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DanM

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Posts posted by DanM

  1. I bought a massive bunch of large, thick scallions at the farmer's market today. Any suggestions on scallion happy dishes, especially if they are vegetarian?

    Thanks!

    Dan

  2. Rick Bayless has a great, simple recipe in his Mexican Everyday cookbook for chicken cooked in a banana leaf lined crockpot. IIRC, the chicken was coated with achiote paste and root veg was thrown in as well.

  3. I decided to try a new local roaster today and picked up a bag of Carlos Ernesto Guerrero Lara Apaneca El Salvadoran coffee... whatever that means. What caught my eye about the bag is that they note the roast date (4/22), best from (4/25) and to (5/9) dates. I am confused about the from date. Why would I wait 3 days after roasting before drinking?

    Thanks!

    Dan

  4. Sultan's Kitchen is a 5 minute walk up State Street. An unassuming cafe with excellent Turkish food, lots of vegetarian specialties as well as kabob plates and sandwiches. It's small and does brisk lunch business, so if you want a seat get there early or after the rush.

    Sultan's kitchen looks perfect!! She loves this type of food. I think we have a possible winner.

  5. My daughter's friend was over for dinner, so I made some cauliflower cheese using purple cauliflower. The picture does not do the striking final colour justice.

    Dan

    gallery_61658_6368_395713.jpg

  6. The Summer Shack looks like fun, but may be a cruel trick after taking her to the aquarium.

    We never let her run around, but like all healthy 2 year olds, she gets bored easily and makes her presence known.

    An afternoon trip to JP Licks may be in order... If she behaves herself.

  7. Are there any good kid friendly or kid centric restaurants around Boston? We have an adventurous 2 year old foodie in need of a good lunch. We are not sure what we will be doing while we are in town, so we do not have a specific part of town in mind.

    thanks!

    Dan

  8. The Francis Francis uses grounds or pods. I have a Bodum Bistro grinder, which seems to do a pretty good job at grinding beans to a fine powder. I put some old beans through at the finest setting and it was like talc powder.

    Tikidoc... thanks for the offer, but with a 2 year old and a 2 month old, I don't have any time to spare for tinkering. I will look into the complexity of changing the gasket and will let you know if I change my mind.

    Dan

  9. My mother-in-law has a Francis Francis X1 sitting on her counter as "counter art" and is only used when I am there... to the annoyance of my father in law. Apparently, art is not supposed to have any intrinsic function. We have been saving up for a Rancillio Sylvia, based on recommendations written here.

    Now they are tired of the art piece and want are offering it to us. My experiencce with it has been limited, but it does not seem like the most accurate machine.

    The big question... don't argue with free, or will I get what I pay for and am better off buying a good one.

    Dan

  10. In my experience, kosher restaurants are established by people with no restaurant or culinary knowledge.

    What exactly is your experience? Professional or perhaps as a customer?

    I should have said that many are established... But a mixture of both. I have been to quite a few lousy kosher places in my life. I am also prodded regularly to open a kosher bakery. I have some training, but almost no professional experience in a bakery or knowledge of how to run a business. I keep pushing back... family comes first.

  11. In my experience, kosher restaurants are established by people with no restaurant or culinary knowledge. They are typically set up by folks to provide something for the local community. Quality falls by the wayside. IMHO, the better kosher restuarants are the vegetarian places that happen to be kosher to bring in a larger audience.

    Regarding pricing. Kosher meat is more expensive to begin with. Add to that the need for supervision from the local Kosher Supervision board. Meat restaurants typically have a person on staff full time making sure all kosher rules are followed. Dairy restaurants have less supervision.

    It is nearly impossible to run a kosher restaurant that serves both meat and dairy. Typically, they will serve one or the other.

    Dan

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