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#121 (permalink) |
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needs no wings
Join Date: Apr 2008
Type: entp
Location: Bochum, Germany
Posts: 1,614
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I had fish finger coupled with potatoes, served with a sauce of mustard today.
The sauce: Heat butter in a jar, until it is liquid. Then one tablespoon of flour (the white one, not the grey one ). Then you need half a glas of water to mix it with until it reaches the consistency you like. Should not be too solid or too liquid. Then 1 1/2 tablespoon of mustard, a little shot sweetener and a little shoot vinegar. Then you can take something to make it a little bit more flavoursome, like maggi. But not to much or the sauce is ruined xD.I just love that, can go thousand miles for it xD. Another idea for this kind of sauce is called "Königsberger Klopse" ). You take some meat, like used in hamburges. Half cow, half beef. That you can flavour with a little grain of salt and pepper. Then you form little balls out of the meet and cook it for some time. When its done, the butter and the flour is given in the cooked water and a little mustard in the end. That sauce is not based on mustard but on the flavor of the meat, so not to much mustard. In the end you can give one smal glass of caper in the sauce. They are really great in that combination. Served with potatoes, noodles, just how you like it. I prefer potatoes .-- - greetings ~ent
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Enneagram 5w4 - " . . . Take another glass of wine, and excuse my mentioning that society as a body does not expect one to be so strictly conscientious in emptying one's glass, as to turn it bottom upwards with the rim on one's nose." -- http://sn0opy83.funpic.de |
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#122 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Type: ISTP
Posts: 18
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Chicken Long Rice
2 1/2 lbs chicken thighs 3 quarts water 1 tbsp salt (Hawaiian sea salt if you can find it) 2-3 slices of fresh ginger 1 large white onion chopped 5 chicken bouillon cubes 8 oz long rice* 3 green onion stalks chopped Put chicken into a five quart saucepan. Add two quarts of the water, the salt, and ginger. Bring to a boil, skim any foam that rises to the top of stock, lower heat, and simmer for forty minutes. Remove from heat and drain, saving broth. Remove meat from chicken, discarding bones. Shred meat and set aside. Put broth, onion, bouillon cubes and the remaining one quart water into saucepan. Bring to a boil. Add long rice, then lower heat and cook, covered for 5 minutes. Turn off heat and let stand about 30 minutes. With kitchen shears, cut long rice into approximately 3- or 4- inch lengths. Stir in chicken and heat briefly. Stir in green onions. Makes 6 to 8 servings. *Long rice is different than long grain rice. Long rice or cellophane noodles are clear thin noodles made out of starch and used in Asian cuisine. You can learn more here: Cellophane noodles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This is the brand I normally use: ![]() Modified recipe from Hawaiian Electric Company. Some people add shitake mushrooms but I find the woodsy flavor overpowers the dish. I prefer to keep it simple. This dish can be a little off putting for people who aren't used to the slippery texture of the noodles but I've found most people that enjoy Asian cuisine appreciate this dish. If you've ever eaten Japchae the texture of the noodles is very similar although Japchae noodles tend to be thicker. The wikipedia article mentions that chicken long rice is served at luaus in Hawaii. This is definitely true as I can attest to the countless luaus I have gone to where the big vat (often cooked by the aunt with the least cooking skills) started the procession of food laid out buffet style. It is placed at the beginning of the buffet line so people have less room on their plate (and bellies) to eat the more expensive food. |
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#123 (permalink) |
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Mmmhmm
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: ISFP
Location: College Station, Texas
Posts: 2,132
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Easy Tilapia Bowl
Heat up a Gorton's breaded tilapia filet in the oven, microwave a bag of Steamfresh broccoli florets, and one bag of Uncle Ben's 90 second brown rice. Put about one third of the bag of broccoli in the bowl first, then a little over half the bag of rice and the tilapia. Add lemon juice and Mrs. Dash southwest chipotle (or just black pepper or whatever seasoning you want), and a splash of olive oil. Mix it up and enjoy. That's good eatin'! Yeah, I just had one of these a few minutes ago. Ahhhh, that's good. And good for you too, it's got protein, the good kind of fat, one of the best vegetables you can eat, high in fiber and vitamins and minerals, and whole grain, and if you don't add salt or a salty seasoning, then it's low in sodium too. Plus you can substitute any of those ingredients for a different variety of the same thing. Good to go.
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"Jeffster overflows with mind-blowing ideas." -- Jack Flak "Jeffster ROCKS so effen hard it hurts!" -- Trinity "Yeah, I am with Jeffster on this one." -- heart "Gotta love the steady stream of sorority girl pics from Jeffster" -- Eileen "Hey, how comes I'm never quoted in Jeffster's sig?" -- Martoon |
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#124 (permalink) |
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only bites when provoked
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: HPLS
Location: Plant Hardiness Zone 10 or 11
Posts: 2,174
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Due to the challenge of avoiding meat for a week (I'm up to 72 hours now), I have been making delicious meat-free items, and thought I'd share how to make guacamole, since it's apparently completely foreign to people which is why they'll pay so much for pitiful prepared guacamole and mixes... It's extremely easy to make, too, if a bit time-consuming.
Due to the recent tomato scare, tomatoes are a bit scarce and pricey here, so I omitted them. They're also a royal pain to cut up. If you want them, just remove the seeds and chop the outer portion up, then add it to the remaining items. The seeds and other bits should be thrown in a blender with some extra-ripe tomatoes to make hot sauce or chip-salsa. Yesterday I made a batch of ~4 servings worth. Ingredients: - 3 Hass avocados, remove outer skin and seed. - 4 Serrano peppers, chopped finely. - 6 lower portions of green onions (you can use any onion, I just use green because I can't finish an entire red onion on my own; red onions taste good and look better presentation-wise), chopped. - 1 bunch of cilantro, washed, tops cut off, and chopped. - 1 lime, squeezed. - Sea salt, ground finely. Prep: - Place avocado, peppers, onions, and lime juice in the bowl. - Mix thoroughly with a fork until there are no more avocado lumps. - Salt very lightly and mix in with fork. I usually use it as a topping for tacos, enchiladas, or eat it with tortilla chips. When consuming with tortilla chips, I top it with a layer of finely crumbled queso freso or moist cotija (there are two kinds, and the dry kind is not good for this purpose), and only give a half-twist worth of salt. Guacamole should always be kept cool, never heated/cooked, and consumed within 3-4 days of being made. It mellows and becomes more evenly-flavored after a night or so in the fridge. You may omit the lime (though it adds good flavor) if you plan to eat it immediately after preparation, but it cannot be stored, even briefly, in this state. Fresh salsa is basically the same thing, only without avocados, and you'll usually use jalapeno peppers instead. Again, you don't cook it unless you plan to bottle it, then it's nowhere near as delicious. For quick guacamole, you can just mix drained fresh Mexican salsa (not the kind you make in the blender, but chopped tomato/onion/pepper/cilantro/lime/salt, which you toss in a bowl and place in the fridge to sit for a while) into mashed up avocado and mix thoroughly.
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I 100%, N 88%, T 88%, J 75% Disclaimer: The above is my opinion and mine alone, it does not mean I cannot change my mind, nor does it guarantee that my comments are related to any deep-seated convictions. Take everything I say with a whole snowplow worth of salt and call me in the morning, if you can. |
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#125 (permalink) | |
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Moderating in the rain
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INXP
Location: Southern England
Posts: 2,886
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Quote:
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#126 (permalink) | |
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Mmmhmm
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: ISFP
Location: College Station, Texas
Posts: 2,132
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Quote:
__________________
"Jeffster overflows with mind-blowing ideas." -- Jack Flak "Jeffster ROCKS so effen hard it hurts!" -- Trinity "Yeah, I am with Jeffster on this one." -- heart "Gotta love the steady stream of sorority girl pics from Jeffster" -- Eileen "Hey, how comes I'm never quoted in Jeffster's sig?" -- Martoon |
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#127 (permalink) |
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By Scanty-the pic
Join Date: Jun 2007
Type: INFP
Posts: 2,717
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oooh I have tilapia and I think brown rice and broccoli no chiptole stuff but I can get that.
Though for the past week I was thinking tilapia was some sort of grain. And was like I don't know what that is I don't want to go hunt for it and I'm not big into grains when mushy. and I've had tilapia for the past month and I've eaten it before. Though it's not gordon's it's trident and I forgot gordon's was sea food. but I do love rice
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on my gender:I do not have a penis, I never had a penis, I probably will never have a penis. plus I have bewbs, small ones, but they are still considered bewbs. |
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#128 (permalink) |
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By Scanty-the pic
Join Date: Jun 2007
Type: INFP
Posts: 2,717
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random dish that tastes suprisingly good.
I took some keilbosa and coated a pan in olive oil I then took some coke and garlic cayenne red pepper flakes and oregono and black pepper and cooked over medium heat until done which was about 20 mins I didn't add salt as the meat already has a lot of salt I also didn't use a huge amount of spices I can't tell you how much of each I used I kinda eye balled it.
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on my gender:I do not have a penis, I never had a penis, I probably will never have a penis. plus I have bewbs, small ones, but they are still considered bewbs. |
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