REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

The Recipe Thread

POSTED BY: JEWELSTAITEFAN
UPDATED: Tuesday, June 28, 2022 19:41
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Monday, November 11, 2019 9:27 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Oddly enough, in my batch of pre-cooked foods, is one of Carolina-style pulled pork (peppery and vinegary) with grits and Southern greens. And THOSE are a mix of (washed, de-ribbed, and cut-up) greens: mustard, collard, kale, and turnip; cooked till quite soft with butter and oil. (Other recipes use onion, bacon, and vinegar, to cut the sweetness of the onions.) But I have a really hard time finding turnip greens.

Any suggestions?

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Tuesday, November 12, 2019 10:04 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


PictSweet sells chopped frozen turnip greens. I'll look for some at the stores where I usually shop n see if they're available.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

You idiots have been oppressing the entire sexual spectrum as long as you have existed. I can't wait for the day your kind is dead - WISHIMAY

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Wednesday, November 13, 2019 4:15 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I'd appreciate it. I've looked at Albertson's and Stater Bros as well as my usual and not so usual stores nearby - TJ's, Sprouts, and Whole Foods.

AH! I just looked it up. Nearby me, the only place that has that (supposedly) is Walmart.

But maybe you have another store you can find. Ralph's perhaps? Or a larger Stater Bros?


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Thursday, November 14, 2019 7:49 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:


Here is an enitrely made-up recipe that family is OK with for quiche. (Hubby hates quiches except for this one.)

Line the bottom (JUST the bottom) of a loaf pan with commercial or homemade pie crust. Bake at 400F until golden, about 15 minutes; remove from oven

Place into food processor or blender
about 6" turkey sausage, sliced
1 carton cottage cheese (I rinse and drain it to reduce salty/sour taste)
6 oz shredded cheese (I use "Italian blend" but you can use whatever you like)
4 eggs
1/4 c flour
1/2 c milk
youcan add cooked broccoli, chopped parsley, cooked onions or fresh green onions or mushrooms

blenderize it to desired texture (You can make it smooth and uniform or leave visible peices of sausage and vegetables ... it's up to you.

Pour into the loaf pan and bake at 325 until inserted knife comes out cleanly, about 1 1/4 hour.
*****
I serve this with a salad on the side and fruit/jello.
=SIGNY


I'm not a big fan of sausage. Would that also work with something like pulled turkey meat? JSF



It depends on the flavor and texture. Sausage or REAL smoked meat adds a smokey flavor and salt. Pulled turkey? What's that? If it's just slow-cooked turkey then it might be kind of flavorless and stringy. OTOH if it has a flavor and texture that you enjoy ... by all means! I can see adding thyme, sage and parsley for a "stuffed turkey" or "turkey pot pie" flavor, just stir in some cooked peas, carrots, celery and even cooked cubed potatoes before pouring it into the loaf pan.

Quote:

And I cannot eat cottage cheese. Is there some sort of suitable substitute for that ingredient?-JSF



Hmm... cottage cheese. I remember you bringing that up before. I'm not sure if we ever got to the bottom of whether or not it was a lactose problem (in which milk and all soft cheeses would cause the same reaction of bloating and gas) or whether it was a milk protein problem (in which case ALL cow's milk products would cause the same problem, typically diarrhea) or whether it was a flavor/texture/association problem specific to cottage cheese.

I only use cottage cheese to "bulk up" the quiche with something that's relatively bland and lowfat but still with a lot of protein. If you're OK with cheeses in general then substitue ricotta, part-skim mozarella, lofat swiss or any lofat cheese of choice. If you're using a hard cheese then add milk or water to make up the missing water content... maybe another 1/3 cup or so. Play around with the recipe, it's pretty tolerant.

Cottage cheese. Makes me vomit if I eat it. Always has. Never understood as a kid why I could eat lasagna at home, but at school it would make me sick. My mom had found a version of lasagna which did not include cottage cheese.


As a kid, I couold not eat most cheese (nor tomatoes). Cheese slices, curds, cream, etc, unless cooked. Like on pizza was fine. not grilled cheese. favorite frosting was cream cheese frosting, that was OK. After majority, I weaned myself onto cheese and tomato products.
Always ate real ice cream, until BGH which gives me a reaction like sinus congestion. Always had milk, preferred whole, then 2%, currently 1%, not skim, but only non-BGH milk. Like heavy whipping cram, OK with half & half, not interested in fake Ice cream or fake milk.

Cottage cheese remains one item I still cannot eat without vomiting. But I also avoid raw tomatoes, they would likely make me sick as well.




regarding sausage. Salt is the main reason I have for avoiding and disliking sausage. Unsalted sausage might pique my interest, but the name would still repel me.
pulled turkey would be like roasted, or baked. Usually kinda juicy, but I can see it would not radiate your MEL of SALT.

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Thursday, November 14, 2019 10:37 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


When I was really, really little - maybe 3 or so, our mom served a very specific kind of sausage, but, sadly for her, that particular batch was spoiled. Everybody got sick. Then years later she tried to serve it again. None of us kids could get it down - even though we didn't remember the earlier incident. Our bodies remembered! Anyway, maybe that's the thing between you and cottage cheese.

That whole idea of using cottage cheese in lasagna instead of ricotta - I guess that's an WASP (non Italian) thing? Every genuine lasagna I ever had highlighted the light, fresh, dairy flavor of good ricotta. Though I think one can only get good ricotta in certain areas of the country. Anyway, I can't imagine a lasagna made with cottage cheese.

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Monday, November 25, 2019 4:15 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Ok, so: stir-fried beef. Hubby hates beef (he says) but when it's tender and spicy he likes it ok, apparently!

I use flap meat and trim it very closely and cut it into small pieces, marinade in fish sauce (I use fish sauce instead of tamari because it has a stronger flavor and I don't need to use so much/ make the meat too wet)

Set a frypan on med-hi with coconut oil, add the marinaded beef a little at a time to lightly brown, then set it aside in a bowl and let the juices run out. Drain the pan if juices remain. Reheat the pan with more coconut oil, add the beef and add fresh garlic, sliced, and sprinkle wtih 5-spice powder and chipolte according to taste. (I added the beef juices to the vegetables just to give them a little flavor kick, usually I add a little shrimp, and typically I make this meal with baked tofu and not beef.)



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

You idiots have been oppressing the entire sexual spectrum as long as you have existed. I can't wait for the day your kind is dead - WISHIMAY

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Monday, November 25, 2019 12:17 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


So that's the secret! I'm glad you found something reliable.

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Monday, November 25, 2019 12:59 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
When I was really, really little - maybe 3 or so, our mom served a very specific kind of sausage, but, sadly for her, that particular batch was spoiled. Everybody got sick. Then years later she tried to serve it again. None of us kids could get it down - even though we didn't remember the earlier incident. Our bodies remembered! Anyway, maybe that's the thing between you and cottage cheese.

That whole idea of using cottage cheese in lasagna instead of ricotta - I guess that's an WASP (non Italian) thing? Every genuine lasagna I ever had highlighted the light, fresh, dairy flavor of good ricotta. Though I think one can only get good ricotta in certain areas of the country. Anyway, I can't imagine a lasagna made with cottage cheese.

Neither can I, which was I was su surprised to see it in America's Test Kitchen Cookbook lasagna, and also surprised to read (here) that it may have been the offending ingredient in school-lunch lasagna. But maybe schools (and their suppliers) don't want to spend the money on ricotta and substitute cottage cheese instead?

I was thinking that maybe cottage cheese is (or was) made with rennet and possible that is what the problem is, but it turns out that cottage cheese is now made without rennet while many of the other cheeses, like Parmesan, are still mmade with rennt.

Quote:

There are several different kinds of animal rennet used in cheese making. Rennet obtained from a calf is generally used in cheeses made with cow's milk. Goat cheeses are made using kid rennet, and lamb rennet is used in cheeses made with sheep's milk. These days, vegetable rennet, derived from either the fig tree or Creeping Ivy, is used more often in cheese making. Microbial rennet is also used, and even genetically engineered rennet is now used in making cheese. There are also a few soft cheeses such as cream cheese and cottage cheese that are made using only citric acid for the coagulation process. True cheese artisans still tend to prefer animal rennet and consider it to be superior when it comes to curdling milk.


The amount of animal rennet needed to coagulate milk is very small. Though times are changing and more cheese makers are using other forms of rennet, the majority of cheeses on the market are still made with animal rennet. Parmigiano-Reggiano, considered one of the world's best cheeses, originated in Italy. It is next to impossible to find this cheese made with anything but animal rennet, unless one considers a product by BelGioioso called Parveggiano. Most imported cheeses, in fact, still use animal rennet. There are only a few exceptions that include: French Saint-Andre, Tomme Perigourdine, a few English and Spanish farmhouse cheeses and some Dutch made diet cheeses.

Because vegetarianism is on the rise and more vegans are requesting cheese like products, the cheese industry is slowly starting to make changes. Microbial rennet and genetically engineered rennet are starting to be used more frequently, but confusing labeling can make it difficult to know exactly what kinds of enzymes are used in each cheese. According to Whole Foods Market, labels list enzymes in up to eight different ways: enzymes, microbial enzymes, microbial coagulants, rennetless enzymes or coagulants, rennet, both enzymes and rennet, and vegetarian rennet.

https://oureverydaylife.com/which-cheeses-contain-animal-rennet-125313
34.html


So I'm back to lactose, or an associative reaction to cottage cheese, or possibly citric acid, which is one of the ingredients found in cottage cheese and cream cheese but not other cheeses.

A citric acid reaction would also put citrus foods out of reach.

JSF, hw do you react to oranges, lemons and limes?



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

You idiots have been oppressing the entire sexual spectrum as long as you have existed. I can't wait for the day your kind is dead - WISHIMAY

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Sunday, December 1, 2019 2:21 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Getting tired of cooking the same old thing, so today I tried making something different: onion rings. found a recipe online and it worked out better than I could have imagined! The recipe required triple-coating the onion rings, first with a flour/bakingpowder/salt mix, then adding egg and milk to the flour mixture to make a batter and dipping the rings in that, then dusting them with panko bread crumbs before deep frying.

But I had a little batter left over so I made corn fritters too. For dinner we had turkey burgers, onion rings, corn fritters and cole slaw. (It's a little too cold for cole slaw, but what the heck, it was easy and I had cabbage in the frig.)

The cole slaw itself is my very own recipe. I used to try and make it fancy with carrots and/or raisins and/or chopped onion and/or carraway seed, but for our family simplest is best: for 4 cups shredded cabbage make a dressing of scant 1/3 c mayo, 2 t sugae and 1/2 t Dijon mustard, toss well. Less dressing keeps the cabbage crispy and fressh-tasting; too much and it comes out greasy and wilted,


*****

Tomorrow I'm going to attempt twice-fried pork and stir-fried green beans/mushrooms.

The day after that, tandoori chicken, palak paneer, and potato/cauliflower curry..

I think after that, pork in peach sauce, with maybe collards and yam.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Sunday, December 1, 2019 4:26 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Getting tired of cooking the same old thing, so today I tried making something different: onion rings. found a recipe online and it worked out better than I could have imagined! The recipe required triple-coating the onion rings, first with a flour/bakingpowder/salt mix, then adding egg and milk to the flour mixture to make a batter and dipping the rings in that, then dusting them with panko bread crumbs before deep frying.

But I had a little batter left over so I made corn fritters too. For dinner we had turkey burgers, onion rings, corn fritters and cole slaw. (It's a little too cold for cole slaw, but what the heck, it was easy and I had cabbage in the frig.)

The cole slaw itself is my very own recipe. I used to try and make it fancy with carrots and/or raisins and/or chopped onion and/or carraway seed, but for our family simplest is best: for 4 cups shredded cabbage make a dressing of scant 1/3 c mayo, 2 t sugae and 1/2 t Dijon mustard, toss well. Less dressing keeps the cabbage crispy and fressh-tasting; too much and it comes out greasy and wilted,


*****

Tomorrow I'm going to attempt twice-fried pork and stir-fried green beans/mushrooms.

The day after that, tandoori chicken, palak paneer, and potato/cauliflower curry..

I think after that, pork in peach sauce, with maybe collards and yam.

This reminds me.... I recently made some Green Bean Casserole, and I like extra qty of the crispy onions in the mix, plus added on top. I noticed at the store that French's has a new flavor of crispy onions: Carmelized. Yum yum! I think it might work to as well to have the original flavor in the mix, and the new flavor on top, but I enjoyed it just fine all over.

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Sunday, December 1, 2019 4:29 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
When I was really, really little - maybe 3 or so, our mom served a very specific kind of sausage, but, sadly for her, that particular batch was spoiled. Everybody got sick. Then years later she tried to serve it again. None of us kids could get it down - even though we didn't remember the earlier incident. Our bodies remembered! Anyway, maybe that's the thing between you and cottage cheese.

That whole idea of using cottage cheese in lasagna instead of ricotta - I guess that's an WASP (non Italian) thing? Every genuine lasagna I ever had highlighted the light, fresh, dairy flavor of good ricotta. Though I think one can only get good ricotta in certain areas of the country. Anyway, I can't imagine a lasagna made with cottage cheese.

Neither can I, which was I was su surprised to see it in America's Test Kitchen Cookbook lasagna, and also surprised to read (here) that it may have been the offending ingredient in school-lunch lasagna. But maybe schools (and their suppliers) don't want to spend the money on ricotta and substitute cottage cheese instead?

I was thinking that maybe cottage cheese is (or was) made with rennet and possible that is what the problem is, but it turns out that cottage cheese is now made without rennet while many of the other cheeses, like Parmesan, are still mmade with rennt.

Quote:

There are several different kinds of animal rennet used in cheese making. Rennet obtained from a calf is generally used in cheeses made with cow's milk. Goat cheeses are made using kid rennet, and lamb rennet is used in cheeses made with sheep's milk. These days, vegetable rennet, derived from either the fig tree or Creeping Ivy, is used more often in cheese making. Microbial rennet is also used, and even genetically engineered rennet is now used in making cheese. There are also a few soft cheeses such as cream cheese and cottage cheese that are made using only citric acid for the coagulation process. True cheese artisans still tend to prefer animal rennet and consider it to be superior when it comes to curdling milk.


The amount of animal rennet needed to coagulate milk is very small. Though times are changing and more cheese makers are using other forms of rennet, the majority of cheeses on the market are still made with animal rennet. Parmigiano-Reggiano, considered one of the world's best cheeses, originated in Italy. It is next to impossible to find this cheese made with anything but animal rennet, unless one considers a product by BelGioioso called Parveggiano. Most imported cheeses, in fact, still use animal rennet. There are only a few exceptions that include: French Saint-Andre, Tomme Perigourdine, a few English and Spanish farmhouse cheeses and some Dutch made diet cheeses.

Because vegetarianism is on the rise and more vegans are requesting cheese like products, the cheese industry is slowly starting to make changes. Microbial rennet and genetically engineered rennet are starting to be used more frequently, but confusing labeling can make it difficult to know exactly what kinds of enzymes are used in each cheese. According to Whole Foods Market, labels list enzymes in up to eight different ways: enzymes, microbial enzymes, microbial coagulants, rennetless enzymes or coagulants, rennet, both enzymes and rennet, and vegetarian rennet.

https://oureverydaylife.com/which-cheeses-contain-animal-rennet-125313
34.html


So I'm back to lactose, or an associative reaction to cottage cheese, or possibly citric acid, which is one of the ingredients found in cottage cheese and cream cheese but not other cheeses.

A citric acid reaction would also put citrus foods out of reach.

JSF, hw do you react to oranges, lemons and limes?

I've never had any reaction to citrus that I recall.
Love OJ, prefer fresh squeezed or high pulp.
Lemonade is great, I prefer Calypso brand (no fake sweeteners). Otherwise from jar, Country Time Pink, Dark Cherry, because the powder doesn't have the fake sweeteners either.
Love Limeade, many flavors at A&W when they have it, and everyday at Firehouse Subs their Dark Cherry flavor.

If it was lactose, wouldn't I have had an issue with Milk, Cream, real ice cream, real butter? Cheese is heavily cultured, which is where I had assumed the problem lie. And tomatoes are highly acidic.
Any reaction I have to those dairy are sinus related, allergy related. The cottage cheese reaction is digestive, vomiting.

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Sunday, December 1, 2019 5:04 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I still wonder if it's a body-memory from a long, long time ago ... in a galaxy far ... OOPS! got derailed !!

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Sunday, December 1, 2019 5:17 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


So, I'm going to try something.

I buy TJ's organic boneless, skinless chicken thighs. (I would prefer with bone and skin, but I'd have to drive miles for that, and TJ's is less than a mile away.) When I cook them, they always release a TON of juice. I already have a cup-and-a-half stashed away from the last batch I cooked. Now, you can roll your eyes, but I cook them plain, and modify them later - in chicken pot pie, broiled with bbq sauce, used to make chicken salad sandwiches, and so on. Cooking them plain allows me to do a lot of different things with them afterwards. Well, I'm going to cook another batch, so I'll have lots of cooking juice, plus a box of broth, plus the cooking juice I already have. I intend to take all that juice and broth, throw in veges and herbs, and make soup. But then I'm going to take some of the soup broth and make gravy. I wonder how it'll taste.

So, those are my 2 experiments - making soup out of strained broth with no protein chunks in it as a light snack, and making gravy out of soup broth.

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Monday, December 2, 2019 1:45 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Well, the chicken soup made from the juice and boxed broth is omg good. And the gravy made from the soup is omg, omg good! I am not going to make THAT again, unless I have a lot of people around (whose health I don't care about too much) to eat it up for me.

ETA: I DID cook the soup with the lid off to concentrate it. So that might be why the gravy I made from the soup was so flavorful. But it was literally the best gravy I've ever had, excepting the pork sausage pan-gravy I had a Bronco Linda's Cafe in Grand Junction many years ago.

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Monday, December 2, 2019 4:12 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


It sounds yummy! I wish I could taste it. (I mean, I wish I could taste anything.)

You did with your chicken like I do with pork picnic roast- I save the juice and make broth. In my case, it's hot and sour soup, which the family really likes. I keep wondering when they're going to ge tired of it! I suppose I should try something different some day. Any ideas what kind of soup to make with pork broth?

*****

I did the "twice cooked" pork (tempura-style but Chinese flavorings) with sweet and sour sauce with red bell peppers, water chestnuts, garlic, ginger, and onions; and stir-fried green beans with mushrooms.

I forgot what a pain-in-the-neck that twice-cooked pork recipe is. There's a reason why I only make it once every few years! But, the family enjoyed dinner and we have some leftovers* for lunch tomorrow.

* Posted too soon. A midnight bandit dug into the leftovers. Now we have leftover.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Monday, December 2, 2019 1:24 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Well, when I hear pork broth I think bean soup. A large, creamy white bean like cannellini in a very thick soup with some carrots, celery, and onion - but not too much! - for a hint of flavor and color, and of course a couple of bay leaves. Some added ham would also be nice. OK - maybe I should call it stew.

I make and use pig's feet broth for just that purpose. And I'll often toss some small, oven roasted pork meatballs into my soup/stew (taste like they're grilled outdoors on a grill!) for added protein.

ETA: "You did with your chicken like I do with pork picnic roast- I save the juice and make broth. In my case, it's hot and sour soup, which the family really likes." I know you've posted about that before - more than once! It's just ... I associate hot and sour soup with a really clear broth and things like mushrooms, lotus root, and so on, and I associate western soups with chunks of cooked animal protein. So I didn't connect up your hot and sour soup mentally with my no-chicken chicken soup. But yeah - I did the same thing you've been doing!

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Monday, December 2, 2019 9:10 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


So, this is the last cooking experiment for the next while. I tried some mashed cauliflower at TJ's, and I liked it, it was very similar to mashed potatoes though with a mild but different flavor. But it was full of chemicals and salt. So I thought I'd try to recreate it at home. I cooked a 12oz package of riced cauliflower with 2T rice flour for thickening (but any flour that thickens would work, I think), and a cup of milk for flavor, and when it was done I immersion-blended it to a smooth consistency with a tablespoon of cultured unsalted butter. It was a little watery at first, but it thickened with sitting. I did end up adding a small amount of low-sodium salt to counter the sweetness of the cauliflower. Like the TJ's product, you can't mistake it for mashed potatoes, but it's an exceptional alternative that's very similar. Well, I really liked it! Anyway, I put the rest in the freezer. I'll take it out and thaw it after a couple of days to see if the texture survives freezing, or if it breaks into grainy solids and liquid. That's what the flour is supposed to help prevent - but we'll see.

If it freezes well, my next set of meals will be chicken, mashed cauliflower, and gravy.

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Tuesday, December 3, 2019 8:36 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Well cool. I just defrosted the 'mashed cauliflower' and it looks like the rice flour did the trick. The 'mashed cauliflower' didn't break or lose any of its fluffy/creamy mashed-potato texture !! YAY !!!

So now I'll be on to creating my next recipe. Since I WILL be making gravy, I think I'll cook the chicken thighs with an appropriate amount of carrots, celery, onions, and fresh thyme. I can then puree the veges into the broth and use that to make an extra-flavorful gravy. I believe the chicken and gravy over mashed cauliflower will be quite a comfort-food treat.

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Wednesday, December 4, 2019 12:02 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I wish DD could eat cauliflower, that would be a nice treat for her and very healthful.

Well, the experimental dishes turned out OK (I think. Not being able to smell/taste anything, I can't tell if they turned out the way I was hoping, I have to rely on family feedback.)

I did learn how to make crispy-crunchy onion, rings which is great! You MUST use bread crumbs or panko bread crumbs for the crunch ... I cooked a few just with batter, and they weren't anywhere near as good. So I don't need to be hustling off to restaurant to get hubby's favorite treat. But I also learned I need a frying/candymaker's thermometer: The secret to non-greasy deep-fried anything is to make sure the oil is very hot (385F). That way, when you drop the food in, the moisture in it turns to steam and blows the oil away from the food.

I learned something new about the twice-cooked pork, too: It's always hard to tell when the pork is cooked thru, but I noticed that partway thru the deep-dry process the steam bubbles get REALLY intense. I figured that that's when the meat is cooking/releasing its juices, and I can pull the pieces out when the bubbling slows down a bit, that way timing not so critical and accounts for bigger/smaller pieces.

But that's all the deep-frying I'm going to do for the time being; it's a pain in the neck and no matter how carefully you do it the food is still greasier than regular cooking.

Daughter and I made Indian fresh cheese (paneer) which turned out OK. Surprisingly, we found cheesecloth in the grocery store. I would not rinse the cheese at all next time, and I need to figure out how to manage the cheesecloth/pressing process better because some of the curds penetrated the cloth and I couldn't recover them; possibly the weight I was using was too heavy, but it was surprisingly easy to do and a learning experience for dear daughter and me.

The tandoori chicken turned out OK ... altho when I set it to broil hubby walked in asking about burning electrical insulation! Given that I had just strung Xmas lights, and it was raining, I checked around to see if there were any wet connections but didn't see anything wrong.

It is SUCH a trial- and a safety hazard!- not being able to smell anything at all!

The spinach part (palak) of "palak paneer" had the right texture (the secret ingredient is heavy cream), but according to hubby it was missing key spices. Again, not being able to smell I can't tell what those might be and he knows nothing abou cooking so he can't help me there either. Hmmm... a conundrum! Maybe enlist dear daughter's help. She hates anything "spicy" but if I could purchase some palak paneer and get her to taste/smell the restaurant version and smell different spices I think it might help sharpen her cooking skills (differentiate the various scents, like listening to an orchestra and hearing the individual instruments). But feeling a little sorry for myself, I used to have a PHENOMENAL sense of smell, which made me a favorite on odor complaint investigations because not ony could I tell that there was an odor, I could often ID the primary chemicals involved (MIBK, VOFAs etc) I could deconstruct recipes pretty well. Seriously, if I hadn't gone into chemistry I might have been a decent enologist. Not world-class ... I know what those people are capable of ... but a decent sommelier, perfumist, or chef. Now, I can't smell a thing.

Well, that's it for now for the experimental cooking. Like everything you do for the first time it takes a LONG time, and I have more important things to do!

There is one more experiment I'm going to work on: How to make fruit brandy. We have SUCH a fruitfall of feijoa, I tried making jam (too runny) and drying it (ok but not great) I think I should really try fermenting it. I've never done that before, but some knowledge of chemistry should help!


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Wednesday, December 4, 2019 12:18 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Unless ... KIKI, do you have a recipe for palak paneer?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Wednesday, December 4, 2019 2:06 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Hey Signy - what did you start out the paneer with? I was thinking of making it (btw all the recipes are exactly the same as for making ricotta, except you squeeze out the paneer) but it seemed like it could use a LOT of milk for not much cheese.

My palak paneer also has boiled potato which makes it a different kind of dish but it does exist! and I use fresh mozzarella instead of paneer, but cooking it makes the mozzarella stringy and sticky. Also, I don't mention salt. It's to taste, but no spicy dish of any origin seems to get away without the need for salt. Palak paneer should be lightly spicy and fragrant, not in-your-face hot and pungent.

Here's my recipe exactly, cryptic steps and all: 6lbspinach thaw puree/ 2pot cook 6@ 8oz ciliegine or ovoline* // T ginger t garlic 1lb onion lg serrano process fine** gently caramelize*** add H2O if needed/ add H2O 1/2t turmeric 1t@ garamasala ground cumin 2t gr coriander 1Ttamarind paste****// gently sautee*****// add spinach cheese heat/ add lemon juice

* types of mozzarella

** in food processor to get very small pieces / paste so as not to have 'bits' in the palak paneer

*** if you prefer, you can use no or minimal oil and do most of the caramelization in a small amount of water

**** can find in stores it gives a fruity and very sour taste

***** it's that spice/herb 'blooming' step many cooks now talk about

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Thursday, December 12, 2019 3:37 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I made a very nice ham and bean soup today. Not that the recipe is anything special but the soup turned out excpetionally well because I used commercial low-salt chicken broth as the base, and used garbanzos (which I cooked myself) which remained intact.

So ... approx 2 lbs ham (I really like Cure 81), cubed
One box low salt chicken broth
2 T vegetable oil
1.5 cups cut onions
3 medium -large carrots, sliced
4 large stalks celery, sliced
1 green pepper, diced
five bay leaves
3 cups cooked garbanzos plus 2 cups cooking liquid
1/2 c canned crushed tomatoes

Sautee vegetables in oil until slightly soft. Add broth, ham, bay leaves and other ingredients, simmer until vegetables are tender





-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Friday, December 13, 2019 5:46 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


A recipe of a different type, not sure if I mentioned this one already.


Hot Chocolate Bon Bon
Cup of Hot Chocolate, extra rich is fine (extra spoonfuls of powder or flavoring).
Add 1 shot of Amaretto.
Tastes like Chocolate covered Cherries, or Bon Bons.

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Friday, December 13, 2019 9:26 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
A recipe of a different type, not sure if I mentioned this one already.


Hot Chocolate Bon Bon
Cup of Hot Chocolate, extra rich is fine (extra spoonfuls of powder or flavoring).
Add 1 shot of Amaretto.
Tastes like Chocolate covered Cherries, or Bon Bons.

Yum! Sounds great!!

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

I'd nuke a BILLION PEOPLE if it would save the other 7 billion from living under Putin. Hell, I might go all the way to the last 100 people on Earth to keep this planet from being under fascist rule.- WISHIMAY

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Saturday, December 14, 2019 1:24 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
A recipe of a different type, not sure if I mentioned this one already.


Hot Chocolate Bon Bon
Cup of Hot Chocolate, extra rich is fine (extra spoonfuls of powder or flavoring).
Add 1 shot of Amaretto.
Tastes like Chocolate covered Cherries, or Bon Bons.

CHEERS !!!

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Thursday, December 19, 2019 3:22 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


This is my new WINTER marinara recipe:
Please note that these are 12 servings, since I cook in batches and freeze for later. (So one of the things my recipes have to be is freezer-tolerant.)

The recipe calls for steps that most people don't do, which is to brown things first, and to 'bloom' the spices. The browning step adds tons of extra flavor, for example it actually makes the onion both sweet and 'oniony', while the 'blooming' step increases the flavor of aromatics. 'Blooming' isn't cooking, it only take a minute or two, but it helps release the volatile oils. It also calls for 'deglazing' the skillet you brown things in, which is to add some liquid - in this case a cup of wine for flavor but you can even use water or tomato juice - to the skillet while it's being heated, and stir the liquid around, scraping off the caramelized bits from the bottom.

4lbs 85% ground beef
3lbs onions, diced
4lbs cherry tomatoes, pureed
2lbs cremini mushrooms, fine diced
1qt or liter bottle no-salt tomato juice
1C dry(ish) red, rose, or white wine of your choice, optional
5 cloves garlic, minced
3T dried basil
salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes to taste
a large skillet with lid and a large dutch oven with lid

brown the ground beef in the skillet and use a slotted spoon to remove it to the dutch oven
pour off the fat and juice from the skillet and reserve
put about 2T of beef fat back into the skillet, and put in the diced mushrooms and cover, and cook till they give up their liquid, then uncover and cook with stirring till the liquid evaporates and the mushrooms are lightly browned, then put them in the dutch oven
add another 2T of fat back to the skillet, and do the same for the onions, but cook them till they're golden brown, then put them in the dutch oven (because the high sugar content of the onions won't let the liquid evaporate to dryness, the brown color is your guide)
add about 1T of fat and 'bloom' the garlic and basil (and red pepper flakes if you're using them) in it which means heat them while stirring the little pile just until you can start to smell them, then add them to the dutch oven
deglaze the skillet with the wine (or other liquid), cook off the alcohol a bit, then add it to the dutch oven
if you have any beef fat left you can add back in as much as you want, or skim it off, but in either case add the broth back in that you reserved earlier
add the pureed tomatoes and the tomato juice to the dutch oven, and stir everything
bring to a boil on the stove - then cover
and transfer to a pre-heated oven at 350F
cook for 2.5 hours with occasional stirring, if the marinara gets too dry add more water

I think it's everything a winter dish should be - savory, rich, and hearty.



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Thursday, December 19, 2019 3:42 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Now, this was just something I made up from left-overs (except for the chicken thighs), but it sure is good too! This is also 12 servings. 1.5lbs yukon gold potatoes washed, skin-on - these were very small, so I just used those as is otherwise I might have cut them down to 'fork-sized' pieces; a few ounces of left over shredded cabbage, 2 10oz bags of frozen riced cauliflower, a 12oz bag of pre-washed, pre-shredded Tuscan (dinosaur) kale; 3lbs of onions, that I diced; and 6lbs of boneless, skinless chicken thighs - all in a large pot with a cover, oven-cooked 350F for 3.5 hours. It might seem like a long cook-time, but if you don't bring stuff to a boil on the stove first, it takes about 1 hour for that amount of food to come to a boil - reach cooking temperature - in the oven. So the first hour doesn't count as cook-time.

This turned out to be comfort food, like cream of potato soup or chicken stew with gravy - undemanding, thick, homey.


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Sunday, December 22, 2019 3:24 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
This is my new WINTER marinara recipe:
Please note that these are 12 servings, since I cook in batches and freeze for later. (So one of the things my recipes have to be is freezer-tolerant.)

The recipe calls for steps that most people don't do, which is to brown things first, and to 'bloom' the spices. The browning step adds tons of extra flavor, for example it actually makes the onion both sweet and 'oniony', while the 'blooming' step increases the flavor of aromatics. 'Blooming' isn't cooking, it only take a minute or two, but it helps release the volatile oils. It also calls for 'deglazing' the skillet you brown things in, which is to add some liquid - in this case a cup of wine for flavor but you can even use water or tomato juice - to the skillet while it's being heated, and stir the liquid around, scraping off the caramelized bits from the bottom.

4lbs 85% ground beef
3lbs onions, diced
4lbs cherry tomatoes, pureed
2lbs cremini mushrooms, fine diced
1qt or liter bottle no-salt tomato juice
1C dry(ish) red, rose, or white wine of your choice, optional
5 cloves garlic, minced
3T dried basil
salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes to taste
a large skillet with lid and a large dutch oven with lid

brown the ground beef in the skillet and use a slotted spoon to remove it to the dutch oven
pour off the fat and juice from the skillet and reserve
put about 2T of beef fat back into the skillet, and put in the diced mushrooms and cover, and cook till they give up their liquid, then uncover and cook with stirring till the liquid evaporates and the mushrooms are lightly browned, then put them in the dutch oven
add another 2T of fat back to the skillet, and do the same for the onions, but cook them till they're golden brown, then put them in the dutch oven (because the high sugar content of the onions won't let the liquid evaporate to dryness, the brown color is your guide)
add about 1T of fat and 'bloom' the garlic and basil (and red pepper flakes if you're using them) in it which means heat them while stirring the little pile just until you can start to smell them, then add them to the dutch oven
deglaze the skillet with the wine (or other liquid), cook off the alcohol a bit, then add it to the dutch oven
if you have any beef fat left you can add back in as much as you want, or skim it off, but in either case add the broth back in that you reserved earlier
add the pureed tomatoes and the tomato juice to the dutch oven, and stir everything
bring to a boil on the stove - then cover
and transfer to a pre-heated oven at 350F
cook for 2.5 hours with occasional stirring, if the marinara gets too dry add more water

I think it's everything a winter dish should be - savory, rich, and hearty.



Not sure I understand the use of tomato juice when you already have pureed tomatoes.

I might be tempted to replace with tomato paste (if flavor is the reason) or more wine (if liquid is the reason).

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Sunday, January 26, 2020 1:31 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Hey JSF, I read that you were sick! I hope you're feeling better.

*****

Discovered two new recipes that are easy and tasty. But just as an aside, we all (and I mean ALL) have been sick with fever, coughing and wheezing. Soup really seems to help. I've been relying on soup, and soup-like recipes, to help us get better.

RED CURRY
The ingredients might be a little hard to come by, but if you can find them the recipe is simple to prepare

2T coconut oil
3-4T commercial Thai red curry paste
approx 1/4 c chopped cilantro and stems
1/2 t ground cumin

2 cans light coconut milk
2T fish sauce or soy sauce
2T sugar
1/2 lb frozen pineapple chunks
2 potatoes, cut into 1/2" pieces
shrimp to taste

8 oz snow peas tipped and de-stringed
1 red bell, into 1/2" pieces


1 c basil rinsed
Chipotle powder, cayenne, sambal oelek, or Sriracha to taste.

Melt coconut oil in pot, add curry paste, cilantro and cumin, and cook until cilantro is wilted.
Add light coconut milk, potato, pineapple, shrimp, fish or soy sauce, and sugar. Bring to simmer and simmer about 7 minutes

Add snow peas and bell pepper, cook to crisp-tender, add basil at end just to stir in and wilt. Add hot spice to taste.

*****

Now, hubby is not a huge fan of shrimp (altho it is very good for you) so I serve this with pork. I discovered a new cut - tenderloin- that is indeed very tender, and fortunately for me it was on sale for $3/lb. Trim off silver-skin, slice into 1/4" strips. For 2 lb, sprinkle with 1 t fish sauce and 1 t soy (or tamari) and 1/2 t ground black pepper and marinade for 30 minutes or so. Slice approx 1/2 c (yes that's 1/2 cup) garlic cloves, rinse drain and heat 2 bags of shirataki noodles, and rinse approx 1 c of basil leaves.

Melt about 1 T of coconut oil in a pan to med-high, add pork in batches to stir-fry, then add noodles, add pork back in, and garlic to "bloom" the garlic, then add basilto wilt. Add some green or red Thai curry paste if you like. Serve over red curry vegetables in coconut milk. That's it!





-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Sunday, January 26, 2020 3:20 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Kiki, I love your recipes, but I can't eat tomato, potato, or rice (or orange, lettuce, beef, eggplant, and a couple of things I forget) and dear daughter can't eat cruciferous veggies or beans.

Any recipes without the offending ingredients?

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Sunday, January 26, 2020 3:37 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Hey JSF, I read that you were sick! I hope you're feeling better.

*****

Discovered two new recipes that are easy and tasty. But just as an aside, we all (and I mean ALL) have been sick with fever, coughing and wheezing. Soup really seems to help. I've been relying on soup, and soup-like recipes, to help us get better.

RED CURRY
The ingredients might be a little hard to come by, but if you can find them the recipe is simple to prepare

2T coconut oil
3-4T commercial Thai red curry paste
approx 1/4 c chopped cilantro and stems
1/2 t ground cumin

2 cans light coconut milk
2T fish sauce or soy sauce
2T sugar
1/2 lb frozen pineapple chunks
2 potatoes, cut into 1/2" pieces
shrimp to taste

8 oz snow peas tipped and de-stringed
1 red bell, into 1/2" pieces


1 c basil rinsed
Chipotle powder, cayenne, sambal oelek, or Sriracha to taste.

Melt coconut oil in pot, add curry paste, cilantro and cumin, and cook until cilantro is wilted.
Add light coconut milk, potato, pineapple, shrimp, fish or soy sauce, and sugar. Bring to simmer and simmer about 7 minutes

Add snow peas and bell pepper, cook to crisp-tender, add basil at end just to stir in and wilt. Add hot spice to taste.

*****

Now, hubby is not a huge fan of shrimp (altho it is very good for you) so I serve this with pork. I discovered a new cut - tenderloin- that is indeed very tender, and fortunately for me it was on sale for $3/lb. Trim off silver-skin, slice into 1/4" strips. For 2 lb, sprinkle with 1 t fish sauce and 1 t soy (or tamari) and 1/2 t ground black pepper and marinade for 30 minutes or so. Slice approx 1/2 c (yes that's 1/2 cup) garlic cloves, rinse drain and heat 2 bags of shirataki noodles, and rinse approx 1 c of basil leaves.

Melt about 1 T of coconut oil in a pan to med-high, add pork in batches to stir-fry, then add noodles, add pork back in, and garlic to "bloom" the garlic, then add basilto wilt. Add some green or red Thai curry paste if you like. Serve over red curry vegetables in coconut milk. That's it!

Was this one recipe? Or 2?

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Sunday, January 26, 2020 3:54 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Two, actually. The first recipe was originally written with shrimp as the main ingredient, but since hubby hates shrimp I made up a pork recipe to go with. Sorry for lack of clarity!

Here is the second recipe, rewritten

2 lb pork tenderloin, silverskin removed and cut into 1/4" strips
1 t fish sauce (fish sauce is stronger, but if you can't find it just substitute soy or tamari sauce)
1 t soy or tamari
1/2 t fresh ground black pepper
Stir pork with fish sauce, soy/tamari, and black pepper, and marinade about 30 minutes

1/2 cup sliced garlic cloves
2 bags shirataki noodles, rinsed, drained, and heated thru to removed "cat pee" smell, or four cups ANY cooked noodle that you like (spaghetti, rice noodles, whatever)

1 cup (OR MORE) fresh basil leaves, rinsed and drained
about 2T red or green Thai curry paste, if desired

2T coconut oil

heat coconut oil in pan to medium-hi, add pork in batches to quick stir-fry, set aside in bowl as cooked
add prepared noodles to pan, add back pork, add garlic and heat thru to released garlic oils
stir in basil to wilt
stir in curry paste if desired (also, ir you're a hot food fan, can add chipotle, cayenne, sambal oelek or sriracha if desired)

Because of the quantity of near-raw garlic, don't plan on meeting people for about a day!!!


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Wednesday, February 5, 2020 10:58 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I just made this and it's OMG good!

This dish was inspired by many things I've eaten in the past and I tried to put things together that I thought would be tasty. 12 svgs

It's a crustless pie made with 2 lbs ground meat of your choice, browned, excess fat removed if any (in this case turkey), 2 lbs small-diced potatoes with skin is OK (I recommend either russet or Yukon gold, not red or fingerling), 2 lbs minced yellow onions, 2-3lbs greens chopped (in this case kale), and the juice of 2 lemons or to taste.

Probably the next day you'll need 1lb feta crumbled (you could probably do 50/50 w/ grated parmesan), and 1 15oz ricotta (in this case full fat), and 6 eggs, use a stir-stick to smoothly blend the eggs and ricotta till it's a uniform pale yellow.

Also you'll need 12 oven-proof dishes buttered (what I used) or greased.

I prepared this in one YUGE !!! Dutch oven in a 350F oven (not on the stovetop), but if you don't have anything big for all these servings, be prepared to cook less, or cook in shifts and have a very, very large mixing bowl to put it all together.

Add the ground meat to the Dutch oven, cover, and cook it @350F (or on a stove top), breaking it up as needed, till cooked, and remove excess fat, if any. Add the diced potatoes, mix, cover and cook an additional 20 minutes. Add the diced onions and minced greens of your choice (but not much spinach as it cooks very watery), mix, cover and cook an additional 30-45 minutes, stirring at the 20 minute mark, till all is done. (It mostly depends on the potato you used.)

Add lemon juice to taste.

CHILL THOROUGHLY.

Stir in the feta (or feta/ parm mix). Stir in the egg/ ricotta mix.

Portion it out to greased or buttered oven proof dishes, and bake @ 350F 30minutes to set the egg (when knife comes out clean).

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Thursday, February 6, 2020 3:01 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Sounds great, KIKI! Except I can't eat potatoes (allergies), and hubby shoudn't (too much starch). Any recommendations for substitute? Don't say cauliflower, dear daughter can't eat that!

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Thursday, February 6, 2020 3:19 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I FINALLY made a turkey pot pie that the family thought was acceptable! I did a few things differently:

Previously I had cooked the turkey breast (on sale after Tday for $1.99/lb) too long and it came out dry and tasteless. This time I salted it, poured oil over it, and cooked it covered at low temp (250 F) unti just done. I still have to get the timing right, as I achieved the proper results by accident, but the turkey came out flavorful and juicy.

This time, I added a crap=ton of thyme. Most recipes call for a polite amount - I used 2+ teaspoons dried thyme.

This time I used a bigger variety of vegetables.

And this time I added 1/2 c dry white wine.

So here it is:

3 T margarine
1 c diced onion
2 c diced carrot
1 c diced celery
1 c frozen cut green beans
1 c frozen corn
1 c frozen peas
2 t dried thyme
1/2 t fresh ground black pepper, or to taste
1/2 t salt, or to taste
about 1 c turkey juice
about 1 1/2 c milk or canned milk
about 1/2 c flour, mixed in with milk (above)
1/2 c dry white wine
about one pound cooked turkey, diced
approx 1/2 pre-prepared pie crust (optional)

Sautee onions in margarine until golden-brown (Lightly browning onions adds flavor)
Add carrots, celery and cook, covered, for about 8 minutes
Add green beans, turkey juice, wine and thyme and cook for another 5 minutes
Add milk/flour mixture and stir until thoroughly mixed, cook until thickened
Add peas and turkey, stir thru
Pour into large casserole, top with pie crust if desired and bake at 350F for about an hour.

The reason why I add things in the order that I do is that I don't want the turkey to shred and the peas to turn to mush with extensive cooking and stirring, this way the ingredients retain their individual identity and it doesn't just become mush

Family said it was OK, which means I can make it- just not too often!




-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Thursday, February 6, 2020 6:47 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Sounds great, KIKI! Except I can't eat potatoes (allergies), and hubby shoudn't (too much starch). Any recommendations for substitute? Don't say cauliflower, dear daughter can't eat that!

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

I've been thinking about that. In my version - which I calculate out on a spreadsheet (using USDA nutrient values from their database) - one portion has 500 calories and a half a pound of vegetables weighed raw, and 32g protein, 33g carbs, and 27g fat. (It has so much vegetable because I kind of hate vegetables unless I disguise them in something else, and they will be all the vegetables I'll have in a day. There's no added fat, but that high amount comes from the cheeses and eggs, and assumes you drain excess fat from the ground meat.) The potatoes contribute about 2.5oz of vegetable out of the 8oz amount per portion. They also contribute about 245g total of carbs for the entire recipe; or about 20g carbs out of 33g carbs per portion. If you don't mind losing some vegetable, I think either cooked rice or quinoa would be a tasty substitute. Use enough to contribute the same amount of carbs as the potatoes if you want to maintain the macronutrient balance. But I see no problem reducing the amounts or eliminating that ingredient category entirely!

I also think you could cook it in a large casserole dish, but you'll need to cook it longer to get it cooked through - and because you'll be cooking it longer, it should be covered with foil so the top doesn't get burned.

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Thursday, February 6, 2020 6:58 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I FINALLY made a turkey pot pie that the family thought was acceptable!

And I copied it over into my spreadsheet for portion calculation and adjustment!

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Thursday, February 6, 2020 8:40 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Pot Pie. I expect you may have aversion to pre-made solutions, but I have used crescent roll triangles on top of the dish, to be the top crust or pot pie. Just the simple pre-packaged rolls in a tube, crack open and you have 8 triangles to make crescent rolls.

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Friday, February 7, 2020 3:11 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
This is my new WINTER marinara recipe:
Please note that these are 12 servings, since I cook in batches and freeze for later. (So one of the things my recipes have to be is freezer-tolerant.)

The recipe calls for steps that most people don't do, which is to brown things first, and to 'bloom' the spices. The browning step adds tons of extra flavor, for example it actually makes the onion both sweet and 'oniony', while the 'blooming' step increases the flavor of aromatics. 'Blooming' isn't cooking, it only take a minute or two, but it helps release the volatile oils. It also calls for 'deglazing' the skillet you brown things in, which is to add some liquid - in this case a cup of wine for flavor but you can even use water or tomato juice - to the skillet while it's being heated, and stir the liquid around, scraping off the caramelized bits from the bottom.

4lbs 85% ground beef
3lbs onions, diced
4lbs cherry tomatoes, pureed
2lbs cremini mushrooms, fine diced
1qt or liter bottle no-salt tomato juice
1C dry(ish) red, rose, or white wine of your choice, optional
5 cloves garlic, minced
3T dried basil
salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes to taste
a large skillet with lid and a large dutch oven with lid

brown the ground beef in the skillet and use a slotted spoon to remove it to the dutch oven
pour off the fat and juice from the skillet and reserve
put about 2T of beef fat back into the skillet, and put in the diced mushrooms and cover, and cook till they give up their liquid, then uncover and cook with stirring till the liquid evaporates and the mushrooms are lightly browned, then put them in the dutch oven
add another 2T of fat back to the skillet, and do the same for the onions, but cook them till they're golden brown, then put them in the dutch oven (because the high sugar content of the onions won't let the liquid evaporate to dryness, the brown color is your guide)
add about 1T of fat and 'bloom' the garlic and basil (and red pepper flakes if you're using them) in it which means heat them while stirring the little pile just until you can start to smell them, then add them to the dutch oven
deglaze the skillet with the wine (or other liquid), cook off the alcohol a bit, then add it to the dutch oven
if you have any beef fat left you can add back in as much as you want, or skim it off, but in either case add the broth back in that you reserved earlier
add the pureed tomatoes and the tomato juice to the dutch oven, and stir everything
bring to a boil on the stove - then cover
and transfer to a pre-heated oven at 350F
cook for 2.5 hours with occasional stirring, if the marinara gets too dry add more water

I think it's everything a winter dish should be - savory, rich, and hearty.



Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Not sure I understand the use of tomato juice when you already have pureed tomatoes.

I might be tempted to replace with tomato paste (if flavor is the reason) or more wine (if liquid is the reason).

Sorry I didn't see this earlier. It's to add more vegetable for nutrition, more liquid for cooking1, and more tomato flavor. Otherwise, I think the dish's flavor would be beefy/ mushroom-y heavy.

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Friday, February 7, 2020 3:44 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
So, this is the last cooking experiment for the next while. I tried some mashed cauliflower at TJ's, and I liked it, it was very similar to mashed potatoes though with a mild but different flavor. But it was full of chemicals and salt. So I thought I'd try to recreate it at home. I cooked a 12oz package of riced cauliflower with 2T rice flour for thickening (but any flour that thickens would work, I think), and a cup of milk for flavor, and when it was done I immersion-blended it to a smooth consistency with a tablespoon of cultured unsalted butter. It was a little watery at first, but it thickened with sitting. I did end up adding a small amount of low-sodium salt to counter the sweetness of the cauliflower. Like the TJ's product, you can't mistake it for mashed potatoes, but it's an exceptional alternative that's very similar. Well, I really liked it! Anyway, I put the rest in the freezer. I'll take it out and thaw it after a couple of days to see if the texture survives freezing, or if it breaks into grainy solids and liquid. That's what the flour is supposed to help prevent - but we'll see.

If it freezes well, my next set of meals will be chicken, mashed cauliflower, and gravy.

Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Well cool. I just defrosted the 'mashed cauliflower' and it looks like the rice flour did the trick. The 'mashed cauliflower' didn't break or lose any of its fluffy/creamy mashed-potato texture !! YAY !!!

So now I'll be on to creating my next recipe. Since I WILL be making gravy, I think I'll cook the chicken thighs with an appropriate amount of carrots, celery, onions, and fresh thyme. I can then puree the veges into the broth and use that to make an extra-flavorful gravy. I believe the chicken and gravy over mashed cauliflower will be quite a comfort-food treat.

Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I wish DD could eat cauliflower, that would be a nice treat for her and very healthful.

I did try pureeing the veges I cooked with the chx thighs and it was NOT good!

This is basically chicken thighs cooked with veges and herbs to flavor the thighs - but the veges and herbs get removed. The chx gets served over mashed cauliflower (or potatoes or a mix of both) with sauce. Either rice or wheat flour can be used to thicken the cauliflower and the sauce.

12 servings, per serving 440 cals, 58g protein, 20g carbs (not subtracting out the fiber), 6g fat

6lb TJ boneless skinless chx thigh
box chx stock
1lb@ carrot celery onion + pkg fresh thyme + sprigs fr parsley
Cook all till thighs just done and remove chx.

To make the sauce, strain the broth and reduce to about 3C, add 50g flour, cook to thicken. I didn't do this, but I think it would taste awesome with extra fresh thyme leaves and fresh ground black pepper added.

To make the mashed cauliflower:
I use TJ's frozen organic riced cauliflower that comes in 12oz pkgs. If you believe the package nutrition label, it has only 2g net carbs per serving (4g carbs, 2g fiber)
Cook 8pkg TJ riced caulif and puree with 25g flour 2C 2% milk and 2T butter

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Friday, February 7, 2020 5:16 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
This is my new WINTER marinara recipe:
Please note that these are 12 servings, since I cook in batches and freeze for later. (So one of the things my recipes have to be is freezer-tolerant.)

The recipe calls for steps that most people don't do, which is to brown things first, and to 'bloom' the spices. The browning step adds tons of extra flavor, for example it actually makes the onion both sweet and 'oniony', while the 'blooming' step increases the flavor of aromatics. 'Blooming' isn't cooking, it only take a minute or two, but it helps release the volatile oils. It also calls for 'deglazing' the skillet you brown things in, which is to add some liquid - in this case a cup of wine for flavor but you can even use water or tomato juice - to the skillet while it's being heated, and stir the liquid around, scraping off the caramelized bits from the bottom.

4lbs 85% ground beef
3lbs onions, diced
4lbs cherry tomatoes, pureed
2lbs cremini mushrooms, fine diced
1qt or liter bottle no-salt tomato juice
1C dry(ish) red, rose, or white wine of your choice, optional
5 cloves garlic, minced
3T dried basil
salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes to taste
a large skillet with lid and a large dutch oven with lid

brown the ground beef in the skillet and use a slotted spoon to remove it to the dutch oven
pour off the fat and juice from the skillet and reserve
put about 2T of beef fat back into the skillet, and put in the diced mushrooms and cover, and cook till they give up their liquid, then uncover and cook with stirring till the liquid evaporates and the mushrooms are lightly browned, then put them in the dutch oven
add another 2T of fat back to the skillet, and do the same for the onions, but cook them till they're golden brown, then put them in the dutch oven (because the high sugar content of the onions won't let the liquid evaporate to dryness, the brown color is your guide)
add about 1T of fat and 'bloom' the garlic and basil (and red pepper flakes if you're using them) in it which means heat them while stirring the little pile just until you can start to smell them, then add them to the dutch oven
deglaze the skillet with the wine (or other liquid), cook off the alcohol a bit, then add it to the dutch oven
if you have any beef fat left you can add back in as much as you want, or skim it off, but in either case add the broth back in that you reserved earlier
add the pureed tomatoes and the tomato juice to the dutch oven, and stir everything
bring to a boil on the stove - then cover
and transfer to a pre-heated oven at 350F
cook for 2.5 hours with occasional stirring, if the marinara gets too dry add more water

I think it's everything a winter dish should be - savory, rich, and hearty.



Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Not sure I understand the use of tomato juice when you already have pureed tomatoes.

I might be tempted to replace with tomato paste (if flavor is the reason) or more wine (if liquid is the reason).

Sorry I didn't see this earlier. It's to add more vegetable for nutrition, more liquid for cooking1, and more tomato flavor. Otherwise, I think the dish's flavor would be beefy/ mushroom-y heavy.

You think tomato juice adds more flavor?

Maybe try diced tomatoes, bring to a boil for 2 minutes before adding to whatever you're cooking. Makes it zesty and flavorful.

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Friday, February 7, 2020 6:33 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Yeah - oddly enough the 1 qt of 'no salt added' tomato juice I used DOES add flavor. But diced tomatoes could work too!

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Sunday, February 9, 2020 2:55 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Yeah - oddly enough the 1 qt of 'no salt added' tomato juice I used DOES add flavor. But diced tomatoes could work too!

You also mentioned fluid for cooking. Is there anything in your recipe which would not be compatible with alcohol, wine, rum, whiskey?

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Sunday, February 9, 2020 2:55 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Yeah - oddly enough the 1 qt of 'no salt added' tomato juice I used DOES add flavor. But diced tomatoes could work too!

You also mentioned fluid for cooking. Is there anything in your recipe which would not be compatible with alcohol, wine, rum, whiskey?

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Monday, February 10, 2020 2:20 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Rum (sometimes sweet) and whiskey (smokey) I don't believe have flavor profiles that would work with the basic recipe flavors - tomato/ beef/ mushroom. But if you're willing to experiment, you might be on to something unexpectedly good!

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Monday, February 10, 2020 5:51 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Rum (sometimes sweet) and whiskey (smokey) I don't believe have flavor profiles that would work with the basic recipe flavors - tomato/ beef/ mushroom. But if you're willing to experiment, you might be on to something unexpectedly good!

Hmmmm.

I could be off-base with rum and whiskey, just poking in the dark. I was wondering if anything in different alcohols react negatively with any of your other ingredients. Degrade them, reduce them, distract.
I thought beef is always enhanced by wine, or Cold Duck. Burgundy has specific dedicated recipes for beef. Vermouth seems to work well for tomato sauces. I have seen vodka pasta sauce.

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Monday, February 10, 2020 6:01 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Damn, but you're making me hungry!

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Monday, February 10, 2020 7:51 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:
Rum (sometimes sweet) and whiskey (smokey) I don't believe have flavor profiles that would work with the basic recipe flavors - tomato/ beef/ mushroom. But if you're willing to experiment, you might be on to something unexpectedly good!

Hmmmm.

I could be off-base with rum and whiskey, just poking in the dark. I was wondering if anything in different alcohols react negatively with any of your other ingredients. Degrade them, reduce them, distract.
I thought beef is always enhanced by wine, or Cold Duck. Burgundy has specific dedicated recipes for beef. Vermouth seems to work well for tomato sauces. I have seen vodka pasta sauce.

One of my favorite BBQ sauces for use on beef or chicken is Jack Daniel's No.7 Recipe, which I believe uses Bourbon Whiskey - and I assume it is built on tomato/ketchup base. (most BBQ sauces are either tomato/ketchup based, or vinegar/onion based - and JD's is not the latter.) I feel it enhances the flavor of everything, or maybe just smothers the flavor. Maybe it would conflict with mushroom, but I'll let you tell me how you feel about it. Also, JD's Brown Sugar version is more than adequate.

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Monday, February 24, 2020 7:44 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I'll look for it in the store!

So, I was looking for something in the frig, and got to wondering what other people's friges/pantries/cupboards look like.

I have a shelf of American condiments - ketchup, mustard, mayo, bleu cheese and Caesar sald dressing - but also a shelf of Asian- tamari, fish sauce, toasted sesame oil, sriracha ad/or sambal oelek, and Thai curry paste. In the cupboard I have Parmesan, canned tomato, and fresh basil on the windowsill... but I also have coconut milk, kalamata olives, and green enchilada sauce. I couldn't cook without onions, carrots, celery, and garlic ... but my go-to seasonings are basil, oregano, chipotle, and cumin.

I like to cook Thai, Chinese, Mexican, Italian, Greek, and American-style. Every once in awhile I'll make something different ... empanadas, or falafels, or Moroccan chicken.

So, what about you? What's in YOUR cupboard, pantry, or frig that reflects your style?


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake

Happy New Year, WISHY. I edited out your psychopathic screed!

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Monday, February 24, 2020 8:41 PM

BRENDA


I was given last week a slow cooker. Have to learn how to use it properly.

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