• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

What did I cook this weekend.....

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I'm thinking that, since the dietician put me on this diabetic maintenance diet, I'd make something like your dishes? Some parts of them are different, but I've experimented with a lot of weird combos in my time. Yours look compelling at this point. I'm also going to change the veggie side dish for the pesto crusted salmon, adding my take on bauernfruhstuck (German " farmer's breakfast") as the side dish. Might use more of the carbs in the dish to break down the total amount of proteins. Bauernfruhstuck uses eggs scrambled with the sauted veggies. Here's a more original recipe for it, but I'm going to add some other things I can get...http://www.kitchenproject.com/german/recipes/Breakfast/Bauernfrustuck/index.htm


Wow that's fusion cooking to the max! I love trying new flavour combinations but I'd worry that this would overpower the salmon. It's got loads of fresh curry leaves and at least a tablespoon of hot kashmeri chilli powder in the spice blend. Anything subtle wouldn't stand a chance on that plate. A tandoori tikka baked trout type recipe is about as hot as I'd normally go against a flavour like salmon.

Let us know how it goes if you try it though.
 
I have been craving a Cuban sandwich and have not fulfilled that need so tonight I split and pounded a couple of tenderloins, rubbed with garlic and mustard, added ham,Swiss,dill pickles
Rolled and tied, seasoned with cumin
Updates to come.


ISO. Looks great
 
Thanks. Made a breakfast barm with some of it right after. Black pudding, bacon, chipolata sausage and a big fried egg with brown sauce . View attachment 341992

But that was hours ago. Chettinad chicken in progress. Pics to follow.


You totally lost me with black pudding. I have been told there's good and bad, and I have tried many, but I just don't like it. Spent a lot of time in the UK, but don't like black pudding, and like pork'n'beans but just leave them and the black pudding off a full English.
 
You totally lost me with black pudding. I have been told there's good and bad, and I have tried many, but I just don't like it. Spent a lot of time in the UK, but don't like black pudding, and like pork'n'beans but just leave them and the black pudding off a full English.


Yeah it's pretty divisive stuff. I don't know anyone who thinks it's "just OK" they're either die hard fans of it or look at you as if you just suggested eating a baby when offered it.
 
Final picture of the poblano chicken, after baking it for a bit to rewarm it and melt the cheese the rest of the way. I did not get any pictures of it served on tortillas, but this is really an awesome dish :)

Poblano Chicken.jpg
 
Finally made decent biscuits and gravy. I've never been able to get the biscuits just the way I like them. Finally had a hint that old Baking Powder may be the cause. I found out our BP is years old. :(

Bought some new, tried a recipe and they fluffed up so much they were tipping over! Yesterday morning I made a second batch and rolled them thinner and used Buttermilk that I had to use up. I had to add more buttermilk to get the dough to be not too dry, but the biscuits were picture perfect and fluffy with a lightly crisp golden outside.

Fried up some bacon and added ground sausage to the pan (after draining some of the excess bacon grease. Added some flour, red pepper flakes, and some fresh ground black pepper when it was cooked through and let the bottom of the pan get brown. Added milk to de-glaze the pan and stirred and added milk until I got the consistency I wanted. Served with fried egg on top.
 
Finally made decent biscuits and gravy. I've never been able to get the biscuits just the way I like them. Finally had a hint that old Baking Powder may be the cause. I found out our BP is years old. :(

Bought some new, tried a recipe and they fluffed up so much they were tipping over! Yesterday morning I made a second batch and rolled them thinner and used Buttermilk that I had to use up. I had to add more buttermilk to get the dough to be not too dry, but the biscuits were picture perfect and fluffy with a lightly crisp golden outside.

Fried up some bacon and added ground sausage to the pan (after draining some of the excess bacon grease. Added some flour, red pepper flakes, and some fresh ground black pepper when it was cooked through and let the bottom of the pan get brown. Added milk to de-glaze the pan and stirred and added milk until I got the consistency I wanted. Served with fried egg on top.

I've never been able to make good biscuits. Probably the only thing I've ever had trouble cooking lol that sounds absolutely delicious though. I know where I'm going for breakfast from now on xP
 
Final picture of the poblano chicken, after baking it for a bit to rewarm it and melt the cheese the rest of the way. I did not get any pictures of it served on tortillas, but this is really an awesome dish :)

That looks delicious, Travis!

Monterey Jack cheese actually originated right here in Monterey, CA.

From Wikipedia:

In its earliest form, Monterey Jack was made by the Mexican Franciscan friars of Monterey, California, during the 19th century. Californian businessman David Jack sold the cheese commercially. He produced a mild, white cheese, which came to be known as "Jack's Cheese", and eventually "Monterey Jack".

It's great stuff, isn't it? I like the dry aged version too!
 
I've never been able to make good biscuits. Probably the only thing I've ever had trouble cooking lol that sounds absolutely delicious though. I know where I'm going for breakfast from now on xP

I had biscuits and gravy for breakfast and lunch today. :D

My recipe came right out of Betty Crocker cookbook. Very simply if you can manage to not cut the butter and flour too much. Stop before you think you got it all mixed together, use COLD milk (I used some old buttermilk), and don't handle too much.

Off the top of my head I think the recipe was:

2 C. Flour
2 tsp. Baking Powder
1 tsp. Salt
2 Tbsp Sugar
1/2 C. Butter (or shortening, but I used butter)

Stir dry ingredients until mixed. Cut in butter just until you get a course crumb texture

Add 2/3 C. COLD milk and mix together just until mixture isn't dry.

Gently roll out to 1/4" thickness, then fold back on itself and cut with a round biscuit cutter.

Bake on greased sheet at 450F for 8-10 minutes (Until the top is golden brown).
 
I cooked my first home cured country ham this weekend. This one was a wild boar ham I posted a picture of hanging a few months ago. It was good but I think could have used a couple more months curing. I have 2 more in the works as well as a prosciutto going in the basement.

Looks delicious, ISO!
 
Back
Top