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One day one of my Dutch colleagues commented "You Brits are really funny, when I was in London (he was an ex-submariner in the Dutch Navy) I noticed you eat your fish and chips from newspapers" I responded "yes, that is an old British custom but we also ensure the fish is cooked prior to eating it" |
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Raw or pickled fish, even worse: Sushi, is not my thing. Only exception: Herring in dill cream. |
I just had a vegan breakfast, it was pretty good. Did you know if you break-up/crumble a 15 oz block of extra-firm Tofu into bite size pieces. Throw into a fry pan add Tumeric it gives it the color of scrambled eggs, damn near same texture too. Not as tasty as eggs but season with a little cumin, onion powder, garlic powder, salt pepper or Sriracha or whatever and I doubt you'd know the difference.
Goes great with hasbrowns, topped with sautéed garlic onions, tomatoes and cilantro. It wasn't a true vegan meal, the recipe calls to cook in olive oil. But I have to have butter, butter always makes it better. Oh, and cheese does too! :yep: |
Things are expensive these days but the eye of round roast is still the cheapest. Reason many don’t use it is because it’s one tuff cut of beef you’ll spend all day chewing on it. The solution is pineapple. Discard the crown then dice and purée the pineapple skin and all, dump into a large bowl for a marinade. Cut the eye of round into two inch steaks and marinate them in the pineapple NO MORE than two hours in the refrigerator and let those little pineapple enzymes got to work. Afterward rinse well, season and grill them or pan fry that cow. They don’t char as well as untreated beef but boy are they ever tender.
Works well on other cuts but be careful the marinade it will dissolve beef into a mush if left in too long. |
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If you take a lesser cut of meat and use a pressure cooker, it comes out pretty well. I tend to sprinkle a little bit of ground garlic along with sliced onions. In a roaster or pressure cooker, this infuses the meats with acids breaking down the proteins in the meat. Using a roaster pan on a low heat setting and cooking all day makes for a tender cut of meat as well. The pineapple or orange marinades will break down the protein collagen matrix and as you said, make things tender. |
Im in Florida now, it's grillin' season all year. Gotta char that cow. :salute:
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_lEE5TynVs
:Kaleun_Salivating: :D This is about as simple as it gets, all you need is that extra day. Magic powder is only salt, black pepper, and garlic powder. For Salt Pork, check in the bigger box stores or ask the butcher. Lard should be easy. In a worst case, you can use Crisco but you'll lose a little flavor. Try to not jump the shark. Beans need to mellow out for at least over night after you cook them the first time. If you want to add some extras (hot peppers, chopped olives, celery seed, etc.) WAIT until the last cooking step before you serve them. :up: |
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I'd like to read what you think. :hmmm: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NL1vB10wM4 He's making it border-line too complicated (IMO) but there are some good ideas. :salute: As a historical note, in the US during the great depression, dill pickles were a cheap source of dill flavoring. I've tried recipes using dill pickles for stuff like poached or baked salmon and cod. :) His Tar-tar sauce sounds wayy too "fru-fru" for my taste (where's the cilantro and wasabi? :nope: ) but its supposed to be a "house sauce" so I'll allow it. :hmmm: |
It's been thirty years since I had deep fried cheeseburgers served wrapped in newspaper. As a fiscal conservative I always approved of the method. I've used the Sunday funnies as gift wrap too. :D The food I miss most of all from Scotland is the shoestring French fries with malt vinegar served from the Dunkin Donut kiosk at the end of the pier. :salute:
I love dill spice, I put it in many dishes. |
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Gnawing on a homemade heated salami, cole slaw, and Swiss on sliced Italian artisan bread. So take that.
:Kaleun_Goofy: |
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It can be various meats and or Kielbasa and Sauer Kraut with Coleslaw and fries piled on. You literally can't compress the sandwich enough to get your mouth around it. Apparently, the sandwich originates with the truck driving people there who not only didn't have the time to stop and eat but didn't have the room to lay anything out in the truck to eat. So, Primanti brothers piled everything on one Sandwich. When we went to the Restaurant, it was very crowded. I was told in one location, it was common to go to Primanti brothers after a night out seeing live bands at the various clubs at two in the morning. I wasn't sure I would like the Sandwich but it was awesome. I can understand why Primanti Brothers has such a following. Even dignitaries to the area went to Primanti's for a Sandwich. If anyone is ever there, try a Sandwich there. You won't be disappointed. https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/me...ost-famous.jpg https://primantibros.com/ https://www.menuism.com/menus/primanti-brothers-207636 |
^ Trumped by the Beef Rogan Josh I've just had for lunch :yeah:
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If we were there and you were visiting, I would treat you to a Hockey game and a Primanti Brothers " Sammich " and a couple pints to wash it down. :yep: I would even spring for the Rolaids Stomach meds for " heartburn " that you might need later. I certainly needed the Rolaids. :haha: They need to open a couple Primanti Brothers in the Midwest and near Red Wings Venues. :yep: |
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