree or a tree with enough suckers that it looks like a bush and I'd say don't worry about it if you can get dried that aren't turned to a stale crisp. I think the flavour actually changes a bit when dried. I use both but mostly fresh just because I have them.
  3. Semi-dried tomatoes. Here they are before, sorry no after because I was distracted. My Roma plants are being a challenge with a huge excess of leaves so that the tomatoes range from rotting on the ground to little green ones and everything in between with the ripe ones nearly inaccessible. Guess I can't complain because they are volunteers and seem immune from the brown leaf stuff that attacks my other plants. So I took off anything that seemed remotely ripe or ripening and quite a few green ones on branches that came off in the process. Out of those I cut the ripest in half and scooped out pith and seeds and dried in the oven. The main recipe I followed had too high a temperature, 110 C and I dropped it to 70 C after a couple of hours. The advice on storage was all over the place, with most recommending storing in oil in the fridge or freezer. I followed one suggestion to dip in vinegar (I used cider vinegar) to reduce the pH then store in oil in the fridge. I'll try to use them up in month anyway. With luck the olive oil will pick up a bit of the flavour.
  4. This is interesting information about how the name morphed in its journey. You could always edit the Wiki
  5. A new one for me is kaya: Coconut jam. Flavoured with pandan and commonly served as kaya toast and eaten with boiled eggs mixed with soy sauce and white pepper. Ya Kun Kaya Toast seems to have stores everywhere so that's breakfast sorted.
  6. haresfur

    Culantro

    Is the slang word in Mexico pronounced with a hard C? If not it seems like an easy mistake to make. I wonder what the herb is called there.
  7. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    Pasta primavera. All the veg except the onion is from my garden
  8. Oh I know that English is an official language and that I don't need to learn anything else to get by. But it is toe into learning about the culture. Just as there are a whole variety of coffee drinks in Australia, I think it will help me to know the kopi drinks in Singapore. I'm trying to memorize kopi siew dai. I don't expect to be able to get a flat white. I'm now regretting not scheduling more that a recovery day between intercontinental flights but it will be a very long trip as it stands. Maybe I'll be able to go back and spend more time.
  9. It fascinates me how these words and phrases can change meaning as they change location. Of course as an outsider I don't know the nuances of "what it originally meant" vs "how it is used in SG now". Or for that matter if the words have the same origin at all. It seems from Wikipedia that its usage in Singapore originates from Singaporean Hokkien not directly from Mandarin.
  10. I am sure I can get by. This was in part inspired by a question from someone who lives there who wanted to improve their chit-chat in the hawker centres (and maybe get a better portion of food). So that brings me to one of the other tips: Most commonly used when ordering "cai fan" aka "economic rice", because most of us don't really know the actual names of the dishes lol, and there are so many of them. zhe ge is 这个 "this" in chinese na ge 那个 is "that" in chinese [another commenter] Same for malay dishes. Sometimes, i just say ini and itu hahahaha this and that too So now I know to look for cai fan
  11. It takes a little longer but my new induction hot plate has low settings that are great for melting butter and chocolate
  12. I am stopping over in Singapore for unfortunately only one night and have been reading up on the food, particularly hawker centres, and how to order it. I'm sure I would be able to get by with English and pointing but I find their crossroads culture fascinating and I always like to learn a tiny bit of the language wherever I go. So it is part practical, part cultural. I realize that I am not getting pronunciation from internet sources but I have started to compile information, that may be interesting to others here, in a text file. What other food-related language in Singapore do you know? Obviously much originated with Chinese, Malay, and other cultures and I would be interested in similarities/differences in the language. Rather than a total dump, here is what I have thus far on coffee and tea. Even more complicated than ordering coffee in Australia or at Starbucks! Kopi (coffee with condensed milk & sugar) Teh (tea with condensed milk & sugar) Kopi o (coffee with no condensed milk, still has sugar) Teh o (tea with no condensed milk, still has sugar) Kopi o kosong (coffee with no condensed milk & no sugar) Teh o kosong (tea with no condensed milk & no sugar) Teh c (tea with evaporated milk & sugar) Tak giu (Milo) Diao yu (tea bag in hot water) Ditlo - no water added to your coffee or tea Kosong (no sugar, usually for beverages) Siew dai - less sweet Siew siew dai - less than siew dai (Malay stall usually go with ‘kurang manis’ than ‘siew dai’) Peng (Bing) (beverage with ice, Eg. kopi peng, teh peng) Teh tarik: Pulled tea. It is the national drink of Malaysia (Indian origin)
  13. Maggie was wonderfully inspiring and really made eG great. I miss the Daily Gullet. It must have been a huge undertaking.
  14. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    My first carbonara along with over-large greenbeans from the garden fried with toasted almonds. A friend gifted us this piece of home-cured porky goodness and I cheated and used parmesan instead of pecorino. Whole eggs since the most Italian recipe I found was adminant that you don't need to a dd yolks. I got a bit too much pasta water in but it was still creamy and not curdled so I'll call that a win.
  15. Well-preserved spices found in 500-year-old Gribshunden shipwreck in Baltic Sea off Sweden
  16. Might be really good for North African preserved lemons
  17. Actually you will get incomplete combustion at lower levels when the flame turns yellow. High heat will generally keep the flame blue and oxidizing unless you boil over and get water into the burner
  18. This seems like as good a thread as any. I took one for the team and ordered some duck wings and duck tongue at the Korean takeaway: Not a lot of meat, lots of bones so I understand why the owner said they like to sit around eating these and drinking beer. They were ok but I probably won't be ordering them again.
  19. Those were a lunch staple when I was doing geology in northern Canada. But I would just eat them out of the tin by stabbing them with my sheath-knife. Here they often come in plastic vacuum packs. I think I have one in my fridge.
  20. I believe you don't season tea pots - just use them and over time they become better - especially for unglazed pots. Rinse them out and call it good.
  21. Sorry you broke your special pot, but thank you for supporting potters by doing so
  22. I was at a wedding in California where the bride's uncle told me he was an Amon farmer, then translated, "You would say almond." I told him, "You grow them, you get to decide how to say it." eta: If I remember correctly, he used a hard A
  23. First greenbean harvest. Not sure what has been eating them - only on a few beans. I cut a couple open and didn't see anything moving so only composted the worst ones. The rest had the everloving heck fried out of them with slivered almonds toasted at the tail end.
  24. For sharpening with less fuss, I think the Spyderco Sharpmaker does a decent job. As a bonus I have been using light strokes on the fine rods for honing
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