Philistine
100 kW
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,736
They have a summer in England?
Oh hai.. welcome to my ES food show!claire said:Dee Jay said:I'm seeing some nice dishes up in here!
Sopas!
No no, not that piracy bill, it's Chicken Macaroni Soup :lol:
Diced chicken dark meat or white or combo
carrot diced or julien
elbo macaroni
minced garlic
sliced oinion
water
chicken bulion
edit: a little milk
salt and pepper
fishsauce
cook garlic
add and stirfry onions and carrots
add and stirfry chicken
add water and a bulion and macaroni, some salt and pepper to taste
edit:add milk and simmer till macaroni is slighly over cooked
done.
some fishsauce to adjust saltiness at the table. Personally like it super peppery.
You cannot go wrong with this easy and tasty dish. great comfort food for harsh winter that's been kickin my ass..made a big pot over the weekend and it's sold out as of today
:burp:
I love chicken macaroni soup! Had it yesterday, till this morning My favorite soup! yum!
summers are short in the land of Eng...maybe one week?Philistine said:They have a summer in England?
Kingfish, come on down! You're the next contestant on Cook It Right!Kingfish said:Dang that looks good! Dee Jay, I'll be right over :wink:
Still hungry after dinner, KF
Aha, kitsch..like a plastic jesus? :lol: I suspected kitsch at the intro when I Chairman Kaga snickered as the camera pulled away from the close-up. I watched the english dubbed version on youtube. I think americans took it seriously..my friends and family anyway, and youtubers praising this show like it's "all that" :lol: Kitsch to foreigners but what about the Japanese? humor and food? sure, as long as it excites the palate at the end of the show.Philistine said:Deejay are you watching it in Japanese or in English? The reason I am curious is that it is not meant to be a practical cooking show that you watch to learn tips on cooking or practical cooking, (the English dubbed version anyway). It is purely meant to be a kitsch appeal show. Basically when translated and dubbed in English it is so bad it is funny, and that is why people watch it. Well that is the point of it in Australia, it is not intended to be watched as a cooking show, rather as an absurd kitsch show. There is a bit of an undertone where we laugh at the crazy Japanese, and their premise that someone would create a "Kitchen Stadium". Something like Takashi's castle.
[youtube]3u0QF5GJ730[/youtube]
I have watched quite a few episodes, but not for the food, that is awful, it is more for the asburd factor.
SURIMI ALK SNOW LEGS FLVRD
Ingredients: Fish protein contains one or more of the following: Pollack, and/or Pacific Whiting, Water, Wheat Starch, Sugar, Egg Whites, Sorbitol, Snow Crab Meat (wow, glad there was some in there! ), Contains less than 2% or less of: Salt, Tapioca Starch, Mirin (Rice Wine), Whole Egg, Soybean Oil, Sodium Pyrophospate, Brown Rice Syrup, Soya Lecithin, Glycern, Artificial Flavors (read: MSG), Carmine and Paprika for color, Canolia Oil and Hydrolized Gelatin. (probably the biodegradable casing shit to hold it all together)
Last night I fell asleep watching Forks over Knives. What could have been stated in deluxe with 15 minutes, they used 90 to batter the same content over and over again that "meat" was bad for us. I had just came from the market with 2 lbs. of that crab meat thinking "Right. Go veggy. Too late. Glad I didn't pick up the ice cream too." But the documentary (boring as it was) did cover well how mechanization has ruined our diets.Philistine said:One of my favourite tins at the supermarket is a no-name tin of pet food (I presume it is dog food, but I am not 100% sure), and all it says on the tin is "Meat with Chicken". I would have thought it was accepted that chicken was a subset of meat, but for some reason the express mentioning of chicken, as if it is some big fancy claim to be making, makes me question their meaning of the word "meat".
I'm a crêpes man myself; one of the first homemade foods I mastered (after oatmeal-chocolate chip cookies; priorities ). Therefore I like to make my 'cakes from scratch, eggy and thin. Served with real maple syrup, or rolled up as a cheeze blintz with fruit compote :wink: There was a restaurant chain here in the PNW called Elmer’s that used to make Swedish pancakes (imagine a huge pop-over type pancake) topped with powdered sugar, lemon and butter, and/or lingonberry fruit compote. Man, that was the best! But they don’t make it anymoreREdiculous said:I've been making a lot of pancakes lately and I finally figured out where the cake part of the name comes from. Apparently, if you make 'em thick enough, there's cake in there! :lol: