Would you mind sharing the recipe? @AussieT (who is not an Aussie btw and I have yet to figure out why he has chosen this name) went to Brisbane during one of his deployments. It was Australia Day while his ship was there and he had meat pie to celebrate. He says they were awesome, especially with ketchup. I'd like to make it.Just made individual-sized Australian-style meat pies for dinner. Ended up with thirteen of them, then Tiffany and I managed to eat 3.5 of them before we got full.
My labmate's from Australia, though, and has lamented the lack of meat pies in the states compared to Oz. I will be surprising him with lunch tomorrow.
We have cod where we live (SW Newfoundland). Recipe would be great. Assuming there's more than "crust, fry". Do you dunk the fillets in egg first, or no?Made my panko-encrusted cod filets for dinner. Always good.
Are these similar to empanadas? We have meat pockets in western Oklahoma that are supposedly Czech in origin (don't know what they're called there). It's a pastry dough with ground meat, lite-gravy, and onions. They're deep-fried and we ate them with mustard.Just made individual-sized Australian-style meat pies for dinner. Ended up with thirteen of them, then Tiffany and I managed to eat 3.5 of them before we got full.
My labmate's from Australia, though, and has lamented the lack of meat pies in the states compared to Oz. I will be surprising him with lunch tomorrow.
Yeah, they do. Basically it's a way of turning leftovers into a second, different meal with just a bit of dough, as well as creating a satisfying, easy to transport meal for people to take to work.[DOUBLEPOST=1412020730,1412020186][/DOUBLEPOST]Are these similar to empanadas? We have meat pockets in western Oklahoma that are supposedly Czech in origin (don't know what they're called there). It's a pastry dough with ground meat, lite-gravy, and onions. They're deep-fried and we ate them with mustard.
I am assuming that lots of cultures have meat pockets/pies in their cuisines.
It's especially good with "oven fries" - basically baked potato wedges that taste a lot like fries or potato chips. Take 3 baking potatos, wash thoroughly, cut in half the long way, then slice into 1/4 inch thick strips. Coat a baking sheet with peanut oil, or brush each potato slice with it as you prefer. Sprinkle with kosher salt and season to taste (seasoned salt, black pepper, paprika, chili powder, etc). Bake in 425 F oven for 40-45 minutes. I usually have these in the oven for 20 minutes before putting the fish in.Thanks for the recipe. And since I use buttermilk rarely, I've taken to buying the powder from Bulk Barn, or wherever you can get lots of bulk stuff. It IS different than Milk + Lemon Juice, so you may want to try the powdered stuff in recipes.
Sounds delicious. I will definitely be trying it.
Turkey Spam?Tonight is a quarter turkey breast cooked in the crockpot. Probably with baked potato or rice and a big salad.
I've done something similar with potatoes for years. The difference is I generally make garlic-parsley (or rosemary) and I actually dump my spices and oil in a big ziploc bag, then shake the potato wedges in there, and then dump that whole bunch onto the ALREADY HOT cookie sheet. Same temp/time as yours. Works great. I'll definitely try it more fry-like seasoning like you have it some time.It's especially good with "oven fries" - basically baked potato wedges that taste a lot like fries or potato chips. Take 3 baking potatos, wash thoroughly, cut in half the long way, then slice into 1/4 inch thick strips. Coat a baking sheet with peanut oil, or brush each potato slice with it as you prefer. Sprinkle with kosher salt and season to taste (seasoned salt, black pepper, paprika, chili powder, etc). Bake in 425 F oven for 40-45 minutes. I usually have these in the oven for 20 minutes before putting the fish in.
So there you go - my baked fish and chips.
Oh sweet jeebus no!Turkey Spam?
Sure! I used this recipe as a base: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/australian-meat-pie-recipe.htmlWould you mind sharing the recipe? @AussieT (who is not an Aussie btw and I have yet to figure out why he has chosen this name) went to Brisbane during one of his deployments. It was Australia Day while his ship was there and he had meat pie to celebrate. He says they were awesome, especially with ketchup. I'd like to make it.
Bacon makes cruddy gravy. This is something I learned making turkey dinners. One year we added doofy thick sheets of weaved bacon ala Epic Meal Time to the turkey instead of just laying some strips over it and the gravy turned out awful.This is most certainly not poutine:
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The other day I made gravy from bacon fat and chicken broth. It's really mediocre gravy. Would not make again. The first night I made it, I had it with crumbled sausage on toast, and that was pretty good. This time I thought I'd try it on fries, only I used leftover taco meat, and topped it with truffle gouda cheese. It wasn't bad, it just wasn't even as good as the sum of it's parts. Experiment failed.
I'm jealous, although I can never have beer after whiskey, and seldom sex after beer.Pizza and beer and beer and whiskey and pizza and whiskey and beer. And sex.