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Posted

Oven baked haddock over shrimp roe noodles pan fried with shanghai choy, chili crisp oil, garlic and fish sauce. With a tomato and finished with green onion tops and cilantro.

 

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'A drink to the livin', a toast to the dead' Gordon Lightfoot

Posted

Sunday night niece and nephew chose the menu. Nephew grilled chicken kebabs with peppers and onions (and a porterhouse steak, not pictured), niece made macaroni and cheese, and I tossed some broccoli in

 

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Monday was pasta night.  Husband, sister and I had eggplant involtini with arugula salad

 

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Niece had beet gnocchi with roasted beet sauce, spinach, toasted pine nuts and browned butter.  The gnocchi and beet sauce were already made and pulled from the freezer to quickly pan saute, so that was easy enough

 

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Nephew had a baked ravioli and chicken casserole, and I also baked a loaf of focaccia, but I did not get pictures of those.

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Posted

We’ve finished travelling and packing after selling our little country holiday home and I’m feeling tired and washed out. I ordered take out Sweet and Sour pork to be delivered the other night...noticed that they had Mapo Tofu on the menu, so got some of that as well. Big mistake for me as it was so spicey hot I couldn’t eat it ( and I do like my chillis ) Husband had some and finished it off for lunch the next day. That’s the Mapo Tofu on the right looking all innocent. 
 

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Posted

Shaking beef (bo luc lac) - NY strip seared with garlic, oyster sauce, and soy sauce, then tossed with the dressing (lime juice, fish sauce, sugar, bird chiles), pineapple, shallot, and Thai basil. Served over red-leaf lettuce and garden tomatoes.

 

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Mrs. C brought freshly-picked strawberries from Wisconsin. We ate what we could eat, and then she made a strawberry-blueberry crisp

 

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Posted

A rare event for me.  I made an actual evening meal....with meat!  

Clockwise from lower right: Prakas's rib eye, steamed jasmine rice, stir-fried greens with garlic and chiles and a grapefruit and cucumber salad with coconut, peanuts and fried shallot all from Kris Yenbamroong's Night + Market cookbook. 

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Prakas was Kris Yenbamroong's father and the rib eye was something he came up with and served at his restaurant, Talésai.   The rib eye gets a brief bath in black soy sauce and Thai seasoning sauce before getting a hard sear and a rest before being sliced and then stir-fried with garlic, bird's eye chiles, cherry tomatoes, Thai seasoning sauce, oyster sauce, a bit of sugar and Thai basil.  It gets finished with freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, of all things.  Tasted good. 

 

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Posted

Lazy gardening day dinner.

Gojuchang wings with herbed blue cheese dip, pickled red onion, mini cucumbers and tomato.

Keith's IPA.

 

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'A drink to the livin', a toast to the dead' Gordon Lightfoot

Posted
10 hours ago, blue_dolphin said:

A rare event for me.  I made an actual evening meal....with meat!  

Clockwise from lower right: Prakas's rib eye, steamed jasmine rice, stir-fried greens with garlic and chiles and a grapefruit and cucumber salad with coconut, peanuts and fried shallot all from Kris Yenbamroong's Night + Market cookbook. 

DA70DCEE-19C6-40D6-9FAA-610A0F04A5A3_1_201_a.thumb.jpeg.873c8d0cde29a001b9c79be8f8b15859.jpeg

Prakas was Kris Yenbamroong's father and the rib eye was something he came up with and served at his restaurant, Talésai.   The rib eye gets a brief bath in black soy sauce and Thai seasoning sauce before getting a hard sear and a rest before being sliced and then stir-fried with garlic, bird's eye chiles, cherry tomatoes, Thai seasoning sauce, oyster sauce, a bit of sugar and Thai basil.  It gets finished with freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, of all things.  Tasted good. 

 

What is meant by Thai seasoning sauce?  Is that like a Golden Mountain sauce which is like a Maggi type thing?

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Posted
18 minutes ago, KennethT said:

What is meant by Thai seasoning sauce?  Is that like a Golden Mountain sauce which is like a Maggi type thing?

Yes.  I know nothing of Thai ingredients but the author calls it Thai seasoning sauce throughout the book.  He mentioned both Golden Mountain and Healthy Boy brands and I saw other brands at the store. 

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Posted

Rice noodle salad bowl from Andrea Nguyen's Vietnamese Food Any Day.  The protein on top is chicken thigh.  

 

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Posted

A couple of easy dinners to get through the week..

Pie and peas.

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Stuffed potato with savoury mince.

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Posted

Using up bits and pieces- sweet potato, peas, and a smoked blue cheese brat from a local meat market. 

Partner had rockfish pasta with lemon sauce

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Hunter, fisherwoman, gardener and cook in Montana.

Posted

I believe this would be considered a po'boy.

Shrimp and Chorizo with tomato, lettuce and a remoulade(ish) sauce on a WW baguette.

Dry NS cider on the side.

 

 

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'A drink to the livin', a toast to the dead' Gordon Lightfoot

Posted
Last night's dinner was a dish I hadn't made recently. Forgot how much we both loved this recipe.
 
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From Paul Prudhomme's Family Recipes cookbook, - Baked Country Style Pork ribs.
 
Recipe was apparently from one of his sisters and her husband. I've been making this for over 30 years.
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Posted (edited)
13 hours ago, C. sapidus said:

Caramel pork

That sounds delicious. I Googled it and recipes that I found that they called for coconut water. Do you have a link to the recipe you use or can at least explain how you do it. Thank you

Edited by Tropicalsenior (log)
Posted (edited)
36 minutes ago, Tropicalsenior said:

That sounds delicious. I Googled it and recipes that I found that they called for coconut water. Do you have a link to the recipe you use or can at least explain how you do it. Thank you

 

Thanks! Recipe is from 'Into the Vietnamese Kitchen' by Andrea Nguyen. Super-simple if you have burnt caramel sauce on hand, and a longtime family favorite. I added sliced ginger because why not.

 

Caramelized minced pork (thit heo bam)

 

Whoops, forgot this:

 

Vietnamese caramel sauce

Edited by C. sapidus
Added caramel sauce link (log)
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Posted
17 minutes ago, C. sapidus said:

Recipe is from 'Into the Vietnamese Kitchen' by Andrea Nguyen.

Thank you, the recipe seems pretty straightforward but I do have a question. Do you really make the caramel sauce in such a small batch or do you double it?

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Posted
28 minutes ago, Tropicalsenior said:

Thank you, the recipe seems pretty straightforward but I do have a question. Do you really make the caramel sauce in such a small batch or do you double it?

 

Usually I make double, which lasts quite a while. This time sugar limitations dictated a smaller batch (which should still last a while).

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Posted
10 minutes ago, Captain said:

Bolognese with penne.

Great minds think alike. I'm making something quite similar for dinner tonight.

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