Indian-Italian fusion! Looks good.
We have tikka shrimp and grits here. Pretty tasty.
We have tikka shrimp and grits here. Pretty tasty.
You could SHARE your perfect recipe!I finally got the balance worked out just right (to my tastes at least) on my beef bourguignon. Tender - but not over cooked - meat, silky and thick - but not gloopy - sauce, tender carrots and onions, not too winey, and a little floral from the herbs de provence.
I would definitely be interested to hear about any future experimentation with pressure cookers on this recipe. Just be careful that you don't go too far and blast the meat down to shreds. Perhaps the best part of my success with this recipe was the fact that for the first time the meat was tender but not overcooked to the point of dryness.I'll use my big (5 quart) dutch oven for this one. Or possibly my pressure cooker... which gives me a great idea: what if I pressure cook it? Could reduce the time. Plenty of liquid it looks like... but it won't reduce, so maybe not a good idea after all without adjustment, so definitely not the first time for me, but I'm willing to play with it later. If I do, I'll notify the board with how much less liquid it might take. Something tells me it'd just be a matter of reducing those last two cups of water to either 1 or possibly nothing.
Either way, I think I'll try it. Can't get pearl onions here (I'm out in the sticks basically) but my pantry is good on the herbs and other stuff from when I go into a decent-ish sized place (I even recently acquired some Herbs de Provence so I'm good there!), so the rest is no problem.
Thanks @Gared for the recipe.
You can often find frozen pearl onions in the frozen veggies section. Not as nice as fresh, but better than a sharp stick in the eyeI'll use my big (5 quart) dutch oven for this one. Or possibly my pressure cooker... which gives me a great idea: what if I pressure cook it? Could reduce the time. Plenty of liquid it looks like... but it won't reduce, so maybe not a good idea after all without adjustment, so definitely not the first time for me, but I'm willing to play with it later. If I do, I'll notify the board with how much less liquid it might take. Something tells me it'd just be a matter of reducing those last two cups of water to either 1 or possibly nothing.
Either way, I think I'll try it. Can't get pearl onions here (I'm out in the sticks basically) but my pantry is good on the herbs and other stuff from when I go into a decent-ish sized place (I even recently acquired some Herbs de Provence so I'm good there!), so the rest is no problem.
Thanks @Gared for the recipe.
To add to this, I sometimes substitute washed cocktail onions (brined pearl onions) for pearl, and it works quite well. Specially good for adding to served-cold foods (since you don't need to cook them), like rice salad. I mostly just buy them frozen though, like Tin said.[DOUBLEPOST=1454910657,1454910391][/DOUBLEPOST]Like I found out during my experiments, "quick" dough is sub-par in taste. The wife demanded pizza at 8pm tho, and I wasn't the one to tell her "sure, give me a few hours"...You can often find frozen pearl onions the frozen veggies section. Not as nice as fresh, but better than a sharp stick in the eye
Looks good - what's your dough recipe?To add to this, I sometimes substitute washed cocktail onions (brined pearl onions) for pearl, and it works quite well. Specially good for adding to served-cold foods (since you don't need to cook them), like rice salad. I mostly just buy them frozen though, like Tin said.[DOUBLEPOST=1454910657,1454910391][/DOUBLEPOST]Like I found out during my experiments, "quick" dough is sub-par in taste. The wife demanded pizza at 8pm tho, and I wasn't the one to tell her "sure, give me a few hours"...
Anyway, I tried making pan pizza for the first time to see if it'd be any good (and incidentally improve the taste of the dough by frying it).
The result was a success. I fucking love how it's guaranteed to be round (and thus look pleasant to my eye). The crust still tastes off to me, but she didn't mind (and it did taste better). I coated the pan in bacon fat, and used bacon and tuna as the two toppings. Should've probably cooked it at a higher temp (and will do so next time), as it's not quite crisp enough.
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Let me write it down.Looks good - what's your dough recipe?
They sell honey from Hawaii aka the Big Island in our Costco. Noah got to visit the apiary & business as part of a class trip. Macadamia honey from Big Island Bees is so good!They also source all of their honey regionally.
I'm going to tell @Dirona about this and make her insanely jealous.They sell honey from Hawaii aka the Big Island in our Costco. Noah got to visit the apiary & business as part of a class trip. Macadamia honey from Big Island Bees is so good!
This could make her more jealous. He got to roll his own beeswax candles there. We still have them. The wax smells so good I refuse to burn them.I'm going to tell @Dirona about this and make her insanely jealous.
That said, where we used to live (Kelowna) was a valley with many MANY fruit trees, as well as many grapes for wine. Very good honey there too. Strangely, no mead!
No, but I'll have to look for it. And it actually looks like Safeway here carries it!Have you tried Al Fresco chicken breakfast sausage? It's pretty great.