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What did I cook this weekend.....

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Ants Climbing on a Tree

Szechuan-style comfort food...mung bean noodles (tree branches), ground pork (ants), scallions (tree leaves), with a spicy, salty, slightly sweet sauce.

IMG_20200527_185529_933.jpg
 
I have ground pork, I have noodles (not mung bean though)...tell me about that sauce @AZ_IPA

Roughly (for 8oz dried noodles and 1lb ground pork)....

2.5-3 c. Chicken stock
1.5 T doubanjiang (I used Gochujang)
1 T. Light soy
2 tsp dark soy
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp. Shaoxing
1/2 tsp. Black vinegar
A bit of powdered ginger and garlic (fresh would be better)

If you use a noodle other than mung bean, decrease the sauce a bit, as mung bean noodles really soak up sauce!
 
Roughly (for 8oz dried noodles and 1lb ground pork)....

2.5-3 c. Chicken stock
1.5 T doubanjiang (I used Gochujang)
1 T. Light soy
2 tsp dark soy
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp. Shaoxing
1/2 tsp. Black vinegar
A bit of powdered ginger and garlic (fresh would be better)

If you use a noodle other than mung bean, decrease the sauce a bit, as mung bean noodles really soak up sauce!
There is a fortune to be made on doubanjiang... $1 on Alibaba, $15 on Amazon!
 
Roughly (for 8oz dried noodles and 1lb ground pork)....

2.5-3 c. Chicken stock
1.5 T doubanjiang (I used Gochujang)
1 T. Light soy
2 tsp dark soy
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp. Shaoxing
1/2 tsp. Black vinegar
A bit of powdered ginger and garlic (fresh would be better)

If you use a noodle other than mung bean, decrease the sauce a bit, as mung bean noodles really soak up sauce!

Well, I have chicken stock, soy, and sugar ... lol, that's about it.
 
I fill the smoker up with ribs when I do them then vac seal half slabs. Same technique to reheat. All the flavor with none of the less or effort.

Sous vide sucks for almost everything.
I strongly disagree. I enjoy everything I have sous vide. A medium rare stake from edge to edge, prime rib you can literally cut with a fork, curry chicken with the curry flavor deep in the chicken. Start it early and go about your day with no worry about over cooking. It's fool proof.
 
It's fool proof.

And flavorless for steak. Sure its edge to edge medium rare, but the fat isn't rendered and there's no browning. Sure you can add those things but then its not edge to edge medium rare anymore.

I can see how a curry chicken would work just fine. It's a wet sauce with tons of spices. Browning flavor isn't important. Might give that a try actually. Normally i'd just cook that on the stove top since it's 1 pot and 20 minutes.
 
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You fried your own shells. In my opinion, that puts them over the top. I don't make corn or flour tortillas from scratch but I do fry the raw corn tortillas or flour tortillas. So easy and well worth it but nobody I know likes to do it.
 
These are a couple of the Waygu burgers cooked MR. My wife procured 24# of high quality meat. Now we need a dedicated freezer. I believe she was built for the Zombie Apocalypse. The pineapple is for the chicken salad. None of the fun stuff for the burgers--buns, etc. since I'm watching the carbs.

bugers.jpg
 
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You fried your own shells. In my opinion, that puts them over the top. I don't make corn or flour tortillas from scratch but I do fry the raw corn tortillas or flour tortillas. So easy and well worth it but nobody I know likes to do it.

Tortillas are easy to make, but they're hard to make thin.
 
[

You fried your own shells. In my opinion, that puts them over the top. I don't make corn or flour tortillas from scratch but I do fry the raw corn tortillas or flour tortillas. So easy and well worth it but nobody I know likes to do it.
Indeed I did buy fresh corn tortillas and I fried them right before dinner.
 
Tortillas are easy to make, but they're hard to make thin.
I hear you. I haven't tried it. I've watched the PBS folks do well with it. I've found there are one or two places that make the raw ones and they are very good. In Detroit, we have Mexican Village where serious skill is already in place.
I have a stable datum: if I can't make something significantly better than I can buy, I'll buy it.
When I make fried tortilla chips, there's a bit of a push and shove as to who gets to take home the remaining bag or three of chips.
What do you think the secret is to make them properly thin?
 
Tortillas are easy to make, but they're hard to make thin.

I make them all the time (made a bunch of them for enchiladas (chicken and beef, verde) this weekend. To make thin, just add more water. Yes, they are super easy to make. Here's the recipe: corn masa, water. :) I use a tortilla press lined with parchment paper. (I made fairly thick ones for the enchiladas here).

1590805211888.png
 
I make them all the time (made a bunch of them for enchiladas (chicken and beef, verde) this weekend. To make thin, just add more water. Yes, they are super easy to make. Here's the recipe: corn masa, water. :) I use a tortilla press lined with parchment paper. (I made fairly thick ones for the enchiladas here).

View attachment 682729

Yah, but I find that they stick more the thinner they get. Double pressing works for me...press, flip, and press again.
 
Maybe try parchment paper. I guess it's like wax, but not sure (I've always used parchment).
Parchment is paper impregnated with silicone, so it doesn't really exhibit its nonstick, instant release properties until it's up to oven temperature, but then stays separated from the food and doesn't melt and burn once there. (Really waxed is just good for wrapping stuff cold, and if your Mom used it putting a sandwich in your Adam-12 lunchbox, she was the last one to think it was the best choice for that. ;) )
 
Parchment is paper impregnated with silicone, so it doesn't really exhibit its nonstick, instant release properties until it's up to oven temperature, but then stays separated from the food and doesn't melt and burn once there. (Really waxed is just good for wrapping stuff cold, and if your Mom used it putting a sandwich in your Adam-12 lunchbox, she was the last one to think it was the best choice for that. ;) )

Haha, I grew up in Parchment Michigan. Grandpa was a lifetime employee of the paper company there (KVP). Believe me, it was the only paper of its type in the house.
 
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