What are you cooking tonight?

Discussion in 'The Lounge' started by mugen shiyo, Sep 18, 2011.

  1. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    Medium. The key is the really, really constant stirring, especially once it starts to bubble. It'll bubble a lot for a while, then the bubbles will slacken off and it'll just be kind of syrupy. Then, all of a sudden it will go dry-ish. That's when all the water is gone and the sugar has recrystalized. If you keep going after that the sugar will caramelize and you'll get kind of an almond brittle effect, but to do proper brittle is more conplicated.

    But anyway, as soon as it crystalizes pour it out on the butcher/parchment paper. Have that laid out in advance. Use your stirring implement (I have a cheap bamboo spoon) to break up any clumps of nuts. Also, put water and soap into your pan right quickly if you want the remaining sugar ever to come off. Basically, nuts out of the pan, pan into the sink, turn on the tap, back to the nuts breaking up the clumps, add soap to the pan and turn off the water when it's full, walk away for 15 minutes to let the nuts cool.

    New trick: It works with the same amount of cocoa powder (unsweetened, pure cocoa powder) as with cinnamon for chocolate nuts. With hazelnuts, cocoa, and a bit of salt, you could have....

    [​IMG]
     
  2. Homer Potvin

    Homer Potvin A tombstone hand and a graveyard mind Staff Supporter Contributor

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    Ran 20oz prime bone-in sirloins with a bacon-scallop topper, miso-carrot puree, and wild mushroom risotto for a special tonight. $80. Killed an 8 pack case by 7:30. Should have ordered two cases.
     
  3. Dogberry's Watch

    Dogberry's Watch Contributor Contributor Contest Winner 2022 Contest Winner 2023

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    Almost smoked out my kitchen because I had the heat on the wrong burner and overheated my frying oil. All I wanted was to fry my spring rolls and turn them into not spring rolls. That was a horrible mess.

    But I saved it by baking them instead. Cabbage, carrot and TVP in a Korean barbecue flavor (a packet came with the TVP). I also undercooked my broccoli because, well, the broccoli was on the burner I thought I was heating. The rice was fine! No adventure there.

    All in all it was really quite delicious, I just need to remember I'm not good at frying things.
     
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  4. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    TVP... the mainstay of gas station microwave burritos! Charlie D had a car and one night we drove off base to get microwave burritos. Sat on the hood of his car and ate them, then on the way back to base I realized that he was going on deployment at the end of the week and I was getting out in two weeks. We had a quick moment of "well, probably never see you again" and that was that.

    No idea what happened to him.
     
  5. peachalulu

    peachalulu Member Reviewer Contributor

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    I made a cracker plate. Crackers, cheese, kolbassa, pickles, olives and a croissant. I like to nibble.
     
  6. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    Cracker plates/low-grade charcuterie rock! Sunday lunch sometimes looks like this around the Aschendale apartment:

    cheese plate.JPG
     
  7. Homer Potvin

    Homer Potvin A tombstone hand and a graveyard mind Staff Supporter Contributor

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    A giant pile of scallops. Restaurant is closed for 48 hours and they weren't going to make it.
     
  8. EFMingo

    EFMingo A Modern Dinosaur Supporter Contributor

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    I'm sorry. Well at least it's good eating.
     
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  9. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    So...you used them to lure in something palatable, like rats?

    Really, really not a seafood guy, sorry.
     
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  10. montecarlo

    montecarlo Contributor Contributor

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    Scallops are the only shellfish I will eat, and only if damned fresh. They can be very good.

    I imagine Rhode Island is a lonely place if you don’t like seafood
     
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  11. Homer Potvin

    Homer Potvin A tombstone hand and a graveyard mind Staff Supporter Contributor

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    I hear you. And I'm sorry too. Seafood is 27% of the business model.

    You can eat, but you're missing out.
     
  12. peachalulu

    peachalulu Member Reviewer Contributor

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    Made my traditional Christmas eve quiche! Mozzarella, bacon and onions with enough left over for breakfast.

    The turkey ought to be interesting tomorrow. It takes great stealth to unpack the fridge and stow the leftovers just right.
     
  13. NobodySpecial

    NobodySpecial Contributor Contributor

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    Japan too.
     
  14. NobodySpecial

    NobodySpecial Contributor Contributor

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    I’m bastardizing chicken parmesan. I don’t have any parmesan, so I’m using provolone and a fire roasted tomato marinara.
     
  15. Hammer

    Hammer Moderator Staff Supporter Contributor

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    Bambi.

    with horseradish, beetroot, and shallots, plus stack of veg.
     
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  16. Kinzvlle

    Kinzvlle At the bottom of a pit Contributor

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    Made an omelet for breakfast as opposed to my normal breakfast of....nothing. With pepperoni and cheese cause...that's what I had.
     
  17. peachalulu

    peachalulu Member Reviewer Contributor

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    Turkey soup. The best way to use up the leftovers.
     
  18. s.j

    s.j New Member

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    Sounds dreamy!
     
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  19. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    I got some trisodium citrate and made some really nice nacho cheese sauce last night.
     
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  20. Hammer

    Hammer Moderator Staff Supporter Contributor

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    It was a delicious Christmas lunch. I am not a vegetarian, but I do have veggie tendencies... call me veg-curious, but venison is terrific meat. Our little haunch was swapped for a bottle of ex-brother-in-law's wine by a guy who "manages" a herd of deer in woods near the vineyard, possibly the best meat I have ever eaten - certainly the best "lean and beef-like" meat.

    upload_2020-12-29_9-26-55.png

    full scoff - haunch of venison with roast shallots, whole carrots, beetroot, potatoes, mashed swede, steamed green beans, carrots, boiled sprouts, chestnut stuffing balls, and "3 pigs" (pieces of pork chipolata, halloumi, and frankfurter wrapped in bacon), creamed horseradish and gravy made with the meat juices (meat was cooked in port, so quite some gravy...)

    I have done a fair few Christmas dinners over the years - they are usually quite stressful (it has to be good, people don't want "ok" at Christmas), but somehow this one was very easy to cook (the meat can stand for ages, the roasted veggies take a long time and can wait in a hot oven, the swede can be re-heated before mashing, gravy can simmer away... the only timing-sensitive bit really was the steamed/boiled veg)

    Unless you have venison (c:

    Yesterday we had "beef" in black-bean sauce and sweet shredded chilli "beef" with noodles and egg-fried rice - really amazing Christmas dinner leftover meal

    (but if we'd had turkey there would have been a soup... probably with noodles)
     
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  21. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    Turkey. Did pan stuffing yesterday, will do the bird (stuffed, you can never have too much stuffing), mashed potatoes, and gravy today. Smoker's busted so I can do a stuffed turkey. This time it's with a brandy brine, and the stuffing has sun-dried tomato and herb sausage rather than Italian.

    No sage in the bird. I'm cautiously optimistic, but the brine recipe didn't call for it, so... we'll see. Also, the taters will have bits of homemade bacon mixed in. Still deciding on skins but I'm leaning towards not.
     
  22. GraceLikePain

    GraceLikePain Senior Member

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    ...Does it count as cooking if it's heating up store-bought barbeque wings in the oven?

    Side note: cooking with a cast iron skillet is amazing because you can just plonk that bad boy right in the oven, no problem.
     
  23. Naomasa298

    Naomasa298 HP: 10/190 Status: Confused Contributor

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    Turkey is the one meat I refuse to eat at Christmas.

    I might do my go-to recipe of beef in oyster sauce tonight. Or if I'm feeling particularly lazy, tacos.

    Or if I can be arsed to cut up some chicken, chicken tom yum.
     
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  24. Iain Aschendale

    Iain Aschendale Lying, dog-faced pony Marine Supporter Contributor

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    I think this might be Thanksgiving, I've sort of lost track :) . Used to try and have the inlaws and a couple of friends over near American Thanksgiving but that tradition sort of died along with my mother-in-law. Just not the same without her. But I still did a turkey later on in the year, I'd do all my cooking at my house, pack everything into a cooler, and take a taxi to the inlaws' house and have dinner there. This year COVID shot that down, since both Mrs. A and I (occasionally, on my part) work outside the home my father-in-law, who is post-80, told us that visits were off this year. Can't say I blame him. So the turkey is in the oven and once it's done, I'll carve out a couple of generous portions (read: half) and box it up with the sides, they'll meet us in the parking lot next door, have a chat, and take their dinner home with them. Less than ideal, but it's a very 2020 Thankmasoween, idn't it?
     
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  25. Homer Potvin

    Homer Potvin A tombstone hand and a graveyard mind Staff Supporter Contributor

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    Polenta, meatballs, sauce, salad, barbera d'alba... peasant Italian.
     

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