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Anna N

eGullet Society staff emeritus
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Everything posted by Anna N

  1. Anna N

    Breakfast! 2018

    Tsukimi soba. Soba noodles in broth with snow peas, an egg and sliced scallions.
  2. An errand found @Kerry Beal and I in Markham yesterday. This is pretty close to the hub of Asian culture outside of Toronto proper. I had a place that I was hoping to visit but had not expected the chance to come up quite so soon. Donburi offers some options that one doesn’t usually find in most of the Japanese restaurants we have visited. Tea as usual for Kerry and warm sake for me. A misunderstanding explains the two ochoko (cups). We were each given a bowl of miso soup. We shared four skewers: Chicken heart, beef with ponzu sauce and pork toro. Mentai chicken. Beef short ribs don for Kerry. Beef gyuu donburi For me. I opted for an onsen egg. Clearly the egg is fried! (As an aside I was pleased to learn that my own rendition of beef gyudon was pretty close to this.)
  3. Japanese white stew made with rotisserie chicken. One can buy roux for this just as one can buy it to make curry. However, no roux was harmed in the making of this stew. Served with some rice. I had serious doubts about this dish but it is in fact quite tasty. There are so many different recipes out there so I just basically winged it. I had a tiny amount of cream cheese left over from another project so it went in there as I had found at least one recipe that used cream cheese!
  4. Anna N

    Breakfast! 2018

    Challenging myself to use a rotisserie chicken in as many Japanese dishes as I can. Onigirazu with lettuce, oven dried tomatoes and sliced rotisserie chicken breast. Next time I would add some kewpie mayonnaise.
  5. Anna N

    Dinner 2018

    Rice paper wrappers with rotisserie chicken, lettuce and kimchi. Dipping sauce is sriracha mayo with a little extra kimchi thrown in because you can never have too much kimchi.
  6. Costco rotisserie chicken thigh and a vermicelli noodle and seaweed salad. Not sure if it’s a late lunch, an early dinner or a combination of both.
  7. Apparently it was used by many indigenous tribes as both a vegetable and the seeds were ground into a flour for breadmaking. That is according to Mr. Google. Have not verified this information. Perhaps some of our foragers will chime in. I am thinking especially of @gfron1 Edited to add: I am sure I have seen it somewhere in the wild. I’m not sure where.
  8. I would suspect it does make a difference whether it’s over water or in water. The initial question was about bones in water.
  9. Me neither.
  10. Roast? Braise? Stew? Just saying.
  11. Anna N

    Breakfast! 2018

    Probably not the first choice of dieticians for a healthy breakfast but somebody had to do it. Chocolate truffle cheesecake done in the Instant Pot. It is part of a project so no sharing information at the moment.
  12. Water would not have been my choice. Roasting implies dry heat. If I was really concerned about things sticking to the pan I would’ve lined it with nonstick foil. In order to get these bones to roast you are first going to have to drive off one and a half cups of water.
  13. Mine looks like this.
  14. Anna N

    Breakfast! 2018

    Used to love smoked eel but it stopped loving me! Just too rich!
  15. Anna N

    Breakfast! 2018

    Sardine and lettuce onigirazu.
  16. Kerry operates the iPhone camera. I know you were discussing the food but I love the blue pattern plates. They remind me very much of Royal Copenhagen tableware.
  17. Yesterday Kerry and I returned to a favourite place, Salad Thai. We both opted for just water to drink this time. No photographs. You’d recognize it anywhere. We shared the following: Crispy calamari. This was just incredibly tender. Penang chicken curry. Drunken noodles with chicken. Bowl of rice. A very satisfactory lunch.
  18. Not even tempted.
  19. I would if I could but mine has never been mounted. It just sits at one end of my breakfast bar.
  20. Suspect that might be a delightful bread but I don’t think it is khachapuri. For a start the dough is missing the cheese filling which is part of the charm and part of challenge.
  21. Anna N

    DARTO pans

    Should have picked your parents much more carefully. 😂
  22. Love my Bamix.
  23. Interesting. But my goal was to avoid the whole cabbage in boiling water scenario.
  24. I would start by looking at Duvel’s experience with his 1.45 kg/3lb rib roast. He cooked it for eight hours at 131°F /55°C. I suspect that even though your roast weighs a pound more his numbers would work reasonably well for you. If you want to get a little more well done then I would move the temperature up. Here is a link to his post.
  25. I do not have any insights to share. It was a long time ago and my memory of it is just that it was a failure. I do not even recall where the recipe came from and a search of my devices does not help in that respect. Will be anxiously watching for your attempt and wishing you success.
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