Food, science geekery, and bacon!

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Armadillo

I'm in a food science program at a major university. I can get you animal fat. :D
 
I don't really like it if I can taste it, if that makes any sense.

When I make sandwiches or tuna/chicken salad, I use it mainly for some added moisture, not necessarily flavor. I usually dress it up by adding garlic/chipotles/salt and pepper/etc to give it some nice taste. On it's own, I don't care for it.

I've also added it to cake mix to make it more moist. It works.
 

Cajungal

Staff member
^I can see that. If real mayo is dripping out of a sandwich, there's no way i can eat that sandwich. But it can also be good in other things.

That "why you're fat" site is such a pick-me-up. No matter how badly I eat some days, I've never gone that far.
 
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Laurelai

I'm not a big mayo fan either. I use it for a binding in salads like tuna and chicken (with the tuna, but enough to make it moist), but there are 2 sandwiches that I must have mayo with:
1) BLT (omg soooo divine)
2) Turkey sandwich made with leftover Thanksgiving turkey.
om nom nom nom nom
 
Heh. My wife (a foodie™) pointed out this article to me a few days ago. It is intriguing. After all, if you can make jam out of bacon, why not mayonnaise?
You can make jam out of bacon?!?[/QUOTE]You can make jam out of almost anything. Colonial Virginians made jam out of pigs feet.[/QUOTE]Heck, you can even make lollipops out of bacon. And peanut butter-and-bacon sandwiches are a part of a [STRIKE]balanced[/STRIKE] nutritious breakfast (or lunch, dinner, or midnight snack).

--Patrick
 
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