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Posted

Cabbage and kimchi okonomiyaki from Tenderheart

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This recipe adds kimchi to the cabbage in the pancake and uses a gochujang ketchup that I love (ketchup + gochujang + soy sauce + sesame oil) in place of okonomiyaki sauce.  I had the pan a bit too hot so that first side is kind of dark but no harm was done. 

  • Like 7
Posted

A few recent breakfasts.

Shakshuka made with a doubled batch of base that I made a few weeks ago and froze half. Couldn't tell the difference in the finished dish so a keeper.

An egg scrambled with dill and chives, house gravlax, tomato and thinned greens on a toasted WW English muffin.

 

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  • Like 9
  • Delicious 1

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

Posted

Saturday morning breakfast saw us having scrambled eggs and little breakfast sausages.

 

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  • Like 9
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Posted

Harvested the first of the scapes yesterday (as well as the first of the lettuces).

Eggs over scapes sauteed with creminis and shitshitos and finished with cilantro and spicy globe basil. With focaccia crusts and blueberries.

 

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  • Like 5
  • Haha 1

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

Posted

Two egg omelet with a filling of creminis, thinned greens (red kale, beet and chard), green onion, dill and aged cheddar.

Served with toasted focaccia, blueberries and a glass of V8.

 

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

Posted

Pad Thai

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This one was from Kenji's The Wok.  After blabbering on at great length as he does, the recipe itself is presented in a way that's easy to follow but it's got too much stuff in it for my taste.  The additions of shrimp paste and preserved radish added a lot of salt.  I might consider them in smaller amounts. 

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Posted

@blue_dolphin

 

there are many ways to cook a breakfast egg

 

for the  ' fryer ' category  

 

crispy fried is the finest .  more or less shallow deepish enough too rapidly crisp those edges !

 

'your looks perfect.

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Thanks, @rotuts!  This recipe says to heat about an inch of oil into the wok.  I had about 1/2 inch and it still worked well to crisp the edges without having the yolk get stuck to the bottom and break!

Posted

@blue_dolphin

 

Its a deep fried egg , 

 

on the shallow depth for the oil.

 

but there has to be a notible amount of oil in the pan

 

and the oil is at the right temp for those crispy edges   etc

  • Like 1
Posted

This breakfast can only be known as Mushrooms on toast

 

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  • Like 6
  • Delicious 1
Posted

Yesterday, I made the Nam Prik Noom (Roasted Green Chile Dip from Night + Market to use as a base for the Nam Prik Khee Ga used in tacos I had for lunch.  Today, I figured I'd dip in to that jar of Nam Prik Noom and build a breakfast around it.  I was worried it would be too hot, and it is plenty spicy, but I enjoyed it all. Everything in my bowl came from the suggestion list at the end of the Nam Prik Noom recipe: sticky rice, raw cabbage, steamed cauliflower and zucchini and an egg - the book says hard boiled but you know I couldn't resist having a jammy one 🙃 

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I was curious to try the microwave sticky rice recipe in the book and was surprised how well it worked, even in my feeble microwave.  

  • Like 6
  • Delicious 1
Posted

@Ann_T – that peameal bacon that you’ve been making is so lovely!

 

@Miss K – I am fond of box mixes and I love muffins.  I like the nice domes you got on those muffins, I need to try that brand! 

 

Still struggling to get caught up and loving all of your beautiful meals.  Breakfast a few days ago was just toast, but made with some beautiful sourdough that we got at a Mennonite market that we discovered on a trip to pick peaches:

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Another day my breakfast was a massive fail.  It was something I saw on a YouTube channel, “Dollar Tree Dinners”.  It sounded and looked easy and tasty.  It WAS tasty, but not easy and more trouble than it was worth even if it had worked.  The basic idea was to make sausage stuffed pancake muffins.  And it was clever.  You formed raw sausage links into patties, tucked the rounds into muffin tins and baked them.  Then you removed the cooked patties and put pancake batter into the tins.  The sausage patties went back in and then were topped with additional batter and baked.  The result was something that looked like a muffin, but cut open revealed a sausage patty.  You were supposed to use maple flavored sausage links and cheese slices to approximate a McGriddle.  We don’t find the idea of cheese and maple syrup appetizing, so I skipped the cheese.  I had a problem right from the beginning:

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These just looked so unfortunate 🤨.  She used sausage links that didn’t have casings and it didn’t occur to me to take mine out of the casing.  Also, since hers was cheap Dollar Tree sausage, it was much fattier and made more lubrication for the batter (foreshadowing here).  I carried on and put them together:

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Another problem with using better quality sausage than she used was that mine didn’t shrink a lot and was, therefore, the same size as the muffin cups which meant that the batter didn’t encase the patties.  Which meant that this was how mine came out:

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“Came out” is actually what they did NOT do:

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🤬This was the mess that I was left to clean up.  SO not worth it.  These were presented as a “grab and go” breakfast.  Something that you could pop in the microwave and take in the car.  Mr. Kim and I both thought that they really needed to be dunked in syrup which made THAT idea a non-starter.  Luckily, I had some batter leftover and some pecans in the freezer.  I made us a couple of regular pancakes:

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Which were delicious and much less trouble.  Breakfast after all that:

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A few days ago, breakfast Campari tomatoes on that good Mennonite toast:

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Pancakes and bacon:

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Pancakes and bacon.  I used up the pancake mix that I bought to make those failed pancake and sausage muffins.  It’s funny – I’ve never used a mix before to make pancakes.   Momma used Bisquick, which is about the same, I guess.  I never loved them, so I’ve always made mine from scratch.  But I have to admit, there’s not a huge difference between these and mine. 

 

Yesterday - 1st breakfast:

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BEC on an English muffin.  Then, because I was hungry about an hour later and this luscious pear was calling to me – 2nd breakfast:

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Also, I was afraid that the croissant was going to go stale 👀.

  • Like 10
  • Delicious 1
Posted

Some recent breakfast. Kind of obvious that's it's scape harvesting time.

Breakfast wrap of egg, scapes, shishito and Thai peppers, baby chard and beet greens and pepper jack on a WW tortilla.

Eggs scrambled with scapes, shishitos, green onion bottoms, cilantro and dill. Toasted focaccia. Orange and cherries on the side.

Egg, sausage, pepper jack, scapes and Thai chili on WW bagel. Tomatoes and local strawberries on the side.

 

 

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  • Like 6
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'A drink to the livin', a toast to the dead' Gordon Lightfoot

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