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Food and Drink Essential to sustain life; near the top of the hierarchy of needs

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Old 12-14-2007, 10:09 PM   #31
monster
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cloud View Post
raw mushrooms are not good for you
Why not?
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Old 12-14-2007, 11:25 PM   #32
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Nothing much tonight; we ate at Panda Express -- a Chinese steamtable chain. I like their Black Pepper Chicken, and tonight I got it fresh out of the wok. Even better!

Mighty fine salad there, V; we'd do it with romaine/green lettuce, as we account iceberg about as bland as ice chips and go for something a bit more intense if at all possible.

Griff, are you allergic to peppers also?
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Old 12-15-2007, 09:23 PM   #33
monster
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I'm allergic to peppers. and chilis. and all in between.
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Old 12-18-2007, 01:37 PM   #34
limey
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Haddock Florentine.
Poach haddock in milk
Put spinach in bottom of dish, put poached haddock on top
Make cheese sauce out of milk used to poach haddock and pour over the above
Put grated cheese on all of the above
Grill (broil?) until brown and crispy on top.
YUM
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Old 12-18-2007, 01:37 PM   #35
seakdivers
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I've got two pork shoulder (butt) roasts smokin' on the Q to make pulled pork sammiches for dinner. mmmm!!
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Old 12-18-2007, 04:38 PM   #36
Griff
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Urbane Guerrilla View Post
Griff, are you allergic to peppers also?
Nah, I'm just not a fan unless its a hot pepper.

I went light tonight.
Greek salad
olive oil
lemon juice
onion
cukes
tomatoes (still from the garden!)
sundried tomatoes
feta cheese
garlic
salt
pepper
oregano
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Old 12-19-2007, 02:02 PM   #37
bbro
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I am having breakfast for dinner. Some fake eggs, fake bacon, english muffin, and a little cheese - voila, a fake mcmuffin
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Old 12-19-2007, 03:09 PM   #38
shina
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skirt steak, mashed potatoes (real ones), beans with parmesian and vino!
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Old 02-27-2008, 05:04 PM   #39
BigV
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Tomato Basil soup serves 24

Disclaimer: I am a cook, not a scientist in the kitchen. I consider recipes guidelines, not commandments. I use approximate measurements, adjusting, tasting as I go.


first make the basil pesto

2 pounds of fresh basil
1 pound of pine nuts
2 heads of fresh garlic, peeled, chopped
1/2 pound parmesan (or mixed romano, asagio, parmesan) cheese, grated fine

2 cups olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

++

Remove stems from basil, discard.
Chop leaves finely, combine with pine nuts and olive oil and cheese in blender/food processor. I use the blender, so I make smallish batches (quart at a time) and then remove it, then continue until I'm done with the basil. The pesto should be a thick paste, dark green. The oil can be used to thin the mixture, and more cheese will certainly firm it up.

I decant the mixture into quart ziploc bags (or smaller) and smooth them flat and freeze them. A couple batches carries us through a season (by batch I mean a couple of two pound bags of basil.. that's a lot of basil). For the soup, I didn't have fresh basil available in quantities greater than $4/ounce or some such insanity, so I just raided the freezer and pulled out five 3"x6" ziploc bags (snack size) of pesto to flavor the soup. Worked great.

On to the soup.

1 #10 can of tomato sauce (this is the BIG can, ten inches high, eight inches across, don't know the weight or volume)

2 regular sized cans (6" high, 3" across, not the tiny 3x1.5" cans) of tomato paste (thickens soup)

A couple cans of chicken broth

some olive oil

Some butter

salt pepper

half gallon ultra heavy cream (yes, the whole half gallon)

Into large pot, pour the tomato sauce and the tomato paste, stir until well mixed. it will be thick. Add the pesto from above. Stir on medium heat. There should be the rare bubble forming to pop the surface. This soup will scald and taste burned. Don't burn it.

Add a little chicken broth to thin it to work it nicely. Add the cream. The red tomato soup turns a rather ugly shade of green/orange when the pesto is added. The cream brightens this considerably to a cheery orange. Add enough chicken broth to make the soup thin enough to stir easily. You should be tasting along the way. Make the soup the way you like it. The salt and pepper go in about now. As the soup is nearing the end of the assembly phase, all ingredients in, and it tastes good, add some butter, quarter cup, half cup, or more, and you get a lovely glossy sheen on the soup, and a beautiful mouth feel.

I let it cool overnight (after an immediate meal with grilled cheese sandwiches). The consistency resembles pumpkin pie filling, and almost that color too, but redder. I spoon it into quart ziplocs (for individual servings, but into gallon ziplocs for family meals). I fill the ziplocs full enough to fold half over empty and have the bag be about an inch and a half high. This size/shape stacks neatly in the freezer. I get about five or six bags from this recipe.
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Old 02-28-2008, 07:56 AM   #40
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Feeding an army?
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Old 02-28-2008, 10:19 AM   #41
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Curry Chicken over white rice. Yum!
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Old 02-28-2008, 11:15 AM   #42
BigV
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Not with this batch. More like.. siege mentality. I like to cook some foods in big batches, and freeze portions. Spaghetti works well this way, as do many soups. I have used this recipe to feed a scout troop. I did have to scale it up by a factor of five or six though.... It was delicious!
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Old 02-28-2008, 11:18 AM   #43
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We had fajitas on Monday, and I made the best Strawberry Margaritas ever. Ever. In the history of the world.

1 package of frozen strawberries
fill the rest of the blender with party ice
fill 2/3 of the blender with tequila, and 1/3 with Triple Sec

Drink until your head explodes with awesomeness.
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Old 02-28-2008, 09:10 PM   #44
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Fried rice, sweet and sour chicken.....the fortune in the cookie better be good!:p
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Old 02-28-2008, 10:14 PM   #45
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pumpkin soup
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