2012-05-04, 17:29 | Link #181 | |
Hail the power of Fujoshi
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: hahahahahahahahaha
Age: 35
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More importantly, it's hard to get it in the UK
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2012-05-04, 17:39 | Link #182 |
Banned
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Well too bad.But look at the bright side. The more hard to get it, the more you wanna eat it.
Oh, I also add slices of tomatoes while it is being fried (not deep fried, a tablespoon for an handful of dried anchovies is enough). Damn, I think fry some right now... hehehe..if there are still left over rice. |
2012-05-05, 21:13 | Link #188 |
blinded by blood
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I made a simple white spaghetti with prosciutto, minced garlic, shallots and calabrian peppers, seasoned with rosemary and fresh-ground black pepper.
Basically just take some salty water in a pot, boil it and add spaghetti noodles when it's boiling. If you have any, toss a chunk of Parmesan rind into the water while it boils and the noodles cook. Get a big shallot or two small shallots and slice them thinly. Chop up a little bit of calabrian pepper (but not a huge amount, they're really strongly flavored) and take that and the shallots in a frying pan with some olive oil and sautee them. When the onion goes translucent, mince some garlic and slice up some prosciutto (thin ribbons) and toss those into the oil with the onion and peppers. Cook this for about half a minute to take the edge off the garlic, then add some dried rosemary, a bit of kosher salt and fresh-ground black pepper, then a few small glugs of cream sherry to the pan. Cook off the mixture at high heat to take the raw alcohol flavor out and add a quarter cup or so of chicken stock. Cook this for a bit longer, cut the heat to medium and then add a half cup of milk or cream (depending on how rich you want it). Cut the heat to almost completely off--you don't want the milk/cream curdling. Let it cook away slowly so all the good flavors get nice and infused. While this is steeping the milk and chicken stock go ahead and finely grate about a cup of good-quality Parmesan cheese (not the crap made with vegetable rennet either) and a quarter cup of Gruyere cheese. Set the cheeses aside for now. Drain off the pasta (make sure to get rid of the Parmesan rind if you used it) and put it in the pan with the sauce. Sprinkle all the cheese on top and start stirring it. Raise the heat a little bit if the cheese doesn't melt right away. Once it's done you want to plate it up right away and then serve immediately, garnishing with a bit of fresh parsley.
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2012-05-05, 21:38 | Link #189 |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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Yep, Synaesthetic knows how to cook better than all of us here. In terms of cooking technique, I know she is good. I know she has had a job or two as a cook before (right?). The pasta you made sounds good.
I want to make homemade pesto sometime, serve it up on pasta and then serve it with bruschetta. Make the tomato based topping with fresh tomatoes and fresh herbs and serve it on toasted french bread slices. Should be good!
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2012-05-06, 04:55 | Link #191 | |
blinded by blood
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Homemade pesto is wonderful. Really, it's worlds better than the jarred stuff, and it's dead easy to make. You want about 4:1 ratio of Italian flatleaf parsley to basil to get a good basil flavor without being massively overpowering. Then it's just a matter of a good extra virgin olive oil, a good Parmesan or peccarino romano (or both, like I do), garlic and some toasted pine nuts. I also tend to finely mince some shallots (yes, I really like shallots ) and add a bit of kosher salt and black pepper to taste.
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2012-05-06, 06:40 | Link #192 | |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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2012-05-06, 13:24 | Link #193 | |
blinded by blood
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Usually what I do is get two or three big ole bunches of Italian flatleaf parsley and about a quarter to a third of that in basil. Make sure the big thick parts of the parsley stem don't go into the pesto (same with the basil, actually) and blend it all together with the garlic, cheese, toasted pine nuts, shallots or purple onion (optional, but I lurvs it) and olive oil in a food processor or using a stick blender. If you want to make a shitload of pesto and save some for later, the stuff freezes remarkably well. Just make a huge batch, use what you will for dinner that night and then put the rest in ice cube trays and cover them with clingfilm. Put that in the freezer and whenever you need some pesto just retrieve a few cubes and toss them in hot pasta--the heat from the noodles will melt and warm the pesto through.
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2012-05-06, 14:40 | Link #194 |
Juanita/Kiteless
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: New England
Age: 40
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I never had homemade pesto. I hear it is very good.
And yeah, the jarred stuff tastes like crap. The refridgerated stuff that comes in plastic containers is good. But I never buy the jarred stuff. Tried it once, and don't wanna have it again.
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2012-05-06, 19:22 | Link #198 | |
ゴリゴリ!
Graphic Designer
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Vancouver, British Columbia
Age: 32
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Can't beat it (unless you're like...at a good restaurant...)! The chicken was slowly simmered in a Marsala sauce over a decent period of time. I'm eating it right now.
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