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#1 |
Navy Seal
![]() Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: New Mexico, USA
Posts: 9,023
Downloads: 8
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My veggie friends won't be offended by meat on the table, but I want something nice for them to eat too.
BTW, neon, when you do eggplant and squash do you salt it and let it sit for a while then rinse and dry it before cooking? I tried that and it made a HUGE difference in texture. Squash was crispy, not squishy. PS—on the egg[plant spaghetti, 1 large JAR of capers? my daughter loves capers, and my large jar is maybe 16 ounces ![]() Or do you mean a tiny jar of the large capers? PPS—read the damn OP. Whine about meat elsewhere. Ask a question, or post a recipe. Back before I was married, every 3d chick or so was a veggie, knowing how to cook them a tasty meal can't hurt your chances. Besides, when you have people over, it's only polite to have something they can eat on the table. That said I won't go as far as vegan crap. You get too persnickety and you're on your own, but a "I don't eat meat" guest deserves to enjoy dinner. (I do most cooking at our house, and I have a few buddies who used to be prep or line cooks. My friend scott can look you in the eye while talking to you making tiny dices for pico de gallo (FAST) and still have all his fingers. Blows my mind. Last edited by tater; 10-24-10 at 11:33 AM. |
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#2 |
Soaring
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CHINESE FRIED SPINACH
Many people do not like spinach. But chances are that they will like it if prepared this way (telling by experience). It's one of my favourite recipes - since 25 years. Occassionaly I kill for it. ![]() Prepare a hugh quantity if it should be the full meal, smaller quantity if it is just part of something bigger. Serve on unsalted Basmati rice. Use froozen spinach, it is easier to handle than fresh one, and does not make a difference. Use a Wok or an iron pan (uncoated), heat it up to the maximum you stove can handle. KEEP IT there during all cooking. 400 gr froozen spinach (full leaves, non-cut!), thawed out 2 onions, cut up 2 cloves of garlic, thin sliced and small cut, or smashed 3-4 slices of fresh ginger, or 1/2 - 1 teaspoons of ginger powder 4-6 table spoons of oil 2 table spoons of Chinese dark soya sauce (no Japanese or Indonesian!) 4-6 table spoons chicken broth 1-2 table spoons Sherry, medium dry Put oil into the heated pan or Wok. Add ginger, garlic and onions. Constantly stir, else...! Once onions start to show brown edges after 2 minutes, add spinach. CONSTANTLY STIR!!! 2 Minutes (precise timing!). Add soya sauce, chicken broth, stir another 1 - 1.5 minutes. Add Sherry, stir 30 seconds, immediately serve/eat with rice. When taking it out of the pan, there should not be much loose liquid left (else you took too much sauce or too little spinach, or the pan was not hot enough). The process is quick, like often is the case with Chinese cuisine, but it is important to keep the heat up and to constantly stir, else the mass burns into the iron immediately. ![]() Watch out for the soya sauce. Japanese, Chinese and Indonesian are all very different in taste. For dedicated recipes demanding it, Chinese is best (but only if hesating it up very much, cold I do not like it), for all other purposes, I prefer Indonesian, which I consume in large quantities. For Japanese soya sauce - well, I do not like it neither hot nor cold. And no, I also do not like Sushi. ![]()
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