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Posts posted by sartoric
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My easy veggie fritters, sort of pakora but not. I mix grated vegetables, in this case carrot, squeezed zucchini and shredded cabbage with spices, an egg and chickpea flour, then drop spoonfuls into a shimmering pan. Too easy.
Served with a tomato and red onion raita, tomato chutney, lemon rice and okra.
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@mm84321 what made it the greatest meal ever ? This is in Tokyo right ? Was it expensive ?
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Ah, @rarerollingobject, I stumbled on this delicious story three years ago and thought “one of these days...”.
Now that day is only three weeks away ! Thanks for the photos, a reread has given me some great ideas
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Pasta bake with small shells, a little sautéed onion and garlic, half a can of cherry tomatoes and a dozen or so halved fresh cherry tomatoes. This was all mixed together, dumped in the dish, enhanced with chunks of avocado, blobs of ricotta and torn basil, then finished with grated cheddar and parmesan.
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8 hours ago, Okanagancook said:
That’s a coincidence....I had a hankering for some Marmite on toast this morning but couldn’t find the little jar. It is an acquired taste...kinda like beef drippings on toast.
I’ve never had beef drippings on toast, but I like Marmite and Promite too.
As an Australian, I can be lynched for saying this, don’t tell anyone
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22 hours ago, lemniscate said:
I made Apricot Chicken (a la Meg, for the final episode of McLeod's Daughters bingeing on Amazon Prime). It's mentioned in the series quite a few times, so I thought it would be fun to eat and watch. I couldn't find apricot puree, so a low sugar apricot preserve was used, Lipton's onion soup mix, boneless skinless chicken thighs in the Instant Pot. A few leftover gnocchi on the communal platter. It was a nice sweet onion sauce. I'd add a little sour to it somehow if I make this again, just my preference. We enjoyed it. Thanks Australia!
Next time try getting a can of halved apricots in syrup, drain the syrup and roughly mash or purée the fruit.
An Australian who grew up when this was the height of exotic cuisine. You’re welcome.
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On 4/5/2019 at 7:18 AM, KennethT said:
Do you make the paratha from scratch? It looks very similar to the Malay/Singaporean prata (many times made by Indian men)... If you make it, can you provide the recipe?
No @KennethT I buy them frozen and reheat in a tawa.
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I tried an experiment last night, using leftover roast chicken from the previous night to boost a mushroom curry. It worked really well flavour wise, and upped the protein count too. On the plate with kale subzi (sautéed kale with chickpea flour crumbs) five lentil dal, a little yoghurt flavoured with roast cumin and dill, plus rice.
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Ha ha, I got a bit sick of DH making jokes about finding feathers in the jam.
@Smithy try searching under rozelle plants. They are a type of hibiscus, native to Africa but grow well here in frost free climates.
We stopped last Saturday in a small town called Rathdowney, there’s a bakery which makes excellent pies and also a lone junk shop where I found a tripod for taking astral photos. Outside the shop a few people were clustered around a table with four pots of jam for sale....adding a pot of jam to my tripod purchase saved them from having to find change. The lady explained she had made the jam yesterday, went into great detail about peeling the rosellas (DH chuckling at the imagery) and said it was a good batch. She was right.
Rosella is also a popular brand of tomato sauce here, the bottle features the distinctive red and blue parrot. Again though, no actual avian rosellas are contained within.
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1 hour ago, Smithy said:
What makes something "Balti"? Does that specify a particular flavor profile?
I think it refers to the cast iron pot called a balti in which it used to be cooked, but also the flavours. Balti is frequently used in English recipe books/restaurants.
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Seeing you were so nice about it @Smithy, here’s another one.
Balti mushroom curry.
These spices are ground together in the spice grinder, coriander seeds, peppercorns, cinnamon bark, chilli flakes, cardamom pods, cloves, dried fenugreek leaves.
You get a curry curry powder like this.
The other ingredients are garlic, green chilli, ginger, tomato and mushrooms, so simple.
I fry fry off the garlic for a minute, then add a tbs of the powder and stir for a couple minutes.
The tomatoes go in next and cook for five minutes or so until quite mushy.
Add the quartered mushrooms, salt to taste and cook covered until they reach your desired tenderness. Garnish with chopped coriander. I often add a few handfuls of baby spinach too.
The plated meal is over on the dinner thread.
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Dinner 2019
in Cooking
Posted
A different mushroom and spinach curry than I usually make, trust me there are mushrooms underneath that greenery. Served with rice, eggplant bharta and leftover potato samosa filling.