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Lunch 2021


liuzhou

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We are getting boxes from a CSA this summer, this past week it came with radishes and bok choy. Luckily they provided a recipe they got from vegetariantimes.com Sweet ‘n Sour Bok Choy and Radish Stir Fry

 

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It was much better then I expected.

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Fried creamy, mild feta. I drenched it in honey.

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Both stuffed with rice. (I didn't touch this because rice)

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Roasted aubergine & sweet pepper "salad" (right)

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"Tamaras" of salmon roe

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Based on Cretan "Dakos", toast with tomatoes and grated feta.

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People be like "why you never go out?" All my stuff is here, including my food.

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Yogurt

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Tahini pastry

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Cheesecake for me

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A few weeks ago, my wife attended a work event that had a really nice gift bag...

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So, what better holiday lunch would there be? The toasts on the left were a little gross so we got a nice locally made baguette and a few other things to supplement it:

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I mentioned 酸菜鱼 (suān cài yú) in the Chinese Pickles and Preserves topic here. This soup dish of fish and pickled mustard leaf is a Sichuan classic. Today, I came across a variant. This was 酸菜鱼分 (suān cài yú fěn) i.e the same fish and pickles served with rice noodles. Thinly sliced grass carp; sour and spicy, pickled vegetation; smooth rice noodles - perfect lunch.
 

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Edited by liuzhou (log)
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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

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"Parent-child"-style: poached prawns and freekeh mixed with roasted prawn roe.

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Cured salmon and roe

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Seared scallops (drenched in Korean soy sauce and sesame sauce).

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Several types of pungent cress

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On my 5th kilo of cherries.

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Matcha

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Dipped in 99% Lindt

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Prawns and oyters, but it's more about the beer.

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@BonVivant – those tahini coils look wonderful and sound like something I’d love.  I’m a big fan of tahini.

 

We had house guests over the 4th of July weekend.  Our first ones in over a year.  On Saturday we took them into the city for lunch.  We ate at a place we end up at often – Salt & Forge.  One friend had the turkey and blackberry sandwich:

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Herb-roasted turkey, blackberry-serrano jam, Brie, crispy shallots, arugula, honey whole wheat.

 

His wife and I had the Brisket:

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Madiera & caramelized onion braised brisket, Gruyère fondue, crispy shallots, whole grain mustard, arugula, baguette.

 

Mr. Kim the Posto:

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Soppressata, capicola, mortadella, country ham, fresh mozzarella, sun-dried tomatoes, red onion, arugula, red wine vinaigrette, baguette.

 

Jessica had the Chicken, Bacon, Ranch:

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Chicken breast (crispy), bacon, buttermilk ranch, pickles, lettuce, tomato, red onion, brioche.

 

We then did a little wandering around in the Scott’s Addition neighborhood and stopped in at the Black Heath Meadery.  We shared a couple of flights and one glass:

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The glass was “Living Reflection” – tangerine with a hint of honey.  The flights included “Blue Angel” – pink lady apple juice and honey, “Sour Cherry” – traditional mead with Balaton and Montmorency cherries and sour tonic, “Respect the Elders” – a blend of two berry meads.  Black currant, black raspberry, blackberry, and elderberry, fermented with orange blossom and Zambian wildflower honey (this was the BEST), “Ginger” – traditional mead with baby ginger, and “Double Barrel Pecan End of the Wait” – bourbon barrel aged honey conditioned on smoked pecans then aged an additional six months in Reservoir bourbon barrels. 

 

Mead is lovely.  So mellow and comforting – it was unseasonable cool, so it suited the day.  We were kept company by their most important employee, Otis:

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Then on to the Blue Bee Cidery.  Possibly we did it backwards.  Considering the fact that I’m not wild about wine, these two stops could have been designed for me.  Instead of a flight, we got individual glasses.  Blackberry Ginger cider two ways – chilled:

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And frozen:

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Friday was my birthday.  I introduced Jessica to a favorite “ladies who lunch”-type place that Mr. Kim and I eat at a lot called Lulu Belles.  Jessica had the Estelle:  Roasted turkey, fig jam, Granny Smith apples and brie, wheat with sesame noodles and street corn

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The sandwich was MUCH better than the picture indicates, and the sesame noodles were great – not too much sesame oil.

 

I had the ham, cheese, and apple quiche with side salad:

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Quiche was great, but the standout was the crust – it was crisp and flaky and delicious. 

 

Today Jessica and I ended up having lunch at a new place across the river called the Brickhouse Diner.   We shared the tots with cheese and bacon:

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She had the fried shrimp and baked potato:

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The shrimp were wonderful and perfectly cooked.  Can’t remember the last time I saw a foil wrapped baked potato, though.

 

I had a very good house made gyro and very ordinary onion rings:

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salad from local chain, Honeygrow...arugula/greens, red grapes, chicken, quinoa, farro, feta, carrot, beet, candied pecans, fresh lime and ginger dressing

 

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"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast" - Oscar Wilde

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As someone who doesn't eat much meat, I'm not sure what came over me, but I decided to try a local BBQ pop-up that's been getting some good press

That's a  1/2 lb piece of brisket in front and a beef rib (aka dino bone) in the back

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Cut side of dino bone.  See thumb at lower left for scale:

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I suspect this will be lunch and dinner and maybe lunch again....

 

 

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13 minutes ago, blue_dolphin said:

Cut side of dino bone.  See thumb at lower left for scale:

You can have the brisket but that fino bone is one of the best pieces of beef in the world in my opinion. They used to be easy to come by and I often cooked them but they became scarcer than hens teeth and twice as expensive. They need to be enjoyed alone or with someone you totally love and trust. Manners spoil them. Fingers and lots of napkins suffice. 

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Anna Nielsen aka "Anna N"

...I just let people know about something I made for supper that they might enjoy, too. That's all it is. (Nigel Slater)

"Cooking is about doing the best with what you have . . . and succeeding." John Thorne

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I'm turning Greek! Recreated a lovely meal I had in Veria. A small local restaurant, was there between lunch and dinner and had the place to ourselves. Cook led me to the kitchen and showed me what he had. I pointed at some vegetables and some meat. What a got was a little feast.

 

My version is based on the photos of the meal in Veria. 

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I used pork (SV'ed then grilled), the restaurant version was chicken.

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In Veria it was a different meat. I used lamb mince.

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All the dishes the cook made were delicious but this one was my personal favourite, because aubergines.

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Thinking of Greece. (Btw, the Rilke quote sounds much nicer in German.)

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The original meal and train tickets. The feral dogs were so ferocious and there were many of them (bottom left corner). Just don't make eye contact whatever you do.

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@blue_dolphin - oh, dear Lord.  That Flintstone bone!  I am SUCH a meat and potatoes girl, and beef rib and BBQ brisket is a rarely found favorite of mine.  I love beef pretty much all the ways it is cooked, but BBQ is probably my very favorite. 

 

@BonVivant – so much beautiful and delicious looking food, but what I kept coming back to were the lamb meatballs.  I adore lamb and ground lamb is a favorite.

 

Stopped for lunch yesterday at Mr. Kim’s favorite downtown lunch place, Union Market.  I had the U. M. Cheesesteak: Roast beef, sautéed onion, American cheese & Duke's mayo on a Lyon Bakery baguette with a side of salad greens with Dijon vinaigrette:

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Mr. Kim had the half Italian Hoagie: Genoa salami, soppressata, capicola & provolone with tomato, shredded romaine, red onion, Duke's mayo, cherry pepper relish & vinaigrette on a Lyon baguette with Spicy Korean Pork soup:

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He said that the soup was especially good.

 

Dessert was saved for home:

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1 hour ago, liuzhou said:

Seafood lunch at a friend's house yesterday

Looks delicious.  The lazy susan had a bit of a fling as a dining table addition among friends. Not usually quite as large. Something more appropriate for condiments. 

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Anna Nielsen aka "Anna N"

...I just let people know about something I made for supper that they might enjoy, too. That's all it is. (Nigel Slater)

"Cooking is about doing the best with what you have . . . and succeeding." John Thorne

Our 2012 (Kerry Beal and me) Blog

My 2004 eG Blog

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2 minutes ago, Anna N said:

Looks delicious.  The lazy susan had a bit of a fling as a dining table addition among friends. Not usually quite as large. Something more appropriate for condiments. 

 

Lazy Susans are not that common here in family homes. Restaurants, yes - de rigeur.

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

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31 minutes ago, Anna N said:

Looks delicious.  The lazy susan had a bit of a fling as a dining table addition among friends. Not usually quite as large. Something more appropriate for condiments. 

Ha first encountered the large lazy susan at the neighbors as a young girl. A large sorta oval table At that point 5 kids plus au pair plus parents and guests. Instead of " please pass" it was fun to "please spin me". I'd forgotten = thanks.

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On 7/17/2021 at 6:07 PM, Anna N said:

You can have the brisket but that fino bone is one of the best pieces of beef in the world in my opinion. They used to be easy to come by and I often cooked them but they became scarcer than hens teeth and twice as expensive. They need to be enjoyed alone or with someone you totally love and trust. Manners spoil them. Fingers and lots of napkins suffice. 

True that.  I used to get beautiful beef ribs; simply salted and grilled just great. 

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