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kartoffel

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Posts posted by kartoffel

  1. kartoffel, did the cookies look anything like these?

    gallery_11814_2555_56771.jpg

    It is such a coincidence that I had to gasp out loud at your post.  A friend brought me some of these deliciously addictive cookies, but I cannot figure out what the filling is either.

    The one I had looked somewhat like this, but yours look like they're sandwiches: two unfilled cookies put together with filling. Is that right? Mine was one cookie, with filling inside stretching almost to the edges. Do you have a picture of the inside of yours? Does it taste smoky?? Such a funny coincidence!

  2. A colleague just returned from a trip from China and put out some cookies she had bought there. One kind came in a cylindrical container, with about a dozen flat, filled cookies coated in sesame seeds. About 4 inches in diameter, the cookies are made with some kind of wheat flour and filled with a filling I can't identify. It looks like dried fruit paste (?), with the occasional bit of pine nut, and has a decidedly smokey flavor. It is slightly sweet. Could it be a longan-based filling? Another colleague from Japan swears it must contain bonito or some other fish product. Does anyone recognize this item? (I'm sorry I don't have a picture.)

    Thanks!

  3. Speaking as a Michigander who spent childhood summers in Wisconsin, bluegill and sunfish are the tastiest pan fish, but it's also a huge pain to clean enough for everyone to get full.

    I concur that a soak in milk followed by a dip in salt-and-pepper-seasoned flour and a shallow fry is the way to go. One of the best meals I know, especially with fresh sweetcorn being shucked on the short drive from the farm to the pot of boiling water...

  4. Shalimar at Jones & Geary (next to the prostitutes and crack dealers) in the tenderloin.  Since apparently cooking in your own kitchen makes you go bananas (like the menu says) we had to have dinner out again.  We end up at Shalimar every few weeks - they've got the best tandoori chicken in the city and Thursdays they've got goat curry.  Tonight while we drank a bottle of kerner from British Columbia the five of us ate (in the same order as the photos): goat karahi, tandoori chicken, seekh kabab (beef), naan, saag, chicken karahi, and bhuna gosht (lamb).

    Delicious as always, and with tax and tip the tab was fifteen bucks per person.  They don't charge corkage, but they also don't have any wine glasses or a corkscrew.  It felt strange for a while to bring our own glasses to a restaurant... I'm not sure when it stopped feeling strange, but it has.

    I'm thrilled to learn that you, too, enjoy Shalimar! We always make a detour there when we're anywhere in the Bay Area. I try to avoid using their restroom at all costs, but you can't beat the prices (or the free masala chai!).

  5. I highly recommend El Pollo Rico, a Peruvian chicken place, for cheap eats in Arlington:

    2917 N. Washington Blvd.

    Arlington, VA

    703-522-3220

    Open daily 11 am to 10 pm

    When I was last there (I moved two years ago to the West Coast), you could get a quarter of a spit-roasted chicken with (frozen) steak fries, cole slaw, and two dipping sauces (including a yummy green chili one) for about $3.75. Well worth a visit, in my opinion, though not necessarily a DC-specific specialty.

  6. I think I'll miss the diversity here the most. There are Indian and asian communities close by, and I've learned so much by having such a wide mix of people and cultures around to learn from. This also means that ingredients are easy to find, an area in which I've gotten a bit spoiled. There's an Indian restaurant called the Peacock Gardens that I will sorely miss. Wonderful food, and I'm making sure to go there at least a few times before we leave.

    Having been in Portland for three years, my advice is to eat all the Indian food you can before arrriving! Portland is a fabulous food town in many ways (Vietnamese, Mexican, Northwest), but the Indian food here is, on the whole, abyssmal. We drive to Seattle every so often to get our fix.

  7. I am interested in hosting a Bockfest in spring, similar to that hosted by the Schell's brewery in New Ulm, MN. Unfortunately, they have a particular tool that I CANNOT find! It's a long, wooden-handled, cast-iron implement. The iron end is a long, thick, solid cylinder. It gets put into coals until it is redhot, then the beers get "poked" by it, creating a beautiful caramel-y head.

    I've seen a similar implement on Cooking with Julia: She used it to return a pot of water to boiling almost instantly by first heating the iron over the burner. She calls it a "buffalo iron".

    Does anyone know where I might get my hands on one of these?

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