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kayb

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Everything posted by kayb

  1. kayb

    Dinner 2018

    That is a PRETTY thing.
  2. I suspect beef tongue is one of those things I might like just fine if I ever had it done right. The only tongue I've ever eaten was in Japan, and the texture put me off -- it was tough and chewy, two characteristics I Do Not Like in meat. I may ask my farm folks where I get my beef if they have any beef tongue, and try the corning/smoking. I suspect I could steam it in the IP for 30 minutes after smoking, like pastrami, if I needed to. Come to think of it, the only things Japanese that I have not liked have been due to texture; abalone sushi, for one. And texture is the major reason I don't like calamari, and by extension, squid or octopus. Only calamari I ever tried was like chewing rubber bands, and I haven't been able to bring myself to try it again.
  3. I'm going with Irma on this one.
  4. Quite well. I run it, then take the rack out and wipe the interior with a paper towel. Done.
  5. Chef and the Farmer was the one I was thinking of. Didn't know she had the others.
  6. kayb

    Dinner 2018

    Eggplant canneloni. Peeled and sliced eggplant, roasted, wrapped around a mixture of ricotta, parmigiano and an egg. Topped with a combo of leftover Bolognese sauce from the freezer and canned roasted tomato-garlic sauce, grated mozzarella, more parm. Baked 25 minutes at 350 in the CSO. Quite good. Served with marinated veggie sala
  7. I want someone who's been to Vivian Howard's restaurant to chime in. Have never spent much time in NC. Can't say any of the trips involved memorable meals.
  8. I'm two-thirds of the way through The Telling Room. It started out wonderfully, has slowed down.
  9. I'd actually ought this before your post. Have skimmed through it and bookmarked half a dozen recipes. Cool looking stuff!
  10. I've used it for those kinds of things. Have eggplant canneloni in there baking as we speak. It takes a little longer than the microwave. I kept my microwave (the CSO sits atop it). I use it mostly for melting butter, and occasionally heating water or making instant noodles, etc. Convection bake is a fine thing for crunchy snacks you might have once thought of deep frying.
  11. Bumping this up to ask a question. I'm in the notion for falafel tomorrow. However, I do not have the first chickpea in my house (Horrors! When did I use the last ones?). Can I get by with using cassoulet or navy beans, the only other variety of white beans I have on hand? It's raining like nobody's business and I really don't want to go to the grocery for ONE thing.
  12. Interesting. I'll be intrigued to learn more. Welcome to the group.
  13. kayb

    Dinner 2018

    Thanks!
  14. I became a fan a few years ago of keeping a jug of water in the fridge with cut-up cucumbers and limes in it. Still do it a lot in the summer. Sometimes I'll put agave or Stevia in it; sometimes not. And I generally add a handful of crushed mint.
  15. You won't regret it.
  16. Thanks, Darienne. She was a magnificent woman. I have a million stories about her. Gone much too soon (at age 59).
  17. FWIW, and it's too late for Father's Day, I like to rub it down in butter, sprinkle with smoked paprika, and wrap in foil before grilling. You still get a bit of char. And the butter and the smoked paprika !!!!
  18. kayb

    Cherry Oh Baby

    I'd love a recipe for the cherry mustard. I would suspect one could can it!
  19. kayb

    Dinner 2018

    I got mine on Prime Day two years ago, and I think paid 239 plus tax for it. So you did good. I NEED a recipe for that curried zucchini. Ditto the jerk paste, please!
  20. Cilantro doesn't taste soapy to me...I just don't particularly like it, except in small amounts. I like black pepper, but it's easy to go too heavy on it, and that ruins a dish for me. I like beets OK, and recognize the "dirt" taste, which I've found in other veggies. My daughter doesn't like field peas because they "taste like dirt." Well, yeah, they kinda do. But it's good dirt. Don't know if they have a lamb category or not, but in Owensboro, KY, their specialty is mutton barbecue. I've tried it, and found it nasty. I'm not a huge lamb fan, once you get past lamb stews or ground lamb that's heavily spiced, a la a Middle Eastern or North African dish.
  21. Today's pickage, upin returning home after three days on the road. There are tiny zucchini a d yellow squash, so I should have those by this weekend. Baby watermelons and cantaloupe as well. No limas or green beans yet. Tomatoes, but for yhe Su gold cherrirs, are stubbornly resisting getting ripe, though I have a fair number of green ones, especially Roma. The tail of one's t-shirt makes a fine impromptu container for picking.
  22. Now I'm intrigued by the notion of making potato scones, which sound much like the potato cakes I grew up eating, and still make when I have leftover mashed potatoes. But they're just round.
  23. My mother, oddly enough, was a marvelous baker of cakes; I say oddly enough, because she was a serious Type 1 diabetic and was VERY good about sticking to her diet. And while she was a perfectly adequate cook all the way around, where she really shined was in baking cakes, cookies, pastries and making candy. She had a cottage industry baking petit fours for bridal and baby showers; her "plain butter cake" recipe, iced with either a butter/confectioners sugar frosting or a seven-minute frosting. Cakes that were a standby at our house included fresh coconut cake -- we'd get coconuts from the grocery, and then either grate them on the box grater (I learned early on to watch knuckles, as blood really shines in fresh, grated coconut!) or drag out the sausage grinder. Icing for that would be a seven-minute frosting, topped with handsful of fresh coconut. Daddy was fond of a banana cake -- her basic cake recipe, with pureed bananas in the batter, frosted with a thin confectioner's sugar/butter/milk glaze and each layer topped with sliced bananas that had been carefully dipped in lemon juice. She would occasionally make an angel food cake, usually during strawberry season to use instead of a shortcake. And she often made a spice cake in the winter that was dense and dark and filled with great warm spices and nuts and candied fruit (though it wasn't like a fruitcake). She also made a fruitcake at Christmas, and I wish I had that recipe. She tended more toward pies, as do I. Chess pies, fruit cobblers, apple pies with a crumb topping, the occasional pecan pie, the notable persimmon pie we got for a few short weeks in the fall when persimmons were ripe. And she made doughnuts, the recipe for which I have but have never attempted, as the directions, in their entirety, say: "Fry in three pounds of Crisco. Glaze with two boxes of powdered sugar." It was a yeasted dough with potatoes in it, and I remember her making it up (in a dishpan! the recipe made about six dozen doughnuts) on Friday nights, always Friday nights, and waking up to the heavenly smell of them frying on Saturday morning. My all-time favorite Saturday morning breakfast. The best cake I ever ate in my life, though, was at a barbecue restaurant in the extreme southeastern Arkansas town of McGehee. It was an Italian Cream Cake, and it was absolutely the most delicious, moist specimen of same I ever ate in my life. It just about made my eyes roll back in my head. I have never attempted to recreate it, because I just know I could never come close. I just buy several slabs of it to go when I happen to be through there; it freezes well.
  24. kayb

    Dinner 2018

    Never thought about rye flour in a flammenkuchen. Must try that. Made a decent marinated veggie salad last night and had it with what'll likely be the last meal off the chicken salad I bought last weekend. Corn, mushrooms, artichoke hearts, peas, pimiento peppers. Forgot to take a pic.
  25. I've recycled for the past 8-10 years, ever since I've lived where a city offered the service. In Hot Springs, we had blue plastic bins -- big plastic totes, essentially -- that we put recylables in. They would pick up metal, glass and paper; you had to take your own plastic, something about it taking up too much space in the truck. In Jonesboro, we have used blue plastic drawstring bags. I keep mine as a liner to a big laundry hamper on the carport, and pitch the cans, bottles, paper and glass all in it. Boxes (we shop Amazon a lot) get broken down and stuffed in a big box. It all goes down to the curb every other week. We are getting the recycling carts next week; had to pay a one-time $20 fee for them. I don't mind that. I would be irritated at a recurring monthly charge; I agree, charge the people who DON"T recycle.
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