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Dinner 2020


JoNorvelleWalker

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Fajitas with the tortillas! 😁

 

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Chicken Breast Meat marinating in olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, jalapeño and paprika

 

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Pico de Gallo

 

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Guacamole

 

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Grilled and chopped chicken with add ins ready for the skillet.

 

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In the skillet!

 

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Fajitas!

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This was a first attempt at recreating a dish my wife was obsessed with on our trip to Indonesia last summer - udang arsik tapanuli - shrimp in a sauce made from the kitchen sink of SE Asian herbs - lemongrass, ginger, galangal, shallots, garlic, chilis and lots more. It was pretty good but definitely needs a bit of work. It's too bad because there are only a few recipes online (all in Indonesian) and all are for the traditional version made with fish and some fruits/herbs that are completely unavailable here.

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On 6/12/2020 at 2:39 PM, shain said:

 

That's one pretty challah.

 

The best thing about it being braided is that one can tear of chunks of bread. In my extended family, we don't even place a bread knife on the table when serving challah :P

 

Killing me.I lost a friend last year. She and her Rabbi were good with this kinda Catholic girl doing the Friday morning challah bake   A female ritual I missed.

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 I feel as food tastes one on my child is definitely more Chinese than the other. My son loves tofu and my daughter really dislike it, my son runs far away from cheese and my daughter lives on Comté 🤣 classic. So tonight tofu and panzerotti 😁 

 

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4 hours ago, Franci said:

 I feel as food tastes one on my child is definitely more Chinese than the other. My son loves tofu and my daughter really dislike it, my son runs far away from cheese and my daughter lives on Comté 🤣 classic. So tonight tofu and panzerotti 😁 

 

 

Good they have strong opinions. I was so taken when mine (29 the other day) told his kindergarten teacher lobster was his favorite food. Very integrated community but nobody else chose that! 

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Not much effort after being out playing golf...came home and put a couple of small turkey tenderloins in some prepared marinade, let it sit an hour. Yellow squash sliced in half, some oil, salt, onion powder, balsamic glaze drizzled on top. Button mushrooms with same, but left whole. All grilled, served with salad. The turkey was good because it was natural/non-injected, and cooked up perfectly by DH...overcooking it makes jerky.

Edited by BeeZee
Spell-o (log)
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"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast" - Oscar Wilde

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23 minutes ago, BeeZee said:

The turkey was good because it was natural/non-injected, and cooked up perfectly by DH...overcooking it makes jerky.

 

Kudos to dh and his grill skill. 
Sawdust" is the descriptor that comes to mind with turkey.

Edited by heidih (log)
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more grilled pork. with a Miznon recipe of green beans- blanched with lemon zest, lemon juice, olive oil and salt. scallion ginger sauce on the side. Yesterday was national rose day so we complied

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Fishmongers! Treasures. More valued than boyfriends. My first taught me to debone trout. A life lesson I still use 40 or so years later, 

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1 hour ago, heidih said:

Fishmongers! Treasures. More valued than boyfriends. My first taught me to debone trout. A life lesson I still use 40 or so years later, 

 

Side story.    Many years ago I locked myself out of my car while parking behind my local super.    I went into the fish department, closest to the door, and asked the fishmonger if he could help me break in.   He brought out a long flexible boning knife and proceeded to do a fair number on the rubber window fittings before finally springing the lock.   

My husband shook his head and reminded me that this man had been a prisoner of war from Italy, held at the Presidio here during WWII,    Didn't bust out of the brig then, nor into cars since.

ETA  Here  is a story of a similarly imprisoned Italian who married a relative-in-law.   Sweet.

Edited by Margaret Pilgrim (log)
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eGullet member #80.

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2 minutes ago, chefmd said:

King crab legs salad.  It took me a long time to get the meat out.  

 

 

 

I use kitchen scissors and cut down length  

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All of this middle eastern food is making me crazy! 

 

@mgaretz – gorgeous challah.  The very first bread I ever made was a challah loaf.  I was 19 and it was wildly successful – better bread than I’ve made in the ensuing 40 years.  One of my friends was Jewish and insisted on taking some to his mom, who asked me to make it for her every so often from then until I moved away for good.  No idea what the recipe was, but yours looks so good, I think I need to try again!

 

@Franci – love the corn fritters.  Perfect summer dish!

 

@liamsaunt – those are perhaps the most beautifully grilled steaks I’ve ever seen!

 

Made some dinners to take over to Mr. Kim’s dad and stepmom.   I made enough that we’ll also be eating them this week.  I realized that made more sense and cut down on the mountain of cooking I’ve been dreading.  I love to cook, but you can have too much of a good thing. 

 

IP braised beef and gravy:

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Sour cream potatoes:

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Green beans:

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Pardon the solidified bacon grease – I forgot to take a picture while they were hot.

 

The next meal was Apricot BBQ Chicken:

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Mr. Kim and I thought it would be better with thighs, but I am "shopping" in their crammed freezer, trying to not let all that food go to waste and they only eat boneless, skinless.  

 

Broccoli casserole:

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This was really good – it calls for using FRESH broccoli, which is unusual in a broccoli casserole.  And I took a microwavable rice pouch – easy enough that his dad should be able to do it with his stepmom supervising. 

 

Dinner for us Friday night was roast chicken done in the CSO: 

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Salad:

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Jessica requested roasted broccoli and @Marlene's Smashed Potatoes:

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Yeast rolls and gravy (freezer surprise):

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Not a great job on defatting!

 

Plated – without:

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and with:

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Dinner tonight started with a salad:

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And some of the Apricot BBQ chicken we took to Mr. Kim’s parents, cheater creamed corn (a bag of frozen corn + a can of creamed corn), roast broccoli, yeast roll, and chicken rice a roni:

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Edited by Kim Shook (log)
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2 hours ago, Margaret Pilgrim said:

Chard from the yard

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Sweet Italian sausage saute with potatoes, peppers, onions

 

 

 

That chard is speaking loudly to me I recall a young boy down the street who told me his grammy grew it and he loved it with "a bit of butter". 

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