Dinner Tonight
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- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
When you're on 10, and you need a little more, turn it up to 11:
http://www.ranchogordo.com/collections/heirloom-beans" target="_blank
http://www.ansonmills.com/products" target="_blank
http://www.ranchogordo.com/collections/heirloom-beans" target="_blank
http://www.ansonmills.com/products" target="_blank
- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
The wife made an authentic carbonara tonight.
I remain in heaven an hour later.......
I remain in heaven an hour later.......
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Nothing better. My wife is still restricted from runny eggs, so haven't had it in a while.Chicat wrote:The wife made an authentic carbonara tonight.
I remain in heaven an hour later.......
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I made yellow coconut chicken curry yesterday and split pea with leftover easter ham soup today.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Just spaghetti tonight.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Yellow-eye beans
Cornbread
Collard greens
Cornbread
Collard greens
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
A peanut butter sandwich made with jam...
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Andy Warhol approves.CalStateTempe wrote:A peanut butter sandwich made with jam...
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I can relate to this.Andy Warhol wrote:I'll buy a huge piece of meat, cook it up for dinner, and then right before it's done I'll break down and have what I wanted for dinner in the first place—bread and jam. I'm only kidding myself when I go through the motions of cooking protein: all I ever really want is sugar. The rest is strictly for appearances, i.e., you can't take a princess to dinner and order a cookie for starters, no matter how much you crave one. People expect you to eat protein and you do so they won't talk. (If you decided to be stubborn and ordered the cookie, you'd wind up having to talk about why you want it and your philosophy of eating a cookie for dinner. And that would be too much trouble, so you order lamb and forget about what you really want.)
- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
As my father was known to say, "Life's short. Eat dessert first."
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Merkin
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Re: Dinner Tonight
On the way in this morning I was just reading about the Andes rugby team crash from 1972. A new book has just been released by a now MD who was a medical student then.
Saying, that, I do love meat.
Saying, that, I do love meat.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Okay, you guys have got to order food from Anson Mills. This stuff is off the charts. Fuck the 20th century and everything it did to destroy food. Get with the times and go back to the 19th century.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Looks fantastic. $8/lb for rice is pretty steep though...
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
For anybody here old enough to remember growing up in America in the 1980s or earlier, what do you remember about "spaghetti" as a dinner that your mother or your friend's mom made? What did it entail? I remember every kid agreeing that spaghetti was his "favorite dish" but I'm having trouble remembering what it involved, other than the fact that the whole concept started to change around the late 1980s. I think it was about the same from, say, 1960 - 1985ish.
Re: Dinner Tonight
I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
had zucchini spaghetti with home made sauce and meatballs last week. pretty good. i don't even really miss the pasta (when it is just store brand dried pasta that is)
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Then maybe you're a living bearer of an otherwise pretty much lost tradition. And it really is mostly lost, which is a total shame, and with no good reason, because I'm pretty certain it was universally loved.azgreg wrote:I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
So what does spaghetti entail for you now? If you start telling me about imported ingredients and a sauce made from scratch, then your experience of the 70s wasn't my experience of the 70s.
My best guess would be to come home from the supermarket with:
And some of this:
... to sprinkle on this (if it exists anymore):
... which is melted onto something like this:
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
More often than not it's:Longhorned wrote:Then maybe you're a living bearer of an otherwise pretty much lost tradition. And it really is mostly lost, which is a total shame, and with no good reason, because I'm pretty certain it was universally loved.azgreg wrote:I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
So what does spaghetti entail for you now? If you start telling me about imported ingredients and a sauce made from scratch, then your experience of the 70s wasn't my experience of the 70s.
With:
And:
Once in a while though we get a wild hair up our ass and make the sauce from scratch.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Thanks. Going back to the 70s, I think Ragu, which started out with a cartoonish picture of gondola in a Venetian canal, was for fancy people. The kind of people who got their sauce out of jars instead of cans. The ground turkey is definitely post-70s. I'm going to date your spaghetti to the early 1980s. And I'm going to try it. I think what I said earlier about 1960-1985 continuity is wrong.
Re: Dinner Tonight
I couldn't tell you what products my mom used, but I'm pretty sure it's whatever he could get at the Davis Monthan Commissary.
- Merkin
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Normally I fry up some green peppers and onions, then add hamburger and Prego. Trying healthier pasta, but really don't care for the whole wheat, although the sauce does hide the flavor.
My daughter was living with us for a while when her hubby was off in training. She made this for us, turned out pretty good.
scumdevils86 wrote:had zucchini spaghetti with home made sauce and meatballs last week. pretty good. i don't even really miss the pasta (when it is just store brand dried pasta that is)
My daughter was living with us for a while when her hubby was off in training. She made this for us, turned out pretty good.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Merkin has a magical way of frying up green peppers and onions without including the mushrooms.
- BearDown89
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Re: Dinner Tonight
My mom made her spaghetti sauce from scratch every time when I was a kid. Whole canned tomatoes, ground beef and bay leaves are what I remember - don't know what she seasoned it with otherwise. It was meaty. Cooked in her large oval enamel Le Creuset pot - kind of an orangey maroon, very 70s. Pasta was Ronzoni - always spaghetti, never any other shape or thickness. Kraft grated parm. Garlic bread using a French baguette. Dad would slice it almost all the way through and butter in between each slice with his mixture of butter, garlic powder/salt and parsley. Then wrapped in foil and heated in the oven until nuclear and untouchable. Definitely one of my favorites.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Marinara from scratch (for a big crowd):
3 - #10 Cans Crushed Concentrated Tomatoes (with no added spices)
1 1/2 - #10 Cans of Water
4 finely chopped medium yellow onions (about 4#)
1/2 - Cup Olive Oil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Oregano
1 - 2 oz. scoop Sweet Basil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Marjoram
1 - 2 oz. scoop Parsley Flakes
1/2 - 2 oz. scoop salt
1/4 - 2 oz. scoop Black Pepper
1/4 - 2 oz scoop Sugar In the Raw
2 pinches Granulated Garlic
Sauté onions in Olive Oil, add mixed spices, tomatoes, and water. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Simmer slowly, over low heat, stirring every 10 minutes, for 2 hours until a well blended taste develops. When cooking properly the surface of the sauce should just barely be bubbling. DO NOT SCORCH!
Makes about 5 gallons.
3 - #10 Cans Crushed Concentrated Tomatoes (with no added spices)
1 1/2 - #10 Cans of Water
4 finely chopped medium yellow onions (about 4#)
1/2 - Cup Olive Oil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Oregano
1 - 2 oz. scoop Sweet Basil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Marjoram
1 - 2 oz. scoop Parsley Flakes
1/2 - 2 oz. scoop salt
1/4 - 2 oz. scoop Black Pepper
1/4 - 2 oz scoop Sugar In the Raw
2 pinches Granulated Garlic
Sauté onions in Olive Oil, add mixed spices, tomatoes, and water. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Simmer slowly, over low heat, stirring every 10 minutes, for 2 hours until a well blended taste develops. When cooking properly the surface of the sauce should just barely be bubbling. DO NOT SCORCH!
Makes about 5 gallons.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Yes, I can feel it! I mean, except for the homemade sauce part, and I'm surprised by bay leaf. But yes, always spaghetti. It was the ingredient, not a shape within a larger category called "pasta." There was "macaroni" (elbow-shaped) and "spaghetti." In the late 80's some people started saying "pasta" and there was no bearing their haughty looks.BearDown89 wrote:My mom made her spaghetti sauce from scratch every time when I was a kid. Whole canned tomatoes, ground beef and bay leaves are what I remember - don't know what she seasoned it with otherwise. It was meaty. Cooked in her large oval enamel Le Creuset pot - kind of an orangey maroon, very 70s. Pasta was Ronzoni - always spaghetti, never any other shape or thickness. Kraft grated parm. Garlic bread using a French baguette. Dad would slice it almost all the way through and butter in between each slice with his mixture of butter, garlic powder/salt and parsley. Then wrapped in foil and heated in the oven until nuclear and untouchable. Definitely one of my favorites.
Finally, can you remember if your mom made it in the Italianized sugo preparation where the cook integrates it all? Or did she present it in the old, authentic, genuinely American tradition of ladling the sauce over a bed of spaghetti like:
?
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
only recently did i start serving pasta with the sauce not just ladled over the top.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
The sheer volume of the product and its bounty of herbs evokes a real New Jersey, man-made pasta for a back room of lunchtime mafiosi, like when you see them make it in the Godfather, or when Ray Liotta's character in Goodfellas is cooking it all day in that gigantic stock pot, or when Paulie makes it on the Sopranos.KaibabKat wrote:Marinara from scratch (for a big crowd):
3 - #10 Cans Crushed Concentrated Tomatoes (with no added spices)
1 1/2 - #10 Cans of Water
4 finely chopped medium yellow onions (about 4#)
1/2 - Cup Olive Oil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Oregano
1 - 2 oz. scoop Sweet Basil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Marjoram
1 - 2 oz. scoop Parsley Flakes
1/2 - 2 oz. scoop salt
1/4 - 2 oz. scoop Black Pepper
1/4 - 2 oz scoop Sugar In the Raw
2 pinches Granulated Garlic
Sauté onions in Olive Oil, add mixed spices, tomatoes, and water. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Simmer slowly, over low heat, stirring every 10 minutes, for 2 hours until a well blended taste develops. When cooking properly the surface of the sauce should just barely be bubbling. DO NOT SCORCH!
Makes about 5 gallons.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Agreed. Nothing else in the pasta family compares with twirling a forkful of spaghetti.Longhorned wrote:But yes, always spaghetti. It was the ingredient, not a shape within a larger category called "pasta." There was "macaroni" (elbow-shaped) and "spaghetti." In the late 80's some people started saying "pasta" and there was no bearing their haughty looks.
Re: Dinner Tonight
I prefer spaghettini to spaghetti.
- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Thai Beef Salad
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- BearDown89
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Re: Dinner Tonight
LH, this brings to mind my father's favorite scene in Goodfellas where Paul Sorvino's character is slicing cloves of garlic with a razor blade in prison . . . As to service of mom's spaghetti, indeed a heaping helping of meaty sauce was ladled over the top of a pile of spaghetti and then topped with a mound of the parm - totally americanized. There's not an Italian gene anywhere in my entire family tree.Longhorned wrote:The sheer volume of the product and its bounty of herbs evokes a real New Jersey, man-made pasta for a back room of lunchtime mafiosi, like when you see them make it in the Godfather, or when Ray Liotta's character in Goodfellas is cooking it all day in that gigantic stock pot, or when Paulie makes it on the Sopranos.KaibabKat wrote:Marinara from scratch (for a big crowd):
3 - #10 Cans Crushed Concentrated Tomatoes (with no added spices)
1 1/2 - #10 Cans of Water
4 finely chopped medium yellow onions (about 4#)
1/2 - Cup Olive Oil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Oregano
1 - 2 oz. scoop Sweet Basil
1 - 2 oz. scoop Marjoram
1 - 2 oz. scoop Parsley Flakes
1/2 - 2 oz. scoop salt
1/4 - 2 oz. scoop Black Pepper
1/4 - 2 oz scoop Sugar In the Raw
2 pinches Granulated Garlic
Sauté onions in Olive Oil, add mixed spices, tomatoes, and water. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Simmer slowly, over low heat, stirring every 10 minutes, for 2 hours until a well blended taste develops. When cooking properly the surface of the sauce should just barely be bubbling. DO NOT SCORCH!
Makes about 5 gallons.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Orca beans:
Soaked 6 hours and cooked up with guanciale, onion, celery, carrot, fish sauce, soy sauce, and a touch of maple syrup. Holy crap that those were amazing little whales.
and
Pencil cob grits:
Soaked them 10 hours and cooked them up with butter. Incredible stuff. A mind-blowing realization cooking with this stuff.
The grits were from Anson Mills. The beans were from Rancho Gordo.
Soaked 6 hours and cooked up with guanciale, onion, celery, carrot, fish sauce, soy sauce, and a touch of maple syrup. Holy crap that those were amazing little whales.
and
Pencil cob grits:
Soaked them 10 hours and cooked them up with butter. Incredible stuff. A mind-blowing realization cooking with this stuff.
The grits were from Anson Mills. The beans were from Rancho Gordo.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Sausage/pepper/rice/spaghetti sauce casserole!
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
What kind of pepper?
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
What do you imagine Ari Lieberman had for dinner tonight? I'm thinking Chicken Kiev. I'm not exactly certain what Chicken Kiev is, but it would be so Ari Lieberman.
I bet UADevil had Beef Wellington. I don't know what that is, either.
I bet UADevil had Beef Wellington. I don't know what that is, either.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Just bell peppers.
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Yup, Thats about right. Except we were a Ragu family. If dad had a good week on the job site, we'd class it up a notch with Prego, but generally that was only for special occasions.Longhorned wrote:Then maybe you're a living bearer of an otherwise pretty much lost tradition. And it really is mostly lost, which is a total shame, and with no good reason, because I'm pretty certain it was universally loved.azgreg wrote:I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
So what does spaghetti entail for you now? If you start telling me about imported ingredients and a sauce made from scratch, then your experience of the 70s wasn't my experience of the 70s.
My best guess would be to come home from the supermarket with:
And some of this:
... to sprinkle on this (if it exists anymore):
... which is melted onto something like this:
At least we didn't eat that Spaghettios slop that my cousins loved. I'd rather go hungry on weekend stays at their house. A man has to have standards.
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
NOW THATS WHAT I'M TALKING ABOUT! (We used ground beef more often than Turkey back in the day)azgreg wrote:More often than not it's:Longhorned wrote:Then maybe you're a living bearer of an otherwise pretty much lost tradition. And it really is mostly lost, which is a total shame, and with no good reason, because I'm pretty certain it was universally loved.azgreg wrote:I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
So what does spaghetti entail for you now? If you start telling me about imported ingredients and a sauce made from scratch, then your experience of the 70s wasn't my experience of the 70s.
With:
And:
Once in a while though we get a wild hair up our ass and make the sauce from scratch.
DAD?!?
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Bah Mi Sando from the corner store
Re: Dinner Tonight
I thawed out some meat sauce and had spaghetti. I always make my own sauce. (although I cheat and use Schilling's spice packets.) Don't really like the stuff in jars.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Fried chicken and waffles. Outstanding.
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Homemade Persian food last night
Greasy spoon Chinese tonight.
Greasy spoon Chinese tonight.
Re: Dinner Tonight
New York Strip from Black Angus.
Re: Dinner Tonight
My sister uses this combination except without turkey, she uses Italian sausage mixed with ground beef. It is quite tasty.azgreg wrote:More often than not it's:Longhorned wrote:Then maybe you're a living bearer of an otherwise pretty much lost tradition. And it really is mostly lost, which is a total shame, and with no good reason, because I'm pretty certain it was universally loved.azgreg wrote:I don't remember anything different from spaghetti as a kid to spaghetti now. It's still one of my favorite dishes.
So what does spaghetti entail for you now? If you start telling me about imported ingredients and a sauce made from scratch, then your experience of the 70s wasn't my experience of the 70s.
With:
And:
Once in a while though we get a wild hair up our ass and make the sauce from scratch.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Grilling baby back ribs tonight. Salad. Baked beans.
Re: Dinner Tonight
I don't always use turkey. Ground beef and sweet Italian sausage is in the rotation.Lando05 wrote:My sister uses this combination except without turkey, she uses Italian sausage mixed with ground beef. It is quite tasty.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Braised lamb shoulder chops in a saucepan of a mirepoix, red wine, stock, tomatoes and curry/garam masala. Some fresh mint on top served over cauliflower rice. Awesome.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Anybody use something like this?
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
tonight is a super simple pasta with asparagus, mushrooms, garlic, lemon and some parmesan and egg yolk to make it creamy.