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haresfur

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Everything posted by haresfur

  1. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    No photo, but the other day I made a nice vegan stir-fry with soba noodles left over from a previous soup. It was only vegan because I forgot the prawns, though.
  2. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    We see ready to eat "slow cooked" bags of pork shanks in sauce in the store sometimes, but more often lamb shanks because this is Australia. There is a whole section of pre-cooked sous-vide stuff, most of which is ok.
  3. r/chefknives is closed due to reddit stupidity It would be good to post location when asking about purchases. My recommendations in Australia might not help you.
  4. I haven't tried Starbucks' instant coffee but the roaster that supplies my coffee joints makes a surprisingly decent instant called Magic Bogan* Dust. *Bogan: an insulting word for a person whose way of dressing, speaking, and behaving is thought to show their lack of education and low social class** **social class, not economic class. Probably even more derogatory is "Cashed-up Bogan"
  5. One time in DC we went to the local coffee shop near where we were staying and had probably the worst espresso drink of my life. After that it was the Starbucks across the street, where the coffee was consistently average. Can't drink their drip but the espresso is adequate, not up to Melbourne standards and they haven't done well in Australia. Then again, you can get a coffee in the afternoon there and it is a good place to hang out, which isn't really part of our coffee culture. I confess to liking a little darker roast than you usually get here. And green tea frappuccino. No syrup and extra matcha. Guilty pleasure.
  6. I found it worked well in a Negroni and some other drinks. Wouldn't be my first choice for a G&T
  7. I'd consider just planting the tree over top of the rock. Figs can have pretty aggressive roots. The larger varieties can benefit from being a bit root bound so I don't think the rock will do any harm.
  8. Haven't tried those two but am fond of the Sevilla Orange. Tanqueray seems to have the ability to change up gin but still make a tasty product rather than some who seem to come up with an idea and then produce it without worrying about whether it is any good.
  9. Brie And Camembert Just The Cheese Version Of A Latte And Flat White
  10. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    I prefer real spinach but this is much easier to grow. Picking the leaves off the vines is a bit tedious. Topping is sunflower seeds and a sprinkle of paprika. I toasted the seeds this time but they tasted a bit burnt. Of course I used a can of Campbells mushroom soup. What would you call this?
  11. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    Lazy meal of tuna casserole with leftover spaghetti and warrigal greens. The warrigal greens are like spinach (also called New Zealand spinach) but really need to be blanched. I have a large patch of volunteers growing in what should be lawn.
  12. I understand the wheat. I don't understand the crispy.
  13. Sounds like you are saying that the crispy fried wheat noodle, brown sauce (god awful) variety found in North America is an American invention in spite of the interesting linguistic similarities to what you find in China. If I understand correctly, the early Chinese immigrants to N America (California initially and then spread eastward with the building of the railways in the US and Canada) were Cantonese. Perhaps someone can correct me if I am wrong. So I wonder how they would have morphed their soft rice noodles into crispy wheat noodles.
  14. Read that. I wonder why companies think they can expand so rapidly rather than working for steady growth that can weather changes. Of course sales will slow after the initial surge. But maybe they are happy to leave the lenders to hold the bag.
  15. My understanding is the salt is a necessary part of lactobacillus fermentation, not just to block pathogens. you don't want salt, don't do anaerobic fermentation. I don't think anyone can give you the minimum amount because there are so many variables in how the fermentation occurs and what nasties might be introduced before sealing in the fermentation vessel. If someone uses a very low amount of salt and lives, that doesn't mean you will. The standard is 2-3% salt by weight - but look it up - don't trust me. There are lots of resources on line. That isn't terribly much and my sauerkraut tastes fine to me. You can always rinse it off before eating. There are also resources for how to recognise relatively benign stuff like kahm yeast from mold. My advice is to try following a recipe before mucking with it. Hope this helps.
  16. I'd say double or triple for teenagers and for any very active people
  17. haresfur

    Dinner 2023

    Spargle and boiled potatoes with melted butter and a kölsch to wash it down. Thanks for the suggestion @Duvel!
  18. Modernist Cuisine At Home has a "Fat-Free" [nearly] Mac and Cheese that is worth making once anyway. I say that because it uses an insane amount of cheese (550 g) to cook 180 g dry macaroni. Basically you sous vide the cheese with 500 ml water at 80 C for 30 min which extracts the cheese flavour into the water and then cook the macaroni in the water. They add sugar, salt, and cauliflower puree, too. I wonder if there are other water soluble flavours that could be extracted this way, too? Smoked salmon? Olive oil?
  19. Stovetop Mac and Cheese is popular, too. I was never much of a fan until my partner started making some that is pretty nice. Different texture but not as weird as modernist imo
  20. I'm not super fond of the texture of this but it is a cool way to work with different cheeses. Still make it occasionally.
  21. If I'm going to remove the pith, might as well remove the seeds too. I do remove the stuff to manage heat sometimes.
  22. When people roll out the argument that it must be parmi because of "Parmigiano-Reggiano" I roll out the "in the style of Parma" argument. Mostly just to tweak them, I don't really care. But this leads to a discussion on whether it does or doesn't have anything to do with the cheese made in the style of Parma. I started doubting myself that an Australian Parma/i doesn't use Parmigiano cheese. From this topic, it often does not. However, I've seen people advocate Parmigiano in the breading or mixed with the mozzarella. In the interest of science I added Parmigiano to the mozzarella for my parma tonight. Have to say it was pretty nice (although I didn't have any ham in the house, Parma or otherwise). It may be a keeper.
  23. Freezing chilies works pretty well if you are going to cook with them. Pickling is good too. Or you can lacto-ferment them for hot sauce. You can also take jalapeños and stuff them with cream cheese, goat cheese or whatever, batter them and fry in oil. Good with beer. That would use up a fair number of them.
  24. There are ways to keep roux-based mac and cheese creamy. The most important ones imo are to keep the sauce from being too hot when mixing in the cheese and using mustard as an emulsifier. I use Dijon for the flavour but others use Coleman's powder. The trick to dispersing the mustard in the sauce is to add it to the roux before you add the milk. Lobster and cheese sounds good to me.
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