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IndyRob

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Posts posted by IndyRob

  1. 35 minutes ago, AlaMoi said:

    wow.  seldom have I seen more absurdity on the web....

    using "1 tsp salt" the best it comes up with is 0.099 ounces per teaspoon.

    everyone in Europe - where tsp is not so common... - has a scale that will measure 0.099 ounces

     

    Not sure what you're looking at.  When I do the search it says 6 grams per teaspoon (Edit: 0.2116 oz).  I just measured 1 tsp of table salt and it was 7 grams (on my scale that only measures to the nearest gram).

     

    I measure salt by weight all the time (usually in greater quantities).

     

    Edit: Do people in Europe measure in ounces? I think America is the last bastion of that antiquated measurement system.

  2. I haven't read every page of this thread to see if this has been mentioned before, but wolframalpha.com does conversions from volume to weight (or vice versa) - often with the option to select specific products.

     

    For instance, if you type in '1 tsp salt', it will allow you to select among coarse sea salt, kosher salt, fine sea salt and kosher flakes (is just 'salt' table salt?  I don't know)

     

    But sometimes with other products it gets down to specific brands.

  3. On 2/20/2024 at 6:02 AM, chromedome said:

    One of those silly anecdotes I remember from a childhood Reader's Digest was from a family newly arrived here, knowing no English, who went out looking for something familiar as a quick and easy meal for that first night. They spotted something immediately recognizable - a container with a big, easily identifiable photo of fried chicken - and bought it, only to discover that it was Crisco.

    Apparently, the Gerber baby food company ran into a problem in Africa when they started selling their products there.  Due to multiple languages and general illiteracy, people were used to pictures that represented the contents of the container.  Needless to say, a picture of a cute, smiling baby on the jar did not evoke the intended response.

     

    Edit: Okay, maybe not.  Debunked. (saw it on QI, I think)

  4. I just binge watched seasons 1 & 2 and feel like I have a love/hate relationship with the show.  I love how it's made, how it's acted, how it brings in some of the realities. But the story?  I'm not always so sure.

     

    The setup is good. Great chef comes in to save a long standing and well loved (albeit dysfunctional) family business. 

     

    But he can't.  Next step? Fine dining, of course.

     

    And that walk-in door.   Okay, yeah, they set up how it went unaddressed until too late (despite the fact that every other element of the place is pristine - except maybe that pesky toilet).  But they clearly figured out how to get stock into the walk-in without a handle since the first failure.  They needed a plasma cutter (or whatever it was) to get their chef out?

     

     

    • Haha 1
  5. On 10/17/2021 at 10:12 AM, Maison Rustique said:

    I do realize that I'm old and as such, am perceived to not have buying power. It is quite clear that I am not the target market for these magazines. I'm not sure who is their target market, but I hope I never have to spend any time with them.

    I think they know you have the buying power.  But also know that that (experienced) buying power is not exploitable.

    • Like 1
  6. For anyone wondering like I was, in the U.S., it looks like they're blanketing the east coast from New Jersey down to just above Savannah, GA.  The western-most stores seem to be in and around Atlanta.

  7. The gold standard seems to be 90 seconds in an Old World oven that was started in the morning for service later in the day.

     

    This, along with 12 hours of dough development produces a product that is light and airy, but with a wafer thin char and the requisite 'leoparding'.

     

    But with three days of cold dough development and 4 minutes of bake, our home oven pizza can get pretty damn close.

    • Like 2
  8. I still think the baking steel in a home oven can't be beat for indoor use.

     

    I'm addicted to YouTube pizza oven videos.  I love the possibilities.  I love the outdoor oven builds, I love the new tech.  But I can do a better Neapolitan style in my oven on the steel than I've ever seen come out of one of these ovens.

     

    That's not to say that they couldn't beat mine, they could easily, but they generally don't.

     

    And what I want now is to do an 18" NYC style.  I can't do that in my oven.  14" max.  And that's bigger than pretty much all of these.

    • Like 4
  9. I've been 'tinned fish' curious since Anthony Bourdain went to that place in Spain in his show.

     

    But I didn't think that meant I should go to my grocery and buy some fish in a can.

     

    The whole point was that Spain has some exceptional examples.

     

    The Eater article does not mention any brands.  In fact, it actively avoids it. (in one case, for our protection, she says - but wouldn't we be better protected if we knew what not to buy?).

     

    At a specialty shop...

     

    One of those options is a $44 tin of sardines, which my colleague Robert Sietsema notes were “skinned and deboned laboriously by hand,” with a mild flavor and dots of gold leaf to really drive home the luxury vibe. He “vastly” preferred a $15 tin, and noted that he didn’t see much distinction between these extravagant tins and plain ol’ supermarket sardines.

     

    Why would you not tell us what, precisely, those products were?

     

    Okay, I get it.  Maybe you're just commenting on the cultural fad.  But it's not a fad in Spain, is it?

     

     

     

     

  10. I'm just skeptical because I see so many labels advertising 'Gluten Free' when that type of food has no relation to anything that would have any gluten.  I think I've seen it on a bottle of water.

     

    Okay, maybe that was just a joke.

    • Like 2
    • Confused 1
  11. 8 minutes ago, lemniscate said:

    My celiac friend can eat Costco chicken because the seasoning is gluten free according the the label.   That makes her and and other celiacs very happy.   No digestive issues reported.

    As long as we're not talking about a flour fried chicken, I'm curious as to what seasonings would not be gluten free.  Especially in a rotisserie chicken.

    • Like 1
  12. Huh.  I thought a site with a name like foodsafetynews.com would somehow expand, or drill down on a Consumer Reports article.  But it just uses it as a source.

     

    That doesn't change anything, but I just found it odd.

  13. I was curious as to whether they'd try to emulate white meat or dark meat.  White meat for the presumed healthiness, or dark meat for flavor.  It looks like they went with white meat.

     

    I'm only assuming they had a choice.

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