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Posted

Chickpea haters, look away now.

 

The rest of you can take a look at this recipe for Chickpea Winter Salad, from the Larchmont Buzz (little newspaper for an area near Los Angeles). Then take a look at my result.

 

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The ingredients are canned, drained chickpeas; chopped parsley, red onion, olives, sundried tomatoes, garlic and marinated artichoke hearts. The author notes that it's a forgiving recipe: adjust at will, add or subtract ingredients. (I just realized that I forgot the garlic!) The dressing is 1:1 lemon juice and olive oil. Salt and pepper to taste. 

 

I think I overdid the red onion. It's already pretty strong as I eat the first bowlful, and I doubt it will mellow with time. Still, this is good. I can imagine adding chunks of meat (especially salami) or more vegetables. It's a nice counterpart to a delightful Antipasti Salad that I make in warm weather when I remember it. 🙄

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Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
HosteG Forumsnsmith@egstaff.org

Follow us on social media! Facebook; instagram.com/egulletx

"Every day should be filled with something delicious, because life is too short not to spoil yourself. " -- Ling (with permission)
"There comes a time in every project when you have to shoot the engineer and start production." -- author unknown

Posted (edited)

I made @Dejah's 1-2-3-4-5 ribs and they were delicious.

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I had to cook them about an hour and 10 minutes to get them tender. I think the pig that I got was a little longer in the tooth than what you buy up there. I made a double batch for the three of us and there were only about four little ribs left. Of course my grandson, Michael, ate about 3/4 of them.

Edited by Tropicalsenior (log)
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Posted
35 minutes ago, Smithy said:

It's already pretty strong as I eat the first bowlful, and I doubt it will mellow with time

I love the flavor of red onion but it can be pretty overpowering. I found that if you soak it in ice water with just a touch of sugar for about half an hour before you use it it mellows it out and it is really good.

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Posted

Duck Ragu Bucatini from “Delicious Tonight” - duck legs get braised with carrots, onions, celery, garlic, dried porcini, red wine, tomato passata, cinnamon stick, star anise, bay leaves, rosemary and chicken broth. Once the duck meat gets shredded you thicken the ragu with beurre manie and mixed with the bucatini and topped with parmesan 

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Posted

Gnocchi wit bacon, peas, parm in a pink pesto (sun-dried tomato). 

 

 

gnocchibacon.jpg

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Posted
8 hours ago, Tropicalsenior said:

I love the flavor of red onion but it can be pretty overpowering. I found that if you soak it in ice water with just a touch of sugar for about half an hour before you use it it mellows it out and it is really good.

 

I just soak in plain cold water and it tames it right down.

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Deb

Liberty, MO

Posted
On 1/3/2025 at 12:02 PM, Okanagancook said:

Baking powder, really…were they noticeably fluffier?  How much did you add, if you have it handy?

According to Ludja  " The basic ( no Fail ) Spaetzle recipe i make and learned from my Austrian mom

 

IS:  2 eggs

       1/2 C  of Water

        1/4 t baking powder

       1 1/2 C of AP flour

         1/2 t of salt

 

I have never made these before but they were awesome---I added Nutmeg too

 

Cheers and happy new yr

Doc B

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Its good to have Morels

Posted
5 minutes ago, YvetteMT said:

No pic from last night but,  meatloaf and  baked sweet potatoes

What, no cougar, no bear? I always eagerly click on your post just to see what the heck you're eating tonight.

  • Haha 5
Posted
5 hours ago, Paul Bacino said:

Spaetzle recipe

Thank you for posting the recipe. I was wondering which one you used. I do have a question. I don't have a  Spaetzle maker and I don't intend to buy one. What did you use? And if one were to use a colander or a grater is the dough thick enough that it doesn't run all over?

Posted (edited)
6 hours ago, Tropicalsenior said:

What, no cougar, no bear? I always eagerly click on your post just to see what the heck you're eating tonight.

Nothing weird tonight either- fish.  😉

Halibut, broccoli, rice. 

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Edited by YvetteMT
Pic (log)
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Hunter, fisherwoman, gardener and cook in Montana.

Posted (edited)

Catfish al mojo de ajo con calabacitas: Garlic cloves sauteed and then blended with gelled chicken stock from a previous Mexican meal. Catfish fillets fried in the garlic-rich oil and then finished in the oven. Zucchini cubes, seared and then cooked down with roasted chile Poblano, the garlic sauce, and lots of cilantro. Lime wedges at the table.

 

Arroz blanco: jasmine rice fried with white onion and garlic, and then steamed with chicken stock.

 

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Edited by C. sapidus (log)
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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, YvetteMT said:

Nothing weird tonight either- fish.  😉

Halibut, broccoli, rice. 

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Oh well, how boring. I guess I'm just going to have to keep checking back to see what Poor Little Critter will bite the dust next week.

Edited by Tropicalsenior (log)
  • Haha 4
Posted

Ran out of time to make moussaka, so the ground lamb turned into Kofta.
Basmati rice and mixed veg sides.

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For dessert: Chinese Steamed Egg Cake: memory from  my childhood, and, my kids love this whenever Po-Po visited us on the farm and made this. After school, a wedge of this with ice cold milk. I have been making this in my Mom's old wicker basket, but it finally fell apart even with all the mending I did. So, I had to make this in a bamboo steamer.

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I need to find a similar basket, like this one! Maybe when my friends go to Malaysia!

                                                                                        cakebasket.jpg.f0c548076d7a3174d9122a0ef06694a2.jpg

 

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Dejah

www.hillmanweb.com

Posted
16 minutes ago, Dejah said:

I need to find a similar basket, like this one! Maybe when my friends go to Malaysia!

                                                                                        cakebasket.jpg.f0c548076d7a3174d9122a0ef06694a2.jpg

 

These are ten a penny round here. Used for making tofu or for more general purposes. I'd imagine Asian markets would have if there is one near you (?).

...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

Like others here perhaps, we were in need of a fish meal so I bought some very fresh monkfish. Shallow fried with a dusting of seasoned  flour. Served with salad and scallop potatoes. 
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Posted

Lazy Chicken and vegetable soup made with freezer bits. Chicken breasts poached first in a flavorful stock earlier in the day, then shredded and stored in the fridge with some of the poaching liquid until needed.  Chopped up some ancient carrot for the stock. Freezer yielded some roasted green beans, a cup or so of cooked rice, handful of mushrooms, half an onion. Added some fresh baby spinach just before serving.

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

Posted

I mentioned last year that I had a dabble with Nigella Lawson’s Fish Finger Bhorta, and thought it would be a good canvas for a number of ingredients other than fish fingers. https://www.nigella.com/recipes/fish-finger-bhorta

Yesterday I cooked up left over goose pie and whilst the oven was on I put in one of the glut of pheasants we currently have nestling in the freezer. I stripped the carcass last night after it had cooled and added the meat to the Bhorta tonight.

Mrs T63 believes it was the best version I have prepared thus far.

I did use freshly grated root ginger and garlic instead of the stuff out of a jar and that contributed to the improved taste. I also used two green chillies instead of red.

 

I will be trying it again soon when I next have the oven on at the appropriate temperature to precook another of our many pheasants.

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