What's cooking? part 4

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Last night I improvised a whole bunch of hearty, Sunday dinner AWESOME.

Crockpot required, approximate cooking time 6 hours on low.

Chicken rub:
Paprika, kosher salt, pepper, lemon pepper

Sauce:
Can of condensed Cream of mushroom soup, 1/2 cup sour cream, 1/2 cup chicken stock, hot dry mustard, generous squirts of Sriracha hot sauce.

1. Rub chicken breasts all over, place in bottom of crock pot.
2. Slice the five remaining mushrooms about to rot in the crisper, put on top of chicken.
3. Mix together sauces, pour in.
4. An hour or so before the end, add frozen cooked new potatoes.
5. Fifteen minutes before the end, add frozen peas, turn to HIGH.
6. Serve with veggies and enjoy!

The broth was delicious. While I was waiting for my boyfriend to get home I totally "buttered" a piece of bread with it. Nom nom.

Finefinemusic, Monday, 23 June 2008 21:00 (eighteen years ago)

I made pesto for the first time on Saturday! It was delicious! I can't believe I didn't try it years ago but I think I used to be nervous about basil (food issues). Does anyone have pesto suggestions etc to refine my next attempt?

Laurel, Monday, 7 July 2008 17:39 (eighteen years ago)

HOT TIP from Montenegro, where I'm not really cooking at all, due to the fact that we're staying with my in-laws: my mother-in-law made chicken liver tonight, and it was excellent, not least because of the unusual yet totally right-on addition of fresh DILL. No joke, it totally works!

G00blar, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 17:09 (eighteen years ago)

speaking of dill -- lemon-dill potato salad, you are a treat.

My dad is picking a 5-gallon bucket of green beans every other day and my mother is forcing me to take some off their hands, so in self-defense I stir-fried a bunch with a ton of garlic and a little soy sauce and sesame oil, to get away from the standard southern method. SO GOOD. Need to go buy more garlic now.

Rock Hardy, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 18:29 (eighteen years ago)

Funny you should say, I am IN LOVE with sesame oil right now. I'm saving $$ by eating Ramen noodles, but with steamed green beans and sliced scallions and sesame oil on everything, it doesn't taste like I'm skimping at all.

Laurel, Tuesday, 8 July 2008 20:08 (eighteen years ago)

omg i want all the green beans!!!!!!!!!! they were like $3.49/lb in my veggie stand the other day :(

tehresa, Friday, 11 July 2008 01:13 (eighteen years ago)

so after a week of fresh (and not to mention extremely affordable) ahi tuna sashimi and marlin ceviche, i am really not happy with the frozen seafood mix from trader joe's i sauteed to throw on salad for dinner. u_u

where in nyc can one find quality fish that is not like $20/lb?

tehresa, Friday, 11 July 2008 01:17 (eighteen years ago)

blue moon at the union square greenmarket or pure vida at the mccarren park market. the gramercy fish market is very nice, but on the pricier side and (i assume) not convenient for you. i used to buy fish in chinatown, but you have to spend some time looking around for a store that you're comfortable with.

lauren, Friday, 11 July 2008 13:52 (eighteen years ago)

i started reading shark's fin and sichuan pepper over the weekend. it's very informative and interesting, although dunlop can get a bit "cheery englishwoman" at times for my taste. a nice selection of recipes are included. what's cooking? tomorrow night, it's going to be fish-fragrant aubergines.

lauren, Monday, 14 July 2008 16:44 (eighteen years ago)

Last night I made arepas (yellow corn) with smoked gouda, shredded chicken (leftover from lunch) and sofrito (leftover from something else I made a few days ago) and man was it good. They were little towers of taste:

sofrito
chicken
gouda
arepa
chicken
gouda
arepa

sauteed green beans on the side

yumz

La Lechera, Monday, 14 July 2008 16:55 (eighteen years ago)

next time i might mix the cheese in with the masarepa and then pan-fry them

La Lechera, Monday, 14 July 2008 16:56 (eighteen years ago)

nommm.

yeah, i need someone to teach me how to shop for and identify good fish before i could do chinatown.

tehresa, Monday, 14 July 2008 17:01 (eighteen years ago)

this reminds me i forgot to take my frozen mahi mahi out to defrost for dinner tonight. damn it.

tehresa, Monday, 14 July 2008 17:01 (eighteen years ago)

i'd recommend checking out the mccarren market this weekend. the fish/seafood that pure vida sell are caught by their boats (same w/ blue moon), so you're getting a very fresh product.

lauren, Monday, 14 July 2008 17:08 (eighteen years ago)

yeah, definitely! i keep meaning to go up there. must make a point of it this weekend.

tehresa, Monday, 14 July 2008 18:09 (eighteen years ago)

Am trying to cook nutritious+delicious food for pregnant wife so have a big pot now bubbling with white beans, smoked ribs (yay montenegro!), onion, carrot, garlic. Will eat with steamed greens w olive oil and lemon. Not the most summery of dishes (it's a million degrees here), but I still think it's gonna be great.

G00blar, Monday, 21 July 2008 12:41 (seventeen years ago)

i'd be astonished if it wasn't, that sounds awesome

today I made potted smoked mackerel with pickled cucumber, I'm fairly pleased with the results but it's too early to tell

Matt, Monday, 21 July 2008 22:26 (seventeen years ago)

did not get to mccarren last wekend bc of beach trip but hopefully this sat it is ON!

tehresa, Wednesday, 23 July 2008 02:37 (seventeen years ago)

matt that combo sounds awesome!

tehresa, Wednesday, 23 July 2008 02:37 (seventeen years ago)

Pregnant so soon?!??!??! Congrats, goob, I missed that one somehow.

Laurel, Wednesday, 23 July 2008 15:49 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah you're telling me! Thanks; we're generally excited, but the excitement is punctuated by huge waves of fear and anxiety and nervous laughter. Oh, and nausea.

G00blar, Wednesday, 23 July 2008 16:17 (seventeen years ago)

I'm loaded down with cherry tomatoes, mostly yellow ones -- if I can see my way through these work deadlines, I'm going to pickle a bunch of them. Don't see why it wouldn't work -- but I wonder if I should process the jars after I seal them or not. I want the tomatoes to retain their shape, so as little cooking as I can get away with will be good.

Rock Hardy, Saturday, 26 July 2008 17:12 (seventeen years ago)

i bought huge bunches of radishes and cilantro at the greenmarket. i have some avocados for another attempt at guac for a party tonight and want radishes to be one of the dipping utensils. also string beans. and cucumbers (the latter two not from greenmarket).

i also got some nice fresh blueberries that i haven't figured out what i will do with yet.

tehresa, Saturday, 26 July 2008 17:17 (seventeen years ago)

Blueberry yoghurt cake om nom nom, faling that just toss them with a little shredded mint and a glob of creme fraiche

and thanks, the cucumber was possibly too acid a cure cos there was a lot of pepper in with the mackerel, but I started another batch today with some dill and thyme which I have high hopes of

Matt, Saturday, 26 July 2008 18:43 (seventeen years ago)

last night i had some fresh blueberries with cucumber slices. yummy combo! wish i'd had mint and yogurt to go with.

tehresa, Monday, 28 July 2008 19:53 (seventeen years ago)

I was making gazpacho this morning with the overload of tomatoes we have -- using a recipe that called for putting the blended veggies & bread through a fine strainer. That left me with a bowl full of tomato/cucumber/garlic/bread solids, so I thought I'd see if I could do anything with it.

Sauteed some chopped onion and more garlic in a lot of olive oil, added a big double spoonful of the tomato stuff, a spoonful of chili paste, a bit of sugar, some lime juice and a little water, then quickly cooked some big shrimps in the sauce, and threw in some leftover cooked noodles at the end and tossed it all together. I was worried that the cucumber would be a weird element in it, but it tasted great. The dissolved bread solids gave the sauce a nice thick stick-to-the-noodle texture.

Rock Hardy, Sunday, 3 August 2008 18:24 (seventeen years ago)

ok I didn't write this down as usual because I'm an inveterate eyeballer/finger-taster but DAAAAMN I'm a genius tonight

seared crusted tuna!:
big hunka tuna bright pink and thawed
lotsa black pepper
lotsa parsley flakes
lotsa ground macadamia nuts with some herbs in it from whole foods
little sea salt
little paprika

rub all over the tuna and sear in buttered pan on low heat like five minutes a side, transfer to plate, slice and serve

WITH AMAZING SAUCE!:

sriracha and/or sweet chili garlic sauce
mango chutney
plain ol' white vinegar
sesame oil

sorry I got no proportions I was just basically emptying a few bottles and watching the pretty colors

SO GOOD

El Tomboto, Monday, 4 August 2008 00:49 (seventeen years ago)

sounds zingy (in the good sense not the idiot lol sense)

we had a stall at a festival this weekend just gone and were knocking out belly pork butties with onion relish which went down a storm

take one pork belly, bone out the ribs and reserve for chef treats, score the skin incredibly heavily, cuts no more than 1cm apart, salt the skin more than seems necessary and leave for half an hour, brush excess salt off, sprinkle crushed coriander seed and mustard seed, glug olive oil all over and put in a stupidly hot oven until you've got good crackling, then turn the oven down and give it a bit more until it's cooked out (if you don't get the requisite crispiness from the oven portion it out and crisp it up under the grill)

onion relish: onions sweated down with ww vinegar, healthy slosh of balsamic, horseradish, mustard powder, paprika, chilli (I use a puree of roasted birdseye at work but dried flakes'll be fine), low heat, long time until it's kind of like jam

combine two between two slices of bread, buy a beer, watch some endearingly slapdash bands

Matt, Tuesday, 5 August 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

Tonight I am making:
-Mussels steamed in coconut milk curry broth
-nasu shigiyaku (miso eggplant)
-sea scallops w/ salad greens (don't know what dressing to make so please give me ideas!)

bell_labs, Sunday, 10 August 2008 00:55 (seventeen years ago)

Oh everything from the farmers market! Would it be weird if I put cippolini onions in the curry broth?

bell_labs, Sunday, 10 August 2008 00:57 (seventeen years ago)

I'd go for some kind of fresh ginger/garlic/lime dressing for the salad w/ scallops. Don't know about cippolini onions being weird in curry, but sure sounds tasty.

Jaq, Sunday, 10 August 2008 01:39 (seventeen years ago)

Matt's pork belly sandwich sounds amazing.

Last night - spicy tofu and edamame beans. Hotter than hell in a good way (tongue tingled for about half an hour afterwards), and the tofu tasted good even to this confirmed carnivore.

hejira, Monday, 11 August 2008 08:32 (seventeen years ago)

the cippolini onions were delicious in the curry broth! perfect for scooping up in the outer scallop shell. the broth was soooooo good and i was very happy to have bread to dip in it.

the only thing that didn't come out so well were the eggplants, i need to revisit that recipe.

bell_labs, Monday, 11 August 2008 14:20 (seventeen years ago)

Cooked the inaugural pan of bacon in the new (to me) kitchen this morning! We have been eating out so much due to working/moving/traveling exhaustion/laziness. But I can tell this is going to be a very happy place to cook.

Jaq, Monday, 11 August 2008 14:54 (seventeen years ago)

yay!

last night we were going to make some soup out of the leftover broth, but got full on bruschetta with tomato, shallots and salami

bell_labs, Monday, 11 August 2008 14:56 (seventeen years ago)

i've been making this frittata from farmer's market vegetables at breakfast and can't stop thinking about it all day!

2 eggs + a blop of milk
1 small tomato
1/3 of a bell pepper, chopped up small
1 green onion stalk
small handful cilantro
smoked paprika
salt + pepper

nom nom nom nom

harbl, Monday, 11 August 2008 15:02 (seventeen years ago)

Has it been another year already?

Are we really up to year five?

Casuistry, Monday, 18 August 2008 05:49 (seventeen years ago)

eleven months pass...

A sort-of quiche/frittata thing for dinner tonight: layer of thinly sliced yukon gold potatoes started in a hot skillet, then a few handfuls of chopped up broccoli tossed on top. 5 well-beaten eggs with a 1/2 cup of milk, 1/2 cup of water, and 1/3 cup of flour beaten in, as well as a pinch of salt. Then some grated emmenthaler and Beecher's flagship mixed in and the batter poured over the potato and broccoli in the skillet. A quick grind of black pepper and the whole thing popped into a 325 oven for 1/2 hour. Puffed up nicely and very tasty.

JAQ this sounds amazing (i was searching for quiche recipes)but i need some advice on how to adapt it. i hardly ever 'cook' (i mean, i make salads/sandwiches and i heat things, but that's really about it) but i have a craving for quiche.

we have: eggs, red onion, broccoli, little yellow potatoes, cheddar cheese, provolone, swiss cheese, grilled chicken, spinach, marinated red capsicum, soy milk, no skillet and no appropriate oven dish. i was thinking i could try making a small version of this in the microwave (sacrilege!) and fry the potatoes first. i don't really have any other basic pantry items like flour, tho. shall i just kind of attempt to slap this together and hope for the best?

where we turn sweet dreams into remarkable realities (just1n3), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:08 (sixteen years ago)

i got a bunch of chard and multicolored potatoes (purple flesh! red flesh! wow!) and i think this week i will attempt some sort of squash/potato/chard bake or tart. maybe a good chance to experiment chickpea flour or something non-wheat in baking (though i have some wheat flour i should probably use up?).

tehresa, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:13 (sixteen years ago)

I think that could work pretty well as long as you didn't try to cook one that was more than maybe 3 eggs worth. If it was too big, the edges would get all rubbery before the center was really cooked. I'd probably chop all the things you want to use for the filling fairly small too, and mix in with the eggs before pouring over the potato base, again so it cooks more evenly. And maybe bring the mixture closer to room temp before nuking (instead of having it all ice cold from the fridge). Another thing to try is to cook for 30-45 second bursts, then let it sit for 15-30 seconds for the temp to even out, then nuke again - again just to not overcook the eggs.

(xpost!)

Jaq, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:18 (sixteen years ago)

Also just1n3 - you don't need to add the flour. It makes it more yorkshire pudding-like rather than quiche like.

Jaq, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:20 (sixteen years ago)

if i make a large quiche tonight, how long will it keep for it? we don't have a medium-size baking dish, just a big sort of roasting pan, so i'm thinking about making a broad, think quiche frittata type of thing.

i'm a little worried about using soy milk - i think it might be way too sweet? might just leave it out all together.

where we turn sweet dreams into remarkable realities (just1n3), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:20 (sixteen years ago)

Quiche will keep 3 or 4 days in the fridge, or wrap individual slices up airtight after it's cooled to room temp and freeze - they'll keep for a few months frozen and you can nuke as needed.

Jaq, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:29 (sixteen years ago)

ok i'm gonna DO THIS! this could solve my lunch worries for the next week, at least.

where we turn sweet dreams into remarkable realities (just1n3), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:30 (sixteen years ago)

oven temp?

if i heavily grease the roasting pan, will that prevent sticking?

where we turn sweet dreams into remarkable realities (just1n3), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:34 (sixteen years ago)

making baked ziti for the first time. with sundried tomato chicken sausages and spinach.

& they talked about "fucking a behive", literally, 4 times (Whitey on the Moon), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:40 (sixteen years ago)

results to follow.

& they talked about "fucking a behive", literally, 4 times (Whitey on the Moon), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:40 (sixteen years ago)

Hmm - thought I posted about skipping the soy milk and just using eggs plus a little water and veg oil, don't know where that went to. Oven temp at 325 F, take it out when the center looks just barely set, then let the residual heat finish baking the center for 10 minutes before you cut it.

grease or oil the bottom of the pan before you layer the potatoes in for sure.

Whitey on the Moon, that sounds delicious.

Jaq, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:41 (sixteen years ago)

I'm simmering fennel and oregano sausages in red wine, crushed plum tomatoes, sweated Walla Walla sweet onions and garlic right now. For dinner tonight over pasta. I feel kind of bad for italian food losing to mexican in the poll - it should have been a tie.

Jaq, Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:44 (sixteen years ago)

when can i come over

ovum if you got 'em (gbx), Sunday, 16 August 2009 23:55 (sixteen years ago)


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