Whats for Dinner?

I think you've mentioned them before. And, once again I got excited and clicked on locations and see that I'd have to go to Charlotte for pancake goodness.

So, do their pancakes have any fermentation flavor? Like a slight sourness? I really like Indian dosa which is sort of like a fermented savory crepe.
I have, and they do. They have an ever-so-slight beerlike bite to them, but it's not the lactic tartness of sourdough.
You don't leave there hungry, that's for sure.

--Patrick
 
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and shallots ;)

The key to a proper risotto is adding liquid a quarter cup at a time, and stirring until it's completely absorbed. You can't rush this step. Those instant packages of risotto, and the rice cooker risotto setting will not do. They do not make risotto. If you don't stir constantly, adding a little liquid at a time, you won't get that awesomely creamy texture. That texture is what separates "rice" from "risotto".
I made risotto only one time. It turned out beautifully, but all the stirring was like torture.
 
Ask @HowDroll about that. She's a Soylent person. And by that I mean she eats/drinks it, not that SOYLENT GREEN IS HOWDROLL!
I have only been using it as a lunch replacement and occasionally for dinner if I am in a hurry. I start missing food too much when I drink nothing but soylent. :(
 
whole milk mixed 50/50 with 2% milk is just 2.625% milk.
"whole" milk is only 3.25% butterfat.

--Patrick
Maybe they call it something else where you are, but in most of Canada (at the least) half-and-half is a type of cream, usually ~10%. So when Celt Z mixed 10% with 2%, they got closer to 6%.
 
Maybe they call it something else where you are, but in most of Canada (at the least) half-and-half is a type of cream, usually ~10%. So when Celt Z mixed 10% with 2%, they got closer to 6%.
I read his post as mixing whole milk in equal parts with 2% milk, not with half-and-half.
 
Maybe they call it something else where you are, but in most of Canada (at the least) half-and-half is a type of cream, usually ~10%. So when Celt Z mixed 10% with 2%, they got closer to 6%.
I read his post as mixing whole milk in equal parts with 2% milk, not with half-and-half.
I'm the one who made the recipe and didn't have whole milk. :) But you're right, @Eriol, about both the half & half and how I went about mixing it. I like half & half in my coffee (fyi in case I ever come visit you guys).

The recipe called for 2.5 cups of whole milk. I had 2% milk and half & half on hand. So I used 1 cup of half & half mixed with 1.5 cups of 2% milk. I figured it would at least come close if it made a difference at all. Since the chicken was only being cooked in the milk I didn't think it was necessary to be pinpoint precise. I just thought the added fat would help make the meat more tender/less dry.
 
Maybe they call it something else where you are, but in most of Canada (at the least) half-and-half is a type of cream, usually ~10%. So when Celt Z mixed 10% with 2%, they got closer to 6%.
Ah.
No, it is referred to as "half&half" here also, being half cream (36%) and half milk (3.25%), but I read "half and half" to mean the proportions mixed, not the name of the product.

--Patrick
 
We've switched to Cashew Milk in almost everything that calls for milk as an ingredient. Some things we still use real milk in, when required for the fats in milk, but everything else is Cashew. I really can't tell the difference, but then again, I don't really like milk as a drink.
 
Speaking of 1/2 and 1/2 in coffee, I recently discovered that almond milk in coffee tastes amazing. I generally only drink black coffee, but I might change that.
You know what tastes even better?
Almond milk in coffee with a splash of amaretto.
I have this on good authority.
And by that I mean I think we've gone through two bottles of Disaronno in the last two months, and none of it has been me.

--Patrick
 
You know what tastes even better?
Almond milk in coffee with a splash of amaretto.
I have this on good authority.
And by that I mean I think we've gone through two bottles of Disaronno in the last two months, and none of it has been me.

--Patrick
I've had Irish Cream and Kaulula(sp?) in coffee and both are great. I'll have to try amaretto.
 
I do believe that tonight I will finally get around to making that curry I've been putting off. Wish I could get my hands on some lamb or goat relatively easily, but I'll just have to go with veggies this time.
 
I do believe that tonight I will finally get around to making that curry I've been putting off. Wish I could get my hands on some lamb or goat relatively easily, but I'll just have to go with veggies this time.
Tacoma doesn't have any ethnic/hallal/kosher/Costco? Or is that not relatively easy? What sort of curry are you making? Vindaloo?

This weekend we made homemade Caesar salad dressing with homemade croutons and served tossed that with baby kale. I grilled 1 1/2 in NY strips. I tried a new method of salting and putting the steaks in the freezer for ~30 min prior to cooking and then threw them on a rocket-hot grill. I added some hickory chips to the coals about 2/3 through the cooking time and it gave the steaks a nice smokiness without being overpowering. We had twice baked potatoes with it too. Yum! For those interested: Medium steaks.

The freezer helped prevent a large gray band of overcooked meat. There was just an 1/8 in of gray. I should have taken a pic. It was a thing of beauty. The freezer also helped dry out the exterior so that I got a crispier crust on the sear. I feel like writing steak poetry now.
 
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It'll be a coconut/tomato based curry with potatoes, cauliflower, and peas. I could go to Costco, but I don't really want to spend 18 hours in the store trying to buy one item (this is the busiest Costco I've ever been to), and I haven't found a kosher or halal store yet. We do have a lot of great Asian options though. That steak and salad sounds awesome. Did you use anchovies or anchovy paste in your Caesar salad dressing?
 
It'll be a coconut/tomato based curry with potatoes, cauliflower, and peas. I could go to Costco, but I don't really want to spend 18 hours in the store trying to buy one item (this is the busiest Costco I've ever been to), and I haven't found a kosher or halal store yet. We do have a lot of great Asian options though. That steak and salad sounds awesome. Did you use anchovies or anchovy paste in your Caesar salad dressing?
Anchovy fillets. I did it right! Raw egg yolk and everything!
 
I can understand some trouble in getting goat, but lamb? Isn't that a pretty "standard" type of meat? It's no harder to find than beef or chicken around here.
 
I can understand some trouble in getting goat, but lamb? Isn't that a pretty "standard" type of meat? It's no harder to find than beef or chicken around here.
I haven't see either since we lived in California. Even then, goat was just starting to show up in regular supermarkets instead of only the Mexican/Hispanic grocery stores.
 
I can understand some trouble in getting goat, but lamb? Isn't that a pretty "standard" type of meat? It's no harder to find than beef or chicken around here.
They have lamb at one grocery store chain around here, but the times I've bought it it's been pretty nasty.
 
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