Jump to content

Suvir Saran

legacy participant
  • Posts

    5,880
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Suvir Saran

  1. We usually do skin the chicken. Most homes would serve chicken bone in. Chicken is cut into 8-10 pieces.
  2. How would you butcher the chicken? Someone had PM'd me asking this question. I was reading the PM When it got erased and lost somehow.. and now I cannot find the PM or remember the name of the member. I am sorry!
  3. You probably say the same thing about a Twinkie. Do they ever go stale? Of course some people raise the question of whether they are ever fresh. I feel the same way about bottled Mayo and Lemon Curd.
  4. Why is that strange? I did read the weed and brownie thread and I'm seriously jonesing...
  5. DO you make your own Fruit Cake? Do you get it from Canada?
  6. Suvir Saran

    Potato Salad

    Mitchell London makes a wonderful red potato and green bean salad. Tossed in vinegar and herbs and pine nuts. It is sensational. Has been at least 2 years since I last at it, but even 2 years later, the taste memory is intact.
  7. why so?
  8. Suvir Saran

    Potato Salad

    I have never had it with potatoes... How does it taste?
  9. As Mary Ann always says, "Fried caramel colored onions are the life of imm jaddara".
  10. eew.....yuck... DO they really make a garlic mayo? Who would buy that? You are teasing Jinmyo and I? For we admit to using Hellman's.... I am sure this is a bad joke. Oh, I just saw a commercial for this last night. They make an herb flavor and a tomato/bacon flavor, too. I am so glad I do not own a TV and have no cable access. Just my video and DVD players and a 20 inch computer monitor. No such torture for me to endure.
  11. Suvir Saran

    Chicken Stock

    I feel edumacated. Thanks! Jokes apart, I always guessed this is what it meant.. and now I am sure. Thanks for taking time to explain what must be so second nature to a professional chef. PS: I was going to ditto Cakewalks post.. but you answered before.
  12. eew.....yuck... DO they really make a garlic mayo? Who would buy that? You are teasing Jinmyo and I? For we admit to using Hellman's.... I am sure this is a bad joke.
  13. I am no 4 Star chef.... sorry! I just used Hellman's.
  14. Am I the only one that also loves the color of home made Mayo? I love that golden hint in the home made version. Hellman's is too white and pasty for my eyes...
  15. It does things that we will not know for a long time... and then.. sometime, someday.. some scientist will prove its connection to some disease.. And then decades after that, another will come along to disprove the previous theory...
  16. I have had to resort to Hellman's once when catering for a group of 225. Embarassed as I was to do that, I felt it was the best I could do. So, here... I have come clean.
  17. You got it! Yes it is indeed rice, masoor dal and fried onions.
  18. I wonder...and thus I never bother with store bought versions of these easy to make classics. And frankly, those that eat home made mayo or lemon curd, are always mighty impressed even with the dishes where one would use these two in very small amounts. A good home made version of each of them is FAR Superior to any of the brands that a supermarket may carry pre-packaged.
  19. I have always wondered what they do differently. I have the same questions for Lemon Curd....
  20. 7 Years ago for my first ever Annual Holiday Open House, I planned a table for fruit cakes. I prepared fruit cakes of many different kinds and using different spirits. The party was a great success... We were able to fit 125 plus people in the apartment. The Tandoor was able to cook enough food for all those people and after the party, most of the friends that came, marked the Open House at Hudson Mews as their preferred holiday party for they "real food" served in this home. Some of the fruit cakes I made for that party are listed below: I had made the classic Fruit Cake that my mom and aunts prepared with cognac. I had an armagnac version of it for fun. I had a Florida Fruit Cake, I believe the recipe was from a famous dessert book. I made a caraway seed and Irish whisky based fruit cake. A rum and tropical fruit cake Grand Marnier and three citrus fruit cake Bourbon, pecan and apricot fruit cake Champagne and mixed berry fruit cake My favorite just happens to be the classic cognac fruit cake that was left behind by the Brits in India.
  21. As I said in the first post... we used Rum in India. But I prefer cognac and armagnac over Rum or Bourbon.
  22. What spirits should one use in the making of fruit cakes?
  23. I have made it three times now. I cannot thank mhadam enough for having introduced me to this wonderful cake. It is the most amazing aromatic and tasty cake I have had. I have had far too many cakes that are flavorful but do not come out being tasty.. simply as spicy, over spiced cakes... This cake is most subtle and yet so full in flavor. It is amazing. It could be Middle Eastern, Iranian, Iraqi, Indian or Sri Lankan.. it would go well with any food and at any time. I would be very curious myself to know how the magazine got to that recipe. And who the first person to come up with this combination was. It is spectacular.
  24. Suvir Saran

    Blondies

    Could that be the same thing as a banburry (sp?) tart. That too is nothing but a butter tart with a fancy name. English in origin. We had it in India as kids. It certainly would deserve it's own thread either way.
×
×
  • Create New...