kayb
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Everything posted by kayb
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For grilled cheese, I slap the cheese between the bread slices, butter the outside, and cook in a skillet, pressing down as if it were a panini. For toasted cheese, I open-face toast two slices of bread, each topped with a slice of cheese, take them out, and put them together. Fillings can be added to the middle. I don't do condiments on either, but some folks do.
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Send it to me. I'll use it for you.
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Here you go. clickety Originally from Yankee Kitchen Ninja. I think the thread originally referred to Ivins Spiced Wafers, and that's what I googled and found these. Easy and good, but I don't cook them as brown and crisp as recommended; I like them chewier.
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The CSO will most assuredly do toasted cheese. With or without any additional toppings. And do it well. Get one. You will not regret it.
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@TdeV -- allow me to chime in. Slice green tomatoes 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick. Dip In milk and egg wash. Then bread with a mix of half and half flour and cornmeal, seasoned with salt and pepper. Fry on medium high heat until golden. Top as desired They're marvelous in a BLT, and work well as the base for eggs Benedict.
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Truth? My preference is to eat potato salad when it's still warm from cooking the potatoes. I don't like it nearly as much when it's cold.
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Ditto, as well as Half Baked Harvest, because I like her blog.
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I found a recipe online last year and made these. They were pretty wonderful. If it'd ever cool off, I'd do it again.
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Oh, Lord. Where do I start? All the things I would have never tried and bought (or rather, bought and tried/loved). Sous vide. My CSO. My Instant Pot. Assorted and various ingredients, cuisines that never crossed my radar. Ordering spices from Penzeys. Making duck confit. I have learned so very much from this site.
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Forecast was wrong. It was 98 today. All I want to eat is ice cream.
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$26.97 hardback, $16.99 Kindle, on Amazon US. B'lieve I'll pass.
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@dcarch, the BBLT is a thing of beauty. Tomatoes are just about all gone down here; burned up in the September heat. (96 here yesterday, 93-97 all week...sigh...)
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For the second time this summer, I got hold of some zucchini which had a distinct cucumber smell when grated. I tasted a bit of the raw grated stuff, as I had begun to doubt myself and wondered if I'd grabbed cucumbers instead of zucchini. Nope, zucchini. Smell disappeared after it was mixed into fritters and fried. Tasted like regular zucchini.
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You are in error. That is a pile of HEAVEN. Seriously, looks like fine pork. My compliments to Mr. Kim.
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Another player enters the sous vide field: Paragon Induction Cooktop
kayb replied to a topic in Kitchen Consumer
Damn all y'all. I just ordered mine. -
I love me some okra, as long as it's roasted or fried, and not boiled. Some of the best okra I ever ate was tiny pods, maybe two inches long, skewered and apparentely dipped in egg wash and then breaded in cornmeal mix and fried. Pretty wonderful. I will eat as much fried okra as you will put in front of me. I like roasted okra. I will tolerate okra in gumbo, etc. But don't be serving me any okra boiled with anything.
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Ooooohhh-WEEEE! I want to eat dinner with YOU!
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Saving that one. Thanks, from a newly gluten-free cook.
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Starting a high profile new restaurant (after closing another)
kayb replied to a topic in Restaurant Life
Great story. And since I had to dash back home unexpectedly and missed it, I'd certainly be up for doing it again! -
Your local big box store should have several options for grill baskets. I have one that's a heavy-gauge wire in about 1/2 inch squares with a top that closes over it so you can flip things; it's handy to grill squash, eggplant slices, burgers, etc. I have another that looks like a 10-inch saute pan but the bottom is covered with round holes. They are about 1/2 inch wide. I have not specifically seen one, but I'll bet you could find one with the equivalent of a screen wire bottom, or make your own with some heavy-duty screen wire, a cheap springform pan sans bottom, and a soldering iron.
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@HungryChris -- I notice when you serve corn on the cob, it's always swathed in a tea towel. Is that to both keep it warm and take up moisture remaining on the ears so butter will adhere better? Never thought of doing it that way. I generally just put it in a baking dish and slather butter on top, then make sure my ear is one of the last out of the dish, so I can roll it around in the accumulated melted butter.
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I've done the pot method, but usually I just run them through the dishwasher and leave them in the rack until I'm ready to fill them. Jams, jellies and acidic stuff (tomatoes, pickles) can be water-bath canned and will be shelf-stable until opened. Highly recommend the Ball Big Book of Canning and Preserving for directions, etc., but quickly: Run jars and rings through dishwasher cycle. Put flats in a small saucepan of water on the stove, bring to boil, and simmer 10 minutes or so. Fill clean jars with funnel; wipe rims with clean, damp towel, put flat on (there's a little magnet-on-a-stick tool that comes in a set with canning tongs, etc, that's ideal for this) add the ring, and finger tighten. Put on a rack in a water bath canner or big stock pot, fill with water to 1" above jar tops, and bring to a boil. Boil for at least 5 minutes, turn heat off and let cool. Remove jars from water with tongs, sit on towel, and let cool. Lids will "pop" and that means they're sealed and shelf-stable. Press on the center of all the cooled lids to check; if any of them give and pop, stick that jar in the fridge and use it first. You can also put the clean jars upside down on a cookie sheet covered with a wet towel and put it in the oven at about 200 for 15-20 minutes. Before filling, that is; I've never tried that with filled jars in lieu of water-bath canning. Less acidic veggies and anything with meat needs pressure canning.
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Mangalitsa pigs are cute with their curly hair. Look like there's some poodle in the mix somewhere.
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I can deal with it sliced pretty thin (less than 1/2 inch, closer to 1/4) and fried crispy on the outside. Might be decent cubed up and fried with potatoes as hash; can't say I've ever tried that. It's also been at least 30 years since I ate any. Maybe 40.
