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Everything posted by chezcherie
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as a non-baker, let me be the first to give a shout out to dorie greenspan's "baking: from my home to yours" for inspiring me to grease and flour baking pans once again. everything i've tried has been exceptional, which is even more inspiring.
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thanks for going to the trouble to dig these up---terrific ideas (i think i'm going to need another couple lbs!)..the photo at the top of the first thread made me feel a bit puny about my formerly glorious haul...c'est la vie. if my store still has them monday (i do NOT costco on the weekend--not even for chanterelles) i think we will either have chanterelle wild rice dressing OR butternut squash, green beans and chanterelles (roasted) on our holiday talbe. i will sure be thanksful for either one!
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the soup sounds delicious---i so agree about stripping the mushrooms. i learned that in a mushroom foraging seminar i attended a while back--so much more rustic looking, and so much more surface area--with the grooves and all to soak up sauce. last night i made risotto with pancetta and the 'shrooms, and some caramelized onions...it was really delicious, and i'm thinking of having some for breakfast. i think tonight i will use another suggestion i've received--tempura chanterelles...doesn't that sound amazing?
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here they are in all their glory...run to costco NOW!
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so there i am, in a semi-trance, pushing the cart through costco, when, in the corner of the walk-in produce fridge, something catches my eye. walking a little closer, i actually let out a tiny shriek, causing several other shoppers to look over in alarm..... large styrofoam trays of perfect, glowing golden chanterelles.. they are in amazing shape, even though they are wrapped in plastic, and look like they were hydroponically cultivated. a mushroom class i took a few years back taught me that they cannot be commercially grown, but have to be foraged...these must have come from a glorious, magical costco chanterelle forest. visions of costco elves (they look a bit like keebler elves) with mushroom knives dance through the forest of my imagination... the cold of the walk-in, and the beauty of the mushrooms jolt me back to reality, so i grab a hefty tray and check the price...again, i am in fantasy land, as it appears that the costco price for a full pound of these beauties is...$8.99. now i know that there are parts of the world where chanterelles grow on trees...okay, well, under them, and milk and honey flow through the streets, but i live in parched southern california, where, if you are lucky enough to lay your hands on any chanterelles at all, they are shriveled and mealy and you are happy to get them, and happy to pay up to $40 a lb. for the pleasure. i figure they are mismarked, and that i will get the real price at check out, but they are so gorgeous that I MUST HAVE THEM, regardless of the cost, so i proceed to checkout, where they ring up at $8.99. i love costco. so, i have a pound of perfect chanterelles, and i plan to have another pound and another pound and another, until the sad and tragic day, very soon, i fear, when the walk-in holds the magic mushrooms no more. what will i do with all these beautiful mushrooms? your best suggestions greatly appreciated! please help me bering this bounty to its full potential.
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i think the rules, deliberately or not, were vague. i think that's why betty wasn't outta there...after some review, it appeared that they had not been specific enough in the wording. otherwise, buh-bye betty, no question. they can certainly use judicious editing to make it appear that everyone else (after the fact) was on board with the rules, but if they'd been clear, i'm pretty sure betty would be history.
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mahalo, miulang!
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can someone provide a pronunciation for this pudding? i wanna try it, but i also wanna be able to say it! thx
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thanks for the link, gg--the recipe looks much the same as the one i have, so i know that the dough contains no sugar, and the ratios look similar (orange flower water, yolk, butter, etc.) so maybe i'm in the ballpark...next step will be to surprise my moroccan friend with a test batch.
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i'm hoping to make the pastry/cookie known as gazelle's horns. i have a recipe, but the problem is that i've never had them, so i don't know if the recipe is a good one. the dough is not at all sweet (although the pastries are finished by a dusting of powdered sugar)--the dough calls for 2 1/2 cups flour, about a tablespoon of butter, a little cinnamon and rosewater and a little regular water. the dough is very easy to roll out, but quite dense. they are filled with an almond paste and shaped into crescents. the finished pastries are not very sweet, which i actually like, but i'm just not sure if they are the "real deal". can anyone describe the texture of this dessert? thanks.
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this is also what i know as millionaire's shortbread...one of my faves!
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the wong way to cook? i sure don't love that... also, i was so looking forward to padma, as she had to have a better voice than "fingernails on the chalkboard" katie lee joel...is is POSSIBLE that her voice is equally annoying??? too soon for me to form opinions on the contestants...when there are so many, it hurts my brain to pigeonhole them..that will come later. still, fun to watch! edited for typos
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thanks for that tidbit! i knew that indexing is a subbed-out job, but love the fact that la julia did it herself! i love this thread, and i'm reminded about how fabulous this site is ever time i log on and see dorie posting here....how terrific is that? i'm really not a baker, but this book is terrific, and along with this thread, it has inspired me to break out the baking stuff. i will be making a variation of dorie's chocolate chip cookies in cooking class tonight, substituting the new tiny mini-peanut butter cups from trader joe's for chunks/chips...and you can bet i will be holding up the book, and telling everyone to go get two copies (gifting season is upon us) tomorrow! i'm wondering--a lot of my students are in the bake sale and class snack phase of life. has anyone tried subbing half whole wheat flour in the applesauce spice bars? if not, i may have to give it a try, as our local schools are crazy about stuff like that... thanks for this thread, and thanks especially to dorie...great book, and great eG customer service!!!
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caramelizzzzzzed
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i heat a little butter/olive oil, saute a shallot or other aromatics for a bit, add the couscous until it colors a little, then cover by about an inch with chicken or veg stock. bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer until tender, 15-20 minutes. in the last 5 minutes, i'll throw in some juliened carrots and/or bell peppers/arugula, prosciutto. i love it hot for dinner nad then cold, maybe with some cooked chicken or pork tossed in with some vinaigrette the next day. cook once, eat twice.
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i was given this vessel as a gift. it is glazed inside and out. am i correct that it is for serving only, and that i cannot use it to cook with on a stovetop? thanks very much!
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Cooking with "All About Braising" by Molly Stevens (Part 1)
chezcherie replied to a topic in Cooking
i did them this weekend. of course, i prefer the bone-in ribs, but the costco ones lured me because (1) i was there and (2) they looked awfully good, even without their bones. they were fabulous....i took them to a friend's house, and even though we had had a million appetizers, people were groaning over their goodness, and fighting over the left-overs. reallly, really tasty and tender. i braised them about 3 1/2 hours and did not tie them. (i added a touch of tomato paste when sauteing the veg, but otherwise followed the recipe faithfully.) thanks, marlene...can't wait to do them again...hopefully it will be braising weather here soon! -
if you use a metal measuring spoon, and you rinse it in very hot water first, the honey will slide right out.
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i think kale (for a longer simmer) or arugula (thrown in at the last sexond) would work in the soups you described. isn't that a funny phenomenon? as soon as we can't have something, we want it so much more!
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a bit of googling (spaces before and after the ampersand) revealed sad news: jan 2006 article check page 2, second column...apparently fallow fields adjacent to the saffron crop lured crocus-eating pests into the fields, destroying the crop.
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saw them at surfas this week, but also, i believe cost plus carries them.
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Cooking with "All About Braising" by Molly Stevens (Part 1)
chezcherie replied to a topic in Cooking
i'm not marlene, but i, too, am dying to try her short ribs...if it ever gets to be braining weather here in southern CA...so i have it bookmarked. marlene's short rib recipe -
if i recall correctly, there were a couple companies that got tripped up by selling "vegetarian" marshmallows, made with a gelatin replacement that turned out to be animal-based....the article i read implied that the companies were duped by the "vegan gelatin" maker, rather than being in on the scam. i think this might have been one of those companies.
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i've doubled, tripled, quadrupled pate a choux quantities many times with no problem. (since you are asking, i assume that the recipe is a small batch quantity...i haven't quadrupled a production volume batch.) i like comte for my gougeres. trader joe's carries a reasonably priced one. you catered your own wedding....i seem to remember the thread. wow. my hat's off to ya...this one should be a piece of cake...you aren't making that, are you?
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i was thinking about this too, and my suspicion is that because the bagged spinach is sometimes "triple washed", people don't wash it, and then consume it raw...whereas they will usually wash the non-bagged stuff. as mimi sheraton posted above, cooking would eliminate most if not all of the danger. washing would also help. i'm not the most type A kitchen person, but i have been (re)washing the "triple washed" lettuce mixes i use for some time now, for just this reason!