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Author Topic: Food for well... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week:IT SPEAKs ENGLISH!  (Read 3249 times)

Tellemurius

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someone suggested to me that i should start up a thread where we can share recipes together. I find it a great idea to collect recipes from each different countries to experience some international foods.

this is the current recipe rhetoric:
---------------------------------------
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

make sure the food is prepared fresh, not out of some box.
I will post all of your awesome recipes up here for people to find them easier.


Asian
--------
by:Vector (should be damn oblivious)

by: Rysith

Spoiler: chicken&rice (click to show/hide)
by:LoSboccacc

by:LoSboccacc

Spoiler: Sushi (click to show/hide)
By: Tellemurius

by:LoSboccacc

Spoiler: low-grade peanut sauce (click to show/hide)
by: Sowelu

« Last Edit: January 17, 2011, 11:19:43 am by Tellemurius »
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Tellemurius

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #1 on: January 11, 2011, 03:02:47 pm »

im posting sushi, and no its not easy to make.

Rysith

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #2 on: January 11, 2011, 10:15:03 pm »

Does it have to actually be Japanese, or can it just be delicious and similar to Japanese?
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Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #3 on: January 11, 2011, 11:15:57 pm »

Eh.

Vector's Breakfast What-the-hell-is-this

(from Vector)

Ingredients:
Egg
Handful or two nuts (almonds, cashews, pistachios, pine nuts, or peanuts preferred.  Skip 'em if you don't have 'em)
Half an onion
Oil (I use olive.  Use whatever you have.  Butter is fine)
Carrot (if you have any)
Leftover rice (if you have any)
Peas/cabbage/bell pepper/whatever (if you have any.  "Whatever" does not include radish, beets, or cucumber.  That would just be gross)
Soy sauce (or skip it)

Procedure:
1. Heat up pan.  Put in oil.
2. Cut up carrot into little pieces and throw into pan.  Turn over occasionally.  Don't worry if they turn a little bit black.
3. Cut up onion into little pieces and throw into pan.  Keep turning.  If you've got a lot of other ingredients, throw in the whole onion.
4. When onions are yellowish, crack an egg or two in there depending on how much other ingredients you've shoved in.  You might want to add more oil first.  Just kind of stir everything around.
5. Put in your extra vegetables if you have them now.  You should've sliced them fairly fine.
6. Rice time!  Toss it in.  If you have rice, throw in a little soy sauce when you're doing this.  Otherwise, you should pour it over later.
7. While that's cooking, chop the nuts up fine.
8. Once it looks like food, turn off the pan.
9. Pour food into bowl.  Add nuts and a little soy sauce (if you didn't put it in earlier) and stir it around.
10. Nom.

Cook time: 10-20 minutes, and you can easily wash all of yesterday's dishes, get your tea ready, and start pot of rice while you're cooking it.
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Tellemurius

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #4 on: January 11, 2011, 11:25:02 pm »

Does it have to actually be Japanese, or can it just be delicious and similar to Japanese?
fine i'll just change it to asian and Vector that sounds good but in order to qualify you need to add the soy sauce.

Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #5 on: January 11, 2011, 11:29:38 pm »

Does it have to actually be Japanese, or can it just be delicious and similar to Japanese?
fine i'll just change it to asian and Vector that sounds good but in order to qualify you need to add the soy sauce.

You know, it'd probably work better if this were just a recipe thread, so that when folks have recipes they can add them (rather than needing to get to the theme week).

But in any case, it's basically fried rice if you add all the ingredients in, and a normal stirfry otherwise.
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Tellemurius

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Japanese
« Reply #6 on: January 11, 2011, 11:34:21 pm »

Does it have to actually be Japanese, or can it just be delicious and similar to Japanese?
fine i'll just change it to asian and Vector that sounds good but in order to qualify you need to add the soy sauce.

You know, it'd probably work better if this were just a recipe thread, so that when folks have recipes they can add them (rather than needing to get to the theme week).

But in any case, it's basically fried rice if you add all the ingredients in, and a normal stirfry otherwise.
i know a recipe thread would be better but some days you just got a taste for something specific like today for me, French and indian food.

Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #7 on: January 11, 2011, 11:38:03 pm »

Hmm... well, then it might be a good idea to accept anyone who comes, but call specifically for whatever you're trying to eat.

That way all the rest of us can get in on the good recipe action, too =)


I'll have a curry recipe for you guys later.
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Rysith

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #8 on: January 12, 2011, 01:53:16 am »

Maybe have the thread be whatever recipes, but have the organized bit in the first post sorted by type of food?

Anyway:
Emerald Peanut-Sesame Noodles (Commentary by Rysith)
Inspiration comes from A Year in a Vegetarian Kitchen, by Jack Bishop[0]

Noodles:
    1 pound noodles[1]
    2 tablespoon sesame oil
    salt

    Prepare noodles to al dente (boil water, add salt, cook 5-8 minutes, rinse to remove excess starch). Transfer noodles to a large bowl and toss with sesame oil until well coated

Sauce:
    3 cups packed spinach leaves
    1/3 cup smooth peanut butter (unsweetened)
    1 tablespoon minced ginger
    1 tablespoon sugar
    1/3 cup hot water
    3 tablespoons soy sauce[2]
    1 tablespoon rice vinegar

    Place all ingredients in a food processor. Use the hot water to wilt the spinach slightly, which makes fitting everything much easier. Process until smooth, scraping down the sides as needed

Garnish (optional)[3]
    3 tablespoons peanut oil
    4 medium scallions, thinly sliced

    Heat oil in a small skillet over high heat until almost smoking. Add scallions and fry, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned, about 2 minutes. Remove to a paper towel to drain.

Assembly:
    Add sauce to noodles, stirring with spoons or your hands as you do to ensure a good distribution. continue tossing until the noodles are evenly coated. If the noodles seem dry, add a tablespoon of cold water and continue tossing. Serve immediately, serves four as a main course.

  • I'm not a vegetarian, but it's a great book. Lots of stuff that is good-and-happens-to-be-vegetarian, rather than trying to imitate meat in various forms.
  • [1] The original recipe wants 'Fresh Chinese noodles', but doesn't actually say what it means by that (lo mein? chow mein? chow fun?). I've had success with Udon and Soba, I'd imagine that it would work well with most types (maybe not egg or rice...). It's definitely forgiving.

    [2] I've had lots of success with dark mushroom soy sauce, which is an excellent idea taste-wise but makes it come out dark brown and muddy-looking. Normal soy sauce doesn't give it as strong a flavor, but makes it come out brilliantly green (hence the "emerald" peanut-sesame noodles). Taste preference and presentation importance, I guess.

    [3] Maybe I don't really know how to prepare it, but the garnish always comes out soggy and sort of tasteless for me. I might try just raw scallions next time...

    My brother also has an excellent recipe for root vegetables in cumin sauce that I'll need to drag out of him and post here.
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Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #9 on: January 12, 2011, 02:07:17 am »

^ I'll try that next time I have noodles and spinach is cheap on the street.

That said, I suspect that your garnish problem is a. that you're overcooking the scallions and b. you're adhering too strongly to the measurement of the oil.  Raw scallions are going to taste pretty nasty, and if they're too oily you'll have even more problems... just pour a little oil in, sautee 'em, and take them out the minute you can smell them or they've become anything less than crisp (light yellowish color, I think).  Keeping them in the fridge beforehand will probably help with crispness, as long as your refrigerator isn't too cold.  Ice crystals are bad, dude.

Your scallions might also be too old. 
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MaximumZero

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #10 on: January 12, 2011, 02:28:41 am »

Ice crystals don't mean too cold. They mean frozen, unfrozen, and then frozen again.
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Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #11 on: January 12, 2011, 02:35:55 am »

Ice crystals don't mean too cold. They mean frozen, unfrozen, and then frozen again.

Huh?  I meant that "if your fridge is producing ice crystals, it's probably too cold."  Not in terms of actual temperature, but in terms of effects.
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MaximumZero

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #12 on: January 12, 2011, 02:41:33 am »

...it suddenly occurs to me that I have no idea where this original conversation started, and I should retract my statement, shut the hell up, and go to bed. I apologize for accidentally eavesdropping.
« Last Edit: January 12, 2011, 02:43:31 am by MaximumZero »
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Rysith

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #13 on: January 12, 2011, 10:15:21 am »

^ I'll try that next time I have noodles and spinach is cheap on the street.

That said, I suspect that your garnish problem is a. that you're overcooking the scallions and b. you're adhering too strongly to the measurement of the oil.

Alright, I'll try using less oil and shorter frying and report back. The scallions were recent and the fridge well-tuned, so I don't think that that's the issue.
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Vector

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Re: Food for well..... you: Recipe Collaboration Thread, This week: Asian
« Reply #14 on: January 12, 2011, 10:20:47 am »

...it suddenly occurs to me that I have no idea where this original conversation started, and I should retract my statement, shut the hell up, and go to bed. I apologize for accidentally eavesdropping.

No, no... don't worry about it.  There is no "eavesdropping" here, and your advice is always much-appreciated.


Alright, I'll try using less oil and shorter frying and report back. The scallions were recent and the fridge well-tuned, so I don't think that that's the issue.

Yeah, I'm thinking that the cook length should be between garlic and white onions.  Plus a bit of adjustment for chopping thickness... scallions are tough, man.  I hardly ever use them.

Haha, sorry for any stupid or incomprehensibility.  I'm in the middle of fixing a wonky sleep schedule.
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pronouns: prefer neutral ones, others are fine. height: 5'3".
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