kayb
participating member-
Posts
8,353 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Store
Help Articles
Everything posted by kayb
-
I'm with @liuzhou. I have filtered (through cheesecloth or paper towels) used oil as long as it's not used for fish, and kept it in the fridge and reused three or four times, maybe more. Fish-frying oil gets dumped in an empty glass jar and tossed in the trash. When I was a kid, we lived out in the country and, to minimize trips to the dump, burned a lot of our trash in a big 55-gallon barrel. We'd just pour fish oil, or oil that had gone off after several uses) on that and burn away.
-
Restaurant Uberfahrt 3* - Rottach-Egern / Germany
kayb replied to a topic in Elsewhere in Europe: Dining
...and the part of my personality that is still 11 years old giggles at the name. Food sounds glorious, though. I always enjoy your reviews.- 1 reply
-
- 1
-
-
I just want a piece of pie.
-
Jealous. I never get that good a "puff" on my pita. What's your secret?
-
I was inclined toward scalloped potatoes but the corn is a family favorite, too. I may do both.
-
Bumping this one up. What's everyone planning? At my house, it's smoked turkey breast, pork tenderloin, asparagus, green peas in some preparation (I like them in a salad, everyone else likes them just cooked with butter), asparagus (likely just roasted, with hollandaise), deviled eggs, corn casserole (fresh corn I froze last year, with sour cream, egg, melted butter, Jiffy cornbread mix), and deviled eggs. Yeast rolls. Strawberries over pound cake for dessert.
-
A steamer or warmer of some description?
-
I know a lot of folks look down their noses at Bittman, but I love this book. I got it at a time I was just getting into cooking outside the realm of what I'd grown up with, and it was a wonderful resource for me. I'd call it worth the price of admission for his recipe for fried rice, and for his pizza dough.
-
If the streaks arent' too prominent, I'll eat 'em. I'll serve them to company if they're smushed up and the streaks don't show.
- 134 replies
-
- 2
-
-
-
- Mexican
- Vegetarian
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
New twist on an old favorite. Oil packed tuna, cannellini beans, capers, oil and vinegar. Greatly enhanced by a third of a cup or so of @HungryChris' marinated mushrooms.
-
I have been gifted two gallon plastic bags full of frozen wild duck breasts; I'd anticipate a good three to four pounds in each bag. That would translate to a dozen to 16 half-breasts per bag, given wild duck breasts are much smaller than farmed. I'm undecided as to how to prepare them, given that that's a lot of duck to cook at a time. In the past, I've parboiled and then grilled duck breasts wrapped in bacon, and I've floured, quick-fried and then braised them in wine. Both are good. I'm contemplating curing half a bag of these and then smoking them, and doing...something with the rest. I'll add to the complexity by noting that, while I'll eat a steak as rare as the next guy, I do NOT like rare duck. I would also note that wild duck has a significantly different, essentially gamier taste than farmed duck, and has always taken better, in my mind, to higher spiced preps. I think I shall peruse Hank Shaw's blog for ideas, but appreciate any thoughts y'all might offer.
-
Thanks, @rotuts That's simple enough to accomplish when you're stumbling about the kitchen half-asleep, which is my aim.
-
Now....if one were, as @rotuts suggested, cook a dozen or so of these for retherming later, what method, time and temp would one use? I could see doing this IF I could retherm in say, two minutes in a saucepan of simmering water, or steam-bake in the CSO, but I'm not inclined to drag out the Anova every time I want a poached/softboiled egg on toast.
-
Any time you wish!
-
M'mmmmm....maybe. Not sure how the vinegar would play with the Jezebel sauce.
-
I don't know that I ever saw a crab with an expression on its face, but that crab looks purely pissed off at its impending fate. Gorgeous food.
-
Thanks for that! I am intrigued by the roujiamo. Looked it up and I see that some places, it's made with beef, and the beef is actually put inside raw dough, which is then cooked. Would you speak to the filling and prep method for these?
-
I have an el cheapo WalMart one, I forget the brand, that I paid $44.78 for, five years ago. It does what I need it to do, which is : 1. Melt butter 2. Melt frozen blocks of stock 3. Heat water 4. Warm up a quick plate of leftovers, though I am using the CSO more and more instead.
-
Depends on the seasoning in the adobo, I'm thinking.
-
I love the water goblets at the top left of this photo. I have a pair of wineglasses hand-blown by a local artisan with a pattern similar to that all the way down to the stem. The water goblets would go beautifully with them on a dinner table setting.
-
I rid the freezer of a chicken today, which has been thawing and will shortly go into an overnight brine in preparation for being roasted tomorrow. I'll also pull out a bag of mixed vegetables or green peas or lima beans to go with it. And likely add to it some potato salad I'll get up and make in the morning when I put the chicken in to roast. Already have fresh strawberries macerating, and pound cakes in the oven for dessert. Sunday dinner!
-
Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
kayb replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Baking day all day for me. A batch of granola. Five dozen old fashioned oatmeal cookies. Two cream cheese pound cakes, because I scored semi-local strawberries and have cut them up and macerated them, and they need to be served over pound cake. -
Folks in Mississippi are a little...strange.
-
When I did my Ancestry DNA test last year, it showed me only one surprise -- 1.5 percent Nigerian (the rest was the UK, Western Europe, and a scattering of Mediterranean). So I immediately set about attempting to find Nigerian cookbooks and try my hand at "my people's" food. I can only conclude that I did not get my cooking genes/flavor preferences from that crop of ancestors. I tried two or three chicken dishes, and a bean and sweet potato stew that sounded promising. They all lacked. Oh, well. Wish I could find that Nigerian ancestor. Math tells me he/she was a four-times-great grandparent, or sometime in the early 1800s. Lots of my family lived in Virginia and North Carolina at the time. I suspect there was a liaison in the slave quarters, and the offspring emigrated west and "passed" for white.
-
Tonight: (quasi) Mexican chicken. A pint jar of tomatoes, can of whole kernel corn, can of rinsed black beans, chicken breasts cut in chunks, small can of diced green chiles, healthy dose of Penzeys taco seasoning. 10 minutes then NPR. Stir in a chunk of cream cheese, a drained can of black olives, and serve over chips or, more likely for us this evening, quick-fried in butter corn tortillas. Sprinkle the whole thing with grated co-jack cheese. Holdover from when the kids were young. I used to make it as a "Mexican lasagna" in a pie plate with corn tortillas as the "noodles." IP is much easier.
