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KennethT

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Everything posted by KennethT

  1. This assumes that one already has a BBQ sauce that they really like... can you share your favorites?
  2. How about something like Pok Pok's Vietnamese Fish Sauce wings? Ricker built a restaurant on them!
  3. KennethT

    Lunch 2020

    Fringe benefits of having your spouse work in the wine industry. This lovely single vineyard Barolo (that was sent to us for free) was perfect with some fettucine with porcini mushroom sauce. Sure, her job barely pays anything, but it comes with a lot of perks. The porcini were dried grade B - which means they were medium sized broken pieces, but they're much more affordable than the A grade.
  4. I wasn't planning on any gardening until I moved into our new apartment, but it seems like that won't be happening for quite a while. Our new building is currently not allowing renovations or workpeople in the building and I imagine that is going to last for at least 1-2 months. Then I've got probably about 2months of renovations. So, since I won't be going anywhere for a while, I figured now would be a good time to start up my indoor garden again... so far planned: herbs like cilantro, mint, lemongrass, rau ram (vietnamese coriander)...
  5. The issue I have in using gloves rather than sanitizing the cart handle is that you use the same gloved hands that touched the cart handle (and is now potentially contaminated) to touch all the items you purchase to put them in the cart. So now the outside of every item you have purchased is potentially contaminated. Nowadays, when I go to the store, I bring an alcohol prep pad (like the kind they use before giving an injection or taking blood) and wipe down the surfaces I am going to touch. That way, my hands (and the items they touch) stay clean.
  6. You beat me to it!
  7. OK - due to an ordering snafu from our online grocer (we use Fresh Direct in addition to going to our local grocery stores) we wound up with 6 sleeves of garlic, each containing 3 heads... that's in addition to the 2 heads I scrounged at the local stores this weekend. I usually use a pretty large amount of garlic - but I don't know what to do with 20 heads of garlic before they go bad and start sprouting. Any ideas??? So far I've come up with fried garlic and the offshoot - garlic oil.
  8. KennethT

    Dinner 2020

    Do you have a deli slicer? Those slices look so even! If not, I am duly impressed by your knife work...
  9. That's why I said "politely ask...." hehehe
  10. @Shelby I feel your pain... so sorry you had to go through that. I was hoping that people in less populated areas would be better than here... evidently that is NOT the case. At the pharmacy, I recommend you channel your inner New Yorker and if someone is standing too close, you need to turn, look them in the eye and politely ask "hey, do you mind backing the eff up?"
  11. I put my thoughts down about this a few pages back... I still feel that way...
  12. In the time of toilet paper shortages, restaurants providing to go and delivery orders are to the rescue! https://www.foodandwine.com/news/toilet-paper-delivery-restaurants-coronavirus?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=social-share-article&utm_content=20200318&fbclid=IwAR1TyXqrRSJtwt0L45uoENx1po25L4ASoq5wDHaD5Zrf0FKBew3Wzz72VNE
  13. Ordering is typically done online, and yes, you can specify whatever you want for tips for the delivery guy.
  14. I don't have data to back this up, but from what I see, I think prepared food delivery would be as safe or safer than eating in an empty restaurant. The same kitchen workers are preparing the food - who, supposedly, have been trained in food safety. But rather than the food being put on an uncovered plate and delivered to your table by a server, it is put into a covered container and put into a bag which is brought by the delivery person. In NYC, they are recommending contact-less delivery, meaning that the delivery person leaves the food at your door and leaves before you open the door. Once you bring the bag into the house, you can handle it in a way that any germs on the outside of the bag don't contact any surfaces in your home and dispose of the bag. The containers as well as the contents within should be clean - or as clean (or cleaner since you have one less person breathing on it) as teh food would have been if dining in the restaurant itself. But in any case, there are always risks to eating food you haven't prepared yourself. Everyone needs to take the precautions they need in order to feel safe. Personally, I'm avoiding eating any prepared food that is uncooked at this time. While the kitchen staff is supposed to wear gloves while handling food that won't be cooked, that doesn't always happen in a busy restaurant, and unless you watch them don a brand new pair of gloves just prior to prepping your order, you have no idea if those gloves have been contaminated by a cough, etc.
  15. Yeah, I definitely could skip the gym this afternoon! Then again, I could skip it most days from the stuff I do at work on an almost daily basis, so this was no big deal. IMO, brown rice should be labeled as not fit for human consumption... I'd much rather have my regular nice jasmine rice (or basmati if I'm making Indian food) and just stir fry some bok choi, or other nice veggie with lots of garlic. That's about as much fiber and vitamins that I can handle... otherwise it would be like that old SNL skit, with Super Colon Blow...
  16. I carried the 20 pound sack home like a baby for 8 blocks while carrying a large bag with the rest of the groceries on my shoulder... Manhattan is not car friendly - or parking friendly at the least...
  17. We don't usually buy rice in such big quantities as we have to schlep it home and have nowhere to store it in a small apt but here it is: 20 pounds... This should last us a month or so...
  18. I haven't read the article, but basically all businesses have to allocate their overhead one way or another. In my manufacturing business, we do it as a multiple of labor hours. So, basically, if a product requires 1 hour of labor, the direct labor cost is 1xDLR (daily labor rate). To get the total costs (not including profit), you add the direct labor, material costs and overhead, which is DLxOHM (direct labor x overhead multiplier). Figuring out this OH is probably the hardest thing to do in business, as you basically have to take all of your fixed costs for the year and divide by how many units you think you'd sell.... For us, the easiest way to do this is by using labor hours - so products that require more labor get more of the OH costs applied to it. Figuring OH using cost of materials is tricky as some items could be very expensive, product wise, but very fast to make. Like a pate de foie gras that you purchase, portion and plate with some accoutrements. Plus, you may not sell that many of them, so you wouldn't be effectively paying for your OH very much that way.
  19. I LOVE mango with sticky rice. It could be my favorite dessert, and usually I'm a chocolate person... BUT - it is extremely dependent on using an awesome mango. I've had decent mangos here in the US (the ataulfo ones, not the Tommy Atkins variety) but in Asia there are so many incredible varieties. @Anna N Your mango looks good - it looks like a nicely ripe Ataulfo - do you know? Or is the restaurant bringing in special mangoes from elsewhere? I know that in NYC, the Indian stores will bring in Indian mangoes. They sell them for a small fortune, but I had to try one one day. I was disappointed - it was not nearly as good as some of the even mediocre ones I've had in SE Asia, forget the best. I think it's because, due to the shipping, they harvest them green and "ripen" them on the way over, which is really not ripening but controlled rotting. I would kill for a good tree ripened mango right about now....
  20. KennethT

    Dinner 2020

    Bun salmon!
  21. Right - it's definitely not a budget retirement place for sure. Being from NYC, it seems (from my few short trips there) that the cost of living for an expat is relatively the same, although some things like local food are much cheaper, and other things, like keeping a car, are much more expensive. The cost of living is much cheaper for citizens though, as they have access to the much cheaper government sponsored housing, even though I gather prices of those are going up also. But I would love to hear more about the realities of living there. Obviously, everyone living there has their own specifics, but I'd like to hear more about everyday life there, as opposed to what you see as a tourist.
  22. I will echo those before... absolutely stunning work!
  23. I love Singapore and have fantasies of moving there when I retire... I'd love to hear your thoughts about the realities of living there as a US expat...
  24. I thought people here would find this interesting. It just happened to pop up in my You Tube recommendations...
  25. KennethT

    Dinner 2020

    This is one dish I still crave from Hanoi. We loved it so much, we almost missed our flight because we spent so much time looking for a street vendor who had it on our last day there.
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