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Author Topic: Food Thread: Kitchen Chemistry  (Read 481474 times)

Bauglir

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2745 on: April 30, 2015, 01:02:24 pm »

You've already used half the bottle. My god. Truly, yours must be the greatest of lives.
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Akura

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2746 on: April 30, 2015, 01:11:08 pm »

I don't know if this has been posted here before, but I just found a free cookbook based around eating for $4 a day. Seems really great for people on a tight budget, but everyone needs cheap recipes sometimes. It's definitely worth a read, she's got some cool ideas and I'm surprised some of them are as cheap as they are.

I've read some that. Holy crepe, some of that looks like stuff that shouldn't be cheap. However, I can verify from my own shopping that it can be, and I try to eat for less than $4 a day... because my parents steal my food stamps and I have absolutely no idea what they do with it.
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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2747 on: April 30, 2015, 04:54:10 pm »

Another one from the $4 a day cook book

Caramelized onions on toast with cheddar
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
Was very delicious but I used sweet onions instead of red onions. I would suggest adding more than one thin slice of cheddar but that's just me
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acetech09

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2748 on: April 30, 2015, 05:55:56 pm »

Benefits of Kentucky:
Bourbon whiskey + Bourbon vanilla = way to much Bourbon.

Bourbon Vanilla is completely unrelated. It's simply a variety of vanilla hailing from the indian oceans of Madagascar and Réunion, historically known as the Île Bourbon.


You've already used half the bottle. My god. Truly, yours must be the greatest of lives.

Don't judge me >.>

I've done two large bread puddings with it so far, which has taken a significant chunk (one of them ended up a bit overdone, and would probably be illegal to sell to minors). I've also fiddled with it in some crepes and whipped creams. I've been having lots of dinner guests over lately, and dessert is always a mainstay.


Edit: Hold on, Quiamus. did you say way too much Bourbon? I beg your pardon? :p
« Last Edit: April 30, 2015, 06:00:43 pm by acetech09 »
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Avis-Mergulus

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2749 on: April 30, 2015, 09:15:22 pm »

Juniper berries are apparently a pretty good marinade ingredient.
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Zrk2

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2750 on: May 01, 2015, 01:01:08 am »

I made carbonara the other day! I didn't take an pictures but it was awesome, and actually quite easy to make.

Juniper berries are apparently a pretty good marinade ingredient.

Won't it end up tasting like gin then?
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Bumblebee

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2751 on: May 01, 2015, 01:58:11 am »

Juniper berries are apparently a pretty good marinade ingredient.
Isn't it a well-known fact?...

Eldin00

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2752 on: May 01, 2015, 02:44:47 am »

I made carbonara the other day! I didn't take an pictures but it was awesome, and actually quite easy to make.

Juniper berries are apparently a pretty good marinade ingredient.

Won't it end up tasting like gin then?

A splash of gin in a marinade isn't bad either.
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Helgoland

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2753 on: May 01, 2015, 04:02:15 am »

I made carbonara the other day! I didn't take an pictures but it was awesome, and actually quite easy to make.
For anything cheese-related kirschwasser is an awesome ingredient. I made a carbonara yeserday as well - with ham substituted by cheese, because vegetarianism - and a bottlecap of the stuff made the whole thing heavenly~
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SirQuiamus

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2754 on: May 01, 2015, 05:17:10 am »

Edit: Hold on, Quiamus. did you say way too much Bourbon? I beg your pardon? :p
I wasn't disparaging everyone's favourite expensive rubbing alcohol, God forbid! (That would be a punishable offence in this thread).

I'm just saying that both products ultimately derive their names from the rapacious and oppressive House of Bourbon, and combining them would be a case of what the Swedes call "tårta på tårta," or "tort upon tort" in English.   
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Sappho

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2755 on: May 01, 2015, 06:03:49 am »

Edit: Hold on, Quiamus. did you say way too much Bourbon? I beg your pardon? :p
I wasn't disparaging everyone's favourite expensive rubbing alcohol, God forbid! (That would be a punishable offence in this thread).

I'm just saying that both products ultimately derive their names from the rapacious and oppressive House of Bourbon, and combining them would be a case of what the Swedes call "tårta på tårta," or "tort upon tort" in English.

Wait a minute... Are you Swedish? Or do you just happen to know a random phrase in Swedish?

(Because I am learning Swedish and I need more people to practice with!)

timferius

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2756 on: May 01, 2015, 06:31:45 am »

I made Kraft Dinner with chopped up hotdogs and peas last night, truly I am a culinary god.
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SirQuiamus

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2757 on: May 01, 2015, 07:49:45 am »

Edit: Hold on, Quiamus. did you say way too much Bourbon? I beg your pardon? :p
I wasn't disparaging everyone's favourite expensive rubbing alcohol, God forbid! (That would be a punishable offence in this thread).

I'm just saying that both products ultimately derive their names from the rapacious and oppressive House of Bourbon, and combining them would be a case of what the Swedes call "tårta på tårta," or "tort upon tort" in English.

Wait a minute... Are you Swedish? Or do you just happen to know a random phrase in Swedish?

(Because I am learning Swedish and I need more people to practice with!)

Swedish is the second official language of Finland. "Jak kan taala svenska mykke pra."

(No, not really. My Swedish-skills are rubbish. But luckily, there are quite a few Nordic forumites around here – you should contact them!)
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penguinofhonor

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2758 on: May 01, 2015, 07:31:34 pm »

Some more food that I have made recently!

Spoiler: spaghetti squash (click to show/hide)

This is a crazy ass plant. It looks like a normal squash at first, but if you cook it then you can scrape out the insides and they fall out into noodliness. I do not understand this squash and therefore it frightens me, but despite that I will probably buy it again. I don't think it's quite as good with vegetable sauce as regular noodles, but I am optimistic about meat sauce or meatballs.

Spoiler: apple and tomato salad (click to show/hide)

I don't know what's wrong with me but I've been eating salads lately. Vinaigrette is good stuff. I've been sticking with the simple stuff because I feel like part of the appeal of a salad is the low effort. I'm still experimenting though. I've never had apples in a salad, but they work very well.

Spoiler: banana bread waffles (click to show/hide)

I needed to get rid of some bananas and this was a great way to. I'm not sure if I'll ever make actual banana bread when I can make waffles instead. I used this recipe without nuts because I didn't have any. I didn't measure the banana in cups, I just threw in three regular-sized ones because that's what I needed to get rid of. They were ridiculously soft so they blended into the batter easily. Definitely good cooking bananas - all brown skin but no brown on the bananas themselves.

I like sweet waffles, but these could actually be slightly less sweet. I think that was because I added extra banana, so next time I'm going to cut some sugar to compensate. If I'm making banana waffles I'm going all out with the bananas.

Spoiler: chicken bacon omelette (click to show/hide)

Kinda overstuffed this one. I cut up and cooked the bacon, then cooked a deboned chicken thigh in the bacon fat (with garlic pepper), then cooked a diced shallot and some sliced mushrooms in the chicken/bacon fat. Then I chopped up the chicken, made the egg part and threw all that into it. Had to add salt (should have cooked the chicken/mushrooms with some) but otherwise it was really good.
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nenjin

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Re: Food Thread: To Beef or Not to Beef
« Reply #2759 on: May 01, 2015, 08:48:47 pm »

Just got done with my company's fifth annual Crawfish Boil.

Imagine, if you will. A 15 or 20 gallon pot. A steel cage to drop in it. Red potatoes. Whole white onions. Mushrooms. Two different kinds of sausages. Corn on the cob. Enough Cajun seasoning to sterilize the innards of an army.

And a a couple thousand Crawfish. I think we had 2400 or so.

First, you fill the pots about 3/4 or so with water, and get them going on propane burners.

Once it's hot, you pour in the Cajun seasoning and get it to a rolling boil.

Meanwhile, the live Crawfish are on ice to keep them alive...ish. You dump them out into a container like a beer cooler and put a hose to them until your container is full to the top. The dead ones should start floating, and you wanna take those out ASAP before their toxins cause other Crawfish to die.

Once they're clean and drained and sort of picked through (because understandably, they will pincer the shit out of you if you aren't careful), you load them into the steel basket, and add all your fixins on top of them. Let boil for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring (if such a thing can be called a stir) occasionally to shift the bottom contents of the pot to the top (carefully, or you will be a in world of hurt.)

When you've got a nice rolling boil visible at the top, and it's been about 20 minutes, you kill the heat and let it continue to steam cook for about 10 minutes.

Then, you remove the cage and manhandle it to a beer cooler with the help of another person, and shake the basket side to side, letting portions fall out. As each big portion falls into the beer cooler, a third person with a can of yet MOAR Cajun seasoning liberally shakes it out, coating the whole mass in dry seasoning.

Close the lid to the beer cooler and it steep for 10 to 15 minutes. You know, so the spice really gets in there and goes from hot to mouth-annihilation.

After its steeped, pick up the ice chest and dump the contents onto a table you preferably built out of plywood, covered in plastic, with circular holes cut on each end, with trash cans under them that also serve as the legs.

And then you eat. I recommend having a lot to drink on hand, like epic quantities of shitty beer.

Spoiler: Not me (click to show/hide)

Spoiler: The dumpening (click to show/hide)

« Last Edit: May 02, 2015, 01:58:39 pm by nenjin »
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