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Posted
On 6/12/2019 at 8:22 AM, liuzhou said:

Pan fried salmon with salted cucumber, quick pickled ginger and rice.

 

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First class sophisticated simple cooking, made even more appetizing by  First class plating .  

 

dcarch

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Posted
1 minute ago, dcarch said:

 

First class sophisticated simple cooking, made even more appetizing by  First class plating .  

 

dcarch

 

What does the character on top say?

 

  • Like 1

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

Posted
7 hours ago, lindag said:

My searches didn’t turn up the poster who first mentioned Michigan Beans but, fortunately, I had saved the recipe.

i've been looking for pantry friendly and simple casserole type foods that I can manage while recovering from my recent surgery and these beans are exactly what I was lookin for.

Still not easy to get to the store for special ingredients and can't manage too much effort yet.

The beans are in my crockpot now and they smell wonderful.  I’m really looking forward to dinner (with a Subway salad alongside.

Was it this recipe?  'Cuz that might have been me.

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Posted
12 hours ago, Kim Shook said:

Was it this recipe?  'Cuz that might have been me.

 

Indeed it was!  I thoroughly enjoyed it, thank you for posting!

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Posted

Shrimp cooked in garlic, tomato sauce with smoked paprika and red pepper flakes. Topped with a little panko, feta italian parsley and olive oil. broiled until browned and crisp

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Posted
23 hours ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:

What is to the left of the burger?

Potato Scollop's 

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Posted (edited)

Some recent dinerish dinners

 

Chicken caccitore

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Meatloaf, potatoes, cauliflower gratin

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Lasagna and salad

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Edited by gfweb (log)
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Posted

@robirdstx – that broccoli salad is one of our favorites.  And pork and venison sausage sounds wonderful – is that locally made?

 

@Ann_T– I’ve been making your corn custard for years, but I’ve never done it in individual servings.  I really like the look of that and want to try it this summer with some really good corn. 

 

@Captain – I had to Google potato scollops and once I waded through a bunch of “scalloped potato” results, I found Australian Potato Scallops!  I gotta make those – they sound fantastic.

 

Swiss/Cheddar omelets, Edward’s country ham and one of the best nectarines I’ve ever tasted:

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Mr. Kim’s kale:

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Posted

Round two off the rotissiere chicken. Pulled most of the meat off the bone, loosely wrapped along with the drumsticks in foil, reheated in the CSO on steam bake at 300F for 12 minutes. Tasted just as good as last night. With zucchini fritters and potato salad. Kids are happy.

 

Tomorrow or Sunday will be Round 3 of rotissiere chicken, the remainder of the meat going into chicken enchiladas. Will make some refried beans and Mexican rice. Then the carcass will go in the IP for stock. A lot of value out of a $4.99 Sam's bird.

 

  • Like 7

Don't ask. Eat it.

www.kayatthekeyboard.wordpress.com

Posted
8 hours ago, Captain said:

Potato Scollop's 

These are what I grew up knowing as Scotch chips. We used leftover pancake batter for them. They are so delicious.

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  • Thanks 1
Posted

Creamy prawn pasta with Thai flavours. The cream was coconut. Topped with raw basil to wilt in the residual heat.

 

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
Mark Twain
 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

Thursday I made portobello mushroom patty melts

 

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Last night we had pasta with a raw tomato sauce, with fresh mozzarella

 

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Posted
On 6/10/2019 at 6:24 PM, Katie Meadow said:

 

I see farmed catfish for sale, but never buy it. One thing I would do is ask for the source. My understanding is that catfish farmed in the US are a small percentage of the catfish sold here, and that most of it comes from Asia, which usually means China.

 

Or Vietnam 

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Posted
1 hour ago, Okanagancook said:

Thanks for posting these. The Seafood Watch is a great resource. I think you can bet on the fact that the place you buy tilapia from will not know where it was farmed or what type it is. I don't eat tilapia, partly because of these recommendations but also because it is about the most tasteless fish ever. I rarely eat fish tacos out because when not specified it is most likely tilapia. 

 

Several years ago when all the data was released about the mis-labeling of fish and seafood, whether retail or restaurant, I just about gave up on variety and stuck to the same identifiable few critters that are sustainably fished or farmed in the US and Canada. I almost never eat red meat any more, so my sources of protein keep shrinking. And getting pricey. I can't remember if it was here or in the NYT that someone noted the price of this year's haul of Copper River Salmon was selling for around $47 dollars per lb. Not that I'm buying that. Poor planet, you will be better off when we are gone. 

  • Like 1
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Posted

@Katie Meadow

 

I do indeed think that tilapia is a fairly tasteless fish

 

and very tough if' conventionally cooked.

 

the CC is up to you

 

however, if you can get it well fozen , I get some at Tj's  in a completely sealed bag

 

with a few decent spices and herbs

 

and SV'd just right

 

its not that bad.

Posted

Everyone's food looks so good.  @liuzhou  I'm always jealous of that insanely fresh shrimp that you get.

 

Venison tostadas

 

Minus the sour cream.  As I was carrying it to the table, I dropped it.  Broke the bowl :( .

 

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Hot wings and salad.  Used the last of my brother-in-law's homemade sriracha.  I'm hoping if I give the empty bottle back he'll get the hint and make me more this summer.

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Last night I had a craving for French dressing so I made some for salad along with spaghetti and venison meatballs.

 

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Posted

Pear custard tart with blue cheese and walnuts. Some mustard and oregano as well.

 

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~ Shai N.

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