- Joined
- Jan 1, 2021
I served up some weeknight style al pastor tacos with leftover arugula and it was a great combo.
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I tried a WWI era recipe for Sauerkraut Soup using canned sauerkraut and, while admittedly on the bland side, I rather enjoyed it.
That is the video I got the recipe from and linked to in my post.I believe I watched Max Miller of Tasting History make the same thing now that long ago. His assessment was very similar to yours.
That is the video I got the recipe from and linked to in my post.
One of my favorite go-to recipes is carbonara. It's so easy and fast and makes a delicious dinner.Made cacio e pepe, so tasty and simple, only used 4 ingredients,
Spaghetti, butter, black pepper and parmesan
Do you make it the classic way with egg or do you add cream and other stuff to it?One of my favorite go-to recipes is carbonara. It's so easy and fast and makes a delicious dinner.
Nope, just egg, cheese, garlic and pancetta.Do you make it the classic way with egg or do you add cream and other stuff to it?
Mmmmm hamburger helper
So I made a sandwich today with the remaining chopped liver mixture.I have like 3 little tupperware containers with the mousse, and then a fourth with the remaining unstrained liver mixture that I'll probably make a sandwich with. It's the same as the mousse, just grittier.
I heartily recommend Colman's. It is some no-joke mustard and is great on any deli-style sandwich. I also find that really robust organ meats (like liver or tongue) work best combined with other more "normal" meats on a sandwich, and combine well with strong flavors. For instance, a Limburger and onion sandwich on a strong pumpernickel with something like Colman's or a really strong Russian mustard.It's swiss cheese, pastrami, big heaping spoonfuls of chopped liver, mustard (Colman's mustard, it's a very spicy English mustard) on rye bread, and then I smashed it in a cast iron pan with a burger press thing.
Cream biscuits (easy and they only use all-purpose flour, baking powder, salt, sugar, and of course cream). If you add buttermilk, you can make crème fraîche which can be used for all kinds of wonderful things. Both crème fraîche and slightly whipped cream can be turned into savory sauces by mixing in herbs, shallots, capers, lemon etc. There are a lot of crème fraîche variations for salmon (nice in summer) and horseradish cream sauce is really great for beef. My favorite is a simple one from Cook's Illustrated:I need a solution for this problem going forward. Just like a simple recipe that I can use up excess cream in.