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?
We made pizza with it too. Ended up with about 10 pint containers of it in the freezer. Whenever I go back to the office I'm going to bring a gift for my closest coworkers. Pint of pasta sauce, 2-3 servings of homemade ricotta agnolotti (homemade ricotta too), a boule of my wife's bread, and some herb butter.
Scums's tomato sauce from Kenji
Bobby flay homemade pizza dough.
Margherita Pizza with garden cut basil
A grower of Sierra Nevada Porter, picked up from the brewery in Chico yesterday.
I've been meaning to buy his book for a while, I know it would just speak to me and how I think about cooking.
For instance, one of the reasons I love cooking with the kids, it is gives me a change to teach them science in a way that is accessible and yummy for them.
When my 5yo can tell her class about "where steam comes from" and states of change for water, I'd like to think I am doing something right.
Yea absolutely, that's great. He takes the time to explain the science sometimes in his videos too and how he relates stuff to his 4 year old. Kenji rules.
Rigatoni with amatricia sauce made with American bacon. I think the key when using bacon instead of guanciale or pancetta is too use entirely too much of it, with the rendered fat used for some other purpose. And a touch of sugar in the sauce to balance the smokiness.
In the middle of a 12 hour work day but I grilled up some corn and chicken real quick and sliced them up and combined with some black beans, red onion, tomato, cheddar, and ranch mixed with chipotle Cholula for an amazing iceberg salad.
Chicken, zucchini, and red peppers in a pesto cream sauce over spaghetti.
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?
The best kind. I'm for trying the most authentic food possible and getting the real cultural experience but theres still nothing better than sloppy American strip mall restaurant Chinese food.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
The best kind. I'm for trying the most authentic food possible and getting the real cultural experience but theres still nothing better than sloppy American strip mall restaurant Chinese food.
That’s what I was craving after work! You nailed the description
American Chinese is fully legit, though. My all-time favorite is House of Lee in Pacific Palisades. I once burst into spontaneous tears upon leaving the restaurant, when I was suddenly struck by the thought that, hypothetically, it might not always be there. Four years later it was gone. The next generation had bigger ambitions than running a family restaurant.
Cheeseburgers. This is probably the first time I've made a burger since about 1985. Takes about 5 minutes for sheer perfection. I used Dave's hamburger buns, and that made all the difference. Also sliced some of those expensive Sonoma dill pickles. And Monterrey Jack.
Also, potato chips, watermelon, and mango.
I wonder why I've been farming out burgers to others all these years.
Longhorned wrote:Cheeseburgers. This is probably the first time I've made a burger since about 1985. Takes about 5 minutes for sheer perfection. I used Dave's hamburger buns, and that made all the difference. Also sliced some of those expensive Sonoma dill pickles. And Monterrey Jack.
Also, potato chips, watermelon, and mango.
I wonder why I've been farming out burgers to others all these years.
What's the preparation? Grilled? Smashed? Fresh ground beef?
Grilled salmon, ratatouille, couscous, and dinner rolls.
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 wrote:Cheeseburgers. This is probably the first time I've made a burger since about 1985. Takes about 5 minutes for sheer perfection. I used Dave's hamburger buns, and that made all the difference. Also sliced some of those expensive Sonoma dill pickles. And Monterrey Jack.
Also, potato chips, watermelon, and mango.
I wonder why I've been farming out burgers to others all these years.
What's the preparation? Grilled? Smashed? Fresh ground beef?
Smashed. I didn't even look at Kenji's instructions. Might have been better if I did, but I got the meat chips around the edges and the outside was perfectly crisp.
I've been dying to make smash burgers but we so rarely eat beef and searing anything in my cast iron or all clad is a nightmare. Reason being is I've been living in a shitty rental for 6 years paying off debt and saving money because I'm a fucked millennial. This shitty rental has a trash electric stove and no hood or ventilation. So smashing burgers or searing steaks means a commitment to a very beefy smelling house for days. Especially in the summer.
scumdevils86 wrote:I've been dying to make smash burgers but we so rarely eat beef and searing anything in my cast iron or all clad is a nightmare. Reason being is I've been living in a shitty rental for 6 years paying off debt and saving money because I'm a fucked millennial. This shitty rental has a trash electric stove and no hood or ventilation. So smashing burgers or searing steaks means a commitment to a very beefy smelling house for days. Especially in the summer.
Yeah, my last house didn't have a working vent hood. A solution would be a gas grill, but I didn't have one of those either. So I just lit up the Webber charcoal grill. It made me realize that grilling over charcoal is great for lots of stuff but it can't replace searing on a stovetop. The lingering smell and dealing with the smoke alarm....
Grocery store spinach salad, poblano pepper and cheese in tortilla, roasted unsalted peanuts, apple and cheese, Zinfandel. Oh, and Emergen-C and a ton of water.
“Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition …There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”
scumdevils86 wrote:I've been dying to make smash burgers but we so rarely eat beef and searing anything in my cast iron or all clad is a nightmare. Reason being is I've been living in a shitty rental for 6 years paying off debt and saving money because I'm a fucked millennial. This shitty rental has a trash electric stove and no hood or ventilation. So smashing burgers or searing steaks means a commitment to a very beefy smelling house for days. Especially in the summer.
Yeah, my last house didn't have a working vent hood. A solution would be a gas grill, but I didn't have one of those either. So I just lit up the Webber charcoal grill. It made me realize that grilling over charcoal is great for lots of stuff but it can't replace searing on a stovetop. The lingering smell and dealing with the smoke alarm....
See I need a charcoal kettle grill. I have a Weber gas grill but I feel like I just can't get enough intensely concentrated heat. I'm holding off buying any new toys before we buy a house (charcoal grill, weather station, pizza oven, more knives, outdoor gas wok setup for stir fries...). Put a grate over a pile of coals in a chimney starter and you can get up to 900 degrees according to Kenji and Adam Savage.
Did a picnic dinner with the girls outside. Now they're in bed. Relaxing with the wife, a bonfire, whisky, a Davidoff and trashy reality TV on the projector. I've had worse nights.
Longhorned wrote:Cheeseburgers. This is probably the first time I've made a burger since about 1985. Takes about 5 minutes for sheer perfection. I used Dave's hamburger buns, and that made all the difference. Also sliced some of those expensive Sonoma dill pickles. And Monterrey Jack.
Also, potato chips, watermelon, and mango.
I wonder why I've been farming out burgers to others all these years.
Had almost the same dinner, except w/ Beyond Burgers Kosher dills.
I'm going to go ahead and recommend the Dave's hamburger buns.
Breakfast sandwiches for dinner:
I buttered the inner faces and toasted them in the pan, added a single light smear of raspberry jam, then a layer of bacon, two medium-well fried eggs, and Monterrey Jack cheese.
I think my wife thought it was the best thing I've ever made.
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?
This is the first time I've ever made it from the prepared package like they do in Japan, instead of from a homemade roux. And it's the first time I've every made it in the Instant Pot. And I'm experimenting because I disagree with this Japanese cook's recipe on principle:
She has you cook deboned chicken pieces in stock. I think it would make more sense to cook bone-in thighs in water so it makes its own stock while it cooks. But that changes the water and the quantities. So this could be pure fail.
Last edited by Longhorned on Wed May 27, 2020 7:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.