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Author Topic: Food Thread: Kitchen Chemistry  (Read 579411 times)

timferius

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1140 on: April 24, 2014, 10:22:28 am »

You know what bugs me? Just because of the neighbours to the south, half of the recipes I find use imperial measurements, and I constantly have to convert amounts because all our food labels use metric. Same with cooking temperatures.
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Sheb

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1141 on: April 24, 2014, 10:27:32 am »

Actually, at 400°C, you're still below the fire point of some oils. You could cook with them, if you don't mind the toxic by-products, smoke and occasional small flame.
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Sappho

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1142 on: April 24, 2014, 10:44:30 am »

I would imagine any supermarket would carry all of those things. They're pretty normal, standard veggies. Good luck!

#thirdworldproblems

I actually don't know what to blame (i.e. I'm not actually in an entirely third world country), but I've never seen zucchini or eggplant for sale fresh. It sucks.

Ah, sorry. I tend to assume that most of the posters on here are living in the USA, even though I don't myself. Actually, the supermarkets here don't tend to carry much of those vegetables fresh, either, but there are really nice Vietnamese markets all over the place that usually have just about everything. So that's lucky! Anyway, for making pasta sauce, you can pretty much use any veggies you want, or meat if you're into that. The only rules, really, are to put the stuff in the oil that takes the longest to cook first, then add the other things in order of how much time they need in the oil. Anything that will soak up oil goes last, regardless of how long it takes to cook. Then add chopped tomatoes or canned tomatoes or whatever you can get along with whatever spices you want to use, bring it to a boil, and simmer it as long as you can, the bare minimum being the time it takes for everything to be cooked. And ta-da! Pasta sauce!

Sheb

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1143 on: April 24, 2014, 10:58:26 am »

I always love how available vietnamese food is in the Czech Republic. Huzzay for Communism!
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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1144 on: April 24, 2014, 11:09:55 am »

I always love how available vietnamese food is in the Czech Republic. Huzzay for Communism!


...wat?
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Sheb

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1145 on: April 24, 2014, 11:32:54 am »

From what my stepmom told me, large number of Vietnamese came to Czechoslovakia in communist time in the name of "Friendship of the people".

Also, I just made a stir-fried rice for my dinner with whatever vegetables I had laying around (zucchini, onions, pickled red cabbage and celeriac). Halfway through, I realized we had run out of soy sauce, so I used teriyaki sauce instead. The result is surprisingly tasty, although the celeriac's taste is a bit too strong and off-flavor. I'm glad I did like a kilo of the stuff.
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Sappho

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1146 on: April 24, 2014, 11:50:14 am »

Yup. They had a worker exchange program. If you go to Vietnam, apparently a surprising number of people there can speak Czech. There are loads of Vietnamese immigrants here, and mostly they run various shops with their families. There are two really nice little markets near me with high-quality produce and all kinds of authentic Vietnamese foods at good prices. There are also some good knockoff shops with loads of cheap crap. I buy socks and such at them. : )

Speaking of Asian food, does anyone have a decent vegetarian Kimchi recipe?

Blargityblarg

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1147 on: April 24, 2014, 11:52:24 am »

Speaking of Asian food, does anyone have a decent vegetarian Kimchi recipe?

Is there such a thing as non-vegetarian kimchi?
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Bauglir

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1148 on: April 24, 2014, 12:10:34 pm »

Speaking of Asian food, does anyone have a decent vegetarian Kimchi recipe?

Is there such a thing as non-vegetarian kimchi?
I'm certain there's a recipe for bacon kimchi out there, somewhere.
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Sappho

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1149 on: April 24, 2014, 12:17:37 pm »

Kimchi very often has seafood in it. Depends on the recipe.

scrdest

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1150 on: April 24, 2014, 12:48:48 pm »

From what my stepmom told me, large number of Vietnamese came to Czechoslovakia in communist time in the name of "Friendship of the people".

Also, I just made a stir-fried rice for my dinner with whatever vegetables I had laying around (zucchini, onions, pickled red cabbage and celeriac). Halfway through, I realized we had run out of soy sauce, so I used teriyaki sauce instead. The result is surprisingly tasty, although the celeriac's taste is a bit too strong and off-flavor. I'm glad I did like a kilo of the stuff.

Oh. I wondered for a while, because most of the Asians here are Vietnamese.
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Sheb

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1151 on: April 24, 2014, 12:50:03 pm »

Where are you from?
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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1152 on: April 24, 2014, 01:07:51 pm »

Where are you from?

Poland. Same deal, I suppose.
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DreamThorn

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1153 on: April 25, 2014, 04:36:31 am »

Since tomatoes, potatoes, sugar, chocolate and bananas are from the new world and spices, rice, coffee and tea come from the far east, and salt used to be very expensive, I usually thought that medieval European food must have been quite bland.

But then I thought about it: Wheat, cauliflower, carrots, meat, herbs, dairy, fruit...

And suddenly I realised that vinegar, olive oil, garlic and onions come from Europe.

I really shouldn't have forgotten my lunch at home today. :)
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scrdest

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Re: Food Thread: Fry Me a River
« Reply #1154 on: April 25, 2014, 12:17:28 pm »

Since tomatoes, potatoes, sugar, chocolate and bananas are from the new world and spices, rice, coffee and tea come from the far east, and salt used to be very expensive, I usually thought that medieval European food must have been quite bland.

But then I thought about it: Wheat, cauliflower, carrots, meat, herbs, dairy, fruit...

And suddenly I realised that vinegar, olive oil, garlic and onions come from Europe.

I really shouldn't have forgotten my lunch at home today. :)

Also it's not like medieval Europe was cut off from trade with the Far East. Spices were a thing, but they were expensive.
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