Subject: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 16 Apr 13 - 11:26 AM I've been enjoying cooking and baking quite a bit lately, it's so grounding and comforting - until it comes to washing up anyway! This afternoon I baked a Wholemeal Sunflower Seed and Honey Loaf using this Recipe , it smells pretty inviting right now, but no snaffling till it's cooled! I've got some soft blue cheese that's going to go amazingly on it later.. What have you been cooking? |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: MMario Date: 16 Apr 13 - 11:34 AM soup. latest was Roasted Garlic soup. 1/4 cup roasted garlic cloves 1/4 cup flour whizzed in food processor until a smooth paste heat 1/4 cup oil in a heavy pan; add paste and cook a wee bit to get some of the "raw" taste out of the flour. gradually whisk in 4 cups beef broth simmer 15 minutes with 2 sprigs of thyme. Spread toast points with a cheese spread and broil until the cheese is melted float those on the soup. yummy! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: catspaw49 Date: 16 Apr 13 - 11:37 AM Good thread! I'll visit this on more than once. This AM I made Shirred Eggs. Chives are growing nicely and we had a bit of cream leftover from something else so.....Whipped my whites and included a LOT of fresh chives , a sweet Reisling, some Parmesan, and hand ground pepper. Cream in the bottom and a heavy layer of shredded sharp cheddar atop and gently baked for around 20 minutes provided a breakfast that seemed quite wonderful. I do shirred maybe twice a month and Karen and I eat slowly talking about last night's work. It sends her off to bed fulfilled but not overfilled and she sleeps better that way. Spaw |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 16 Apr 13 - 11:38 AM That sounds pretty good MMario, I love garlic and I love soup. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 16 Apr 13 - 11:40 AM Delicious CS, wish I could hop into the computer and 'snaffle' some of it right now! Today I made lunch of smoked hadddock in milk, leeks, broccoli and shredded spring greens, with sauted spuds. Then I did a home-made strawberry trifle for pudding. Husband is fast asleep on the sofa as he's stuffed full. (We don't eat an evening meal if we have a cooked lunch) Just like you, I find home-cooking very satisfying and as you say, 'grounding'. I don't even own a microwave and would never ever buy ready-made meals, 'cos all the pleasure is in doing it yourself. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Charmion Date: 16 Apr 13 - 12:10 PM Cockaleekie soup, made in a slow cooker using chicken thigh meat, leeks (that would be the cock and the leekie), whole barley from the health food store and chicken stock from the weekend's roast bird, seasoned with thyme and black pepper. Best lunch ever, with a slice of whole-wheat toast slathered with goat cheese. I think I shall have some right now! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: catspaw49 Date: 16 Apr 13 - 12:26 PM I enjoy Cockaleekie soup too. Frankly, you can't go wrong doing anything with leeks. I add leeks to a lot of dishes and people ask, what is that wonderful taste? They are the "just right" member of the family.......GREAT with eggs and Crimini mushrooms plus your favorite cheese. Spaw |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 16 Apr 13 - 01:52 PM Gosh I'm so hungry! Got a couple of lovely big baking potatoes the oven, a pan of rich beany chilli to go over them on the hob and a pile of grated cheddar cheese to top it all with. Bonfire night fare for us this evening. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,LynnT Date: 16 Apr 13 - 04:09 PM I was out in California visiting my Mom, and I came back with a refreshing appetizer courtesy of a restaurant "Urban Solace" in San Diego. They mixed curry spices and chunks of roasted butternut squash into creme fraiche and, since Passover meant we weren't eating bread, served it on quarter-inch slices of English cucumber. Yum! When I came back I took 3 cups of plain greek yoghurt, stirred in about 1 cup of steamed diced butternut, 1 teaspoon curry powder, a sprinkling of dark-brown sugar, a pinch of five-spice powder and 1/2 tsp black caraway (nigella) seeds, and served it on sliced cucumbers. There was about a cup left over, so while a diced onion was gently cooking I sliced a pork chop into strips, then added the meat. When it was nearly cooked through I stirred in the leftover yoghurt mixture and some cooked egg noodles. Curry stroganoff, anyone? Lynn |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: gnu Date: 16 Apr 13 - 05:02 PM Turkey. I cooked a turkey and there is only two of us. That's a lotta turkey! Hash, soup. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,sciencegeek Date: 17 Apr 13 - 03:01 PM let's hear it for leeks! LOL followed by the rest of the allium family. if it ever warms up, the ramps ( wild leeks) will start emerging in the woods & I will try & beat the cows to them. I usually pick one or two of the three leaves (leaving a leaf or two to support the bulb) & steam them... hmmmm heaven with the cool spring, it's mostly soups - ramen noodles in chicken broth with nappa cabbage & scallions, a little soy sauce & toasted sesame oil. warm & filling... |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Dorothy Parshall Date: 17 Apr 13 - 04:43 PM Cauliflower Cheddar soup solves the "He loves cauliflower and I don't care for it" problem. Very nice. I add in some extra herbs and seasonings as they occur to me - a little jalapeno or "Seven spices" or curry or.... Cauliflower Soup 2 tablespoons butter_ 1/2 cup chopped onion_ 3 cups coarsely chopped fresh cauliflower_ 1 - 10 ounce can condensed chicken broth (or vegetable broth)_ 1/4 cup all purpose flour_ 2 1/2 cups milk_ 1 1/2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese_ salt and pepper_buttered croutons_ chopped parsley Melt butter in large saucepan. Sauté onion until tender. Stir in cauliflower and condensed chicken broth. Bring to a boil. Cover, reduce heat and simmer 12 to 15 minutes or until the cauliflower is tender. Smoothly combine flour and milk. Add the mixture to the saucepan. Cook and stir over medium heat until mixture boils and thickens. Remove from heat. Add cheese and stir until melted. Add salt and pepper to taste. Ladle into soup bowls. Sprinkle with buttered croutons and parsley. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 17 Apr 13 - 06:09 PM It is clear that I need to check out leeks, which I have never actually cooked with. Thanks. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: michaelr Date: 18 Apr 13 - 12:08 AM Leeneia, you must. Leeks are delicious. I recently slow-cooked some leeks cut into 3/4" thick coins in a bit of water, with butter, salt and a sprinkle of sugar. Served drained with a pan-fried salmon filet. Yum! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: alanabit Date: 18 Apr 13 - 04:52 AM I am a veggie. Unfortunately my love affair with cheese, which I have cheerfully been using as a protein source for many years, has now developed into a permanent honeymoon. I discovered this week that my weight (I am less than 164cm tall) has gone up to over seventy-five kilos, which means I comfortably (sic) qualify for the UK government's description of "obese" (20% over the correct weight). Last night I made a chick pea and mushroom curry, which came out surprisingly well. The doc already has me off beer for six weeks, but it looks like many months ahead of no chocolate, biscuits, cake, desserts or cheese. I am going to have to think this cooking thing through again... Today I am soaking some red lentils. Any suggestions? |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 18 Apr 13 - 08:00 AM The docs and the criticizers think they can pester people into losing weight. They really believe people can get healthy by denying themselves what they enjoy. Good luck with that! Why don't you get yourself a bicycle (maybe an Electra Townie) or join a hiking club or a get a swim membership or take up dancing or start a garden and see if you can't lose weight by having fun? Whatever you choose, it should be something you like to do. I visualize the criticizers regarding one another with wild eyes. "Fun? Fun!" they cry. "We weren't put here to have Fun!" |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 18 Apr 13 - 08:31 AM I know what you mean about cheese alanabit, it's like crack for most vegetarians. I went dairy free last year for a few months and it did me a lot of good on a few levels but it wasn't something I felt like keeping at! "Today I am soaking some red lentils. Any suggestions?" Red lentils are great but you might be pleased to know that unlike most beans, you don't actually need to soak lentils. I make a red lentil and tomato soup with red split lentils that always goes down well, it's here on my blog in case you're interested: Red Lentil and Tomato Soup |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: alanabit Date: 18 Apr 13 - 08:53 AM I do a seventy-five minute fitness routine most days. I have to anyway, because I have a crushed vertebrae in my neck - and I quickly get backaches and extreme headaches if I let the fitness slide. I walk a few kilometres most days and the bike will be repaired and used more over the coming days. However, I am probably still not burning up anything like the amount of calories which I did when I was one man banding full time. The doc doesn't have to pester me on this one at all. I am shocked and ashamed that I have allowed myself to get into this state! I think you are right about the fun though leenia. Cycling is probably the best idea for right now. It's cheap and easy to park. Thanks for the recipe CS. I'll look that one up. I love nearly all vegetables, so anything with vegetables and pulses is probably the way to go now! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,Pete Jennings sans cookie Date: 18 Apr 13 - 01:42 PM Beefburgers. Minced braising steak from the village butcher, finely-chopped onion, an egg, mixed herbs and my secret ingredient: Daddy's Sauce (or HP if you prefer). Mix everything together and, with wet hands, form into burgers. Put them into the fridge for an hour before grilling on a high-ish heat, turning once, for about 12 minutes. Delicious. For leek fans, try them roasted. Same applies for broccoli. Lovely. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: John MacKenzie Date: 18 Apr 13 - 02:21 PM Today I made, venison stew, lamb casserole, and chicken curry. Hopefully when split into portions for the freezer, it will provide, ten or twelve, meals for two. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: LilyFestre Date: 18 Apr 13 - 02:30 PM I am just about done cooking up a storm for my 90 year old Nana who is now home, living alone, after a little over a year in the nursing home. She is doing ok on her own but she doesn't like to cook for herself and is living on sodium laden premade tv dinners. I am going to visit her for a few days and have decided to take as many homemade frozen meals as I can for her. I have 15 containers of food for her, each holding 2 servings of food that she will be able to unthaw and toss in the microwave (I prefer the oven and stove but she won't use them so this will work for her). I made Beef BBQ, Shepherd's Pie, Chicken Casserole, Turkey Soup (her favorite), Beef Stew and Stuffed Shells. I am working on something sweet (she always has dessert after her breakfast) that will freeze and keep nicely. :) Freezer space is limited (in fact, either her neighbor or my aunt will be keeping all but 3 containers and deliver the others to her as needed). If you have any classic homemade meals that freeze nicely and you'd like to share...I'll be listening!!! Michelle |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Dorothy Parshall Date: 18 Apr 13 - 05:17 PM Very yummy vegan chili: Vegetarian Chili Ingredients 1 tablespoon vegetable oil 3 cloves garlic, minced 1 cup chopped onion 1 cup chopped carrots 1 cup chopped green bell pepper 1 cup chopped red bell pepper 2 tablespoons chili powder 1 1/2 cups chopped fresh mushrooms 1 (28 ounce) can whole peeled tomatoes with liquid, chopped 1 (15 ounce) can black beans, undrained 1 (15 ounce) can kidney beans, undrained 1 (15 ounce) can pinto beans, undrained 1 (15 ounce) can whole kernel corn, drained 1 tablespoon cumin 1 1/2 tablespoons dried oregano 1 1/2 tablespoons dried basil . 1/2 tablespoon garlic powder Directions . Heat the oil in a large pot over medium heat. Cook and stir the garlic, onion, and carrots in the pot until tender. Mix in the green bell pepper and red bell pepper. Season with chili powder. Continue cooking 5 minutes, or until peppers are tender. . Mix the mushrooms into the pot. Stir in the tomatoes with liquid, black beans with liquid, kidney beans with liquid, pinto beans with liquid, and corn. Season with cumin, oregano, basil, and garlic powder. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium, cover, and cook 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,Spleen Cringe Date: 18 Apr 13 - 06:40 PM I got a Yotam Ottolenghi cookbook for Christmas and I've been working my way through it. He is the bees knees! The chicken marinated in home made harissa with grapefruit and maple syrup sauce on a bed of grapefruit segments and rocket was OBSCENELY nice. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 18 Apr 13 - 09:48 PM Oh good. Here's what we had tonight. Pasta with fennel-flavored meatballs Mix: 2 Tbsp fennel seed one package of ground pork a third cup oatmeal lemon peel if it appeals to you Form into little meatballs and fry or bake for 22 mins in a 350 oven. Parchment paper on the sheet pan makes for easy cleanup. Just before dinner Cook some pasta and drain it heat a little healthful veg oil in a skillet saute 2 cloves of minced garlic add the meatballs and the pasta and heat gently add lemon juice, white wine and water to taste, just so it's not all dry splat on a little olive oil just before supper. peas, sugar snap peas or diced carrot may be added for color and to make Uncle Sam happy I used to buy fennel seed in an expensive little package in the supermarket, but now I buy it in an Indian grocery store in glass jars. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: kendall Date: 19 Apr 13 - 08:05 PM I made my relatively world famous Yankee pot roast for dinner. Everyone who ate it declared it excellent. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 19 Apr 13 - 08:33 PM What makes it world famous, Kendall? Any secret ingredients? |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Jeri Date: 19 Apr 13 - 10:47 PM Pot. Kendall, it's a good thing you told people about making it after it was et. I had to work, but I still might have buggered off up there. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Max Johnson Date: 20 Apr 13 - 04:58 AM I cooked a Steak and Ale pie from a recipe that I saw on the Guardian blogs. Steak and Ale pie is a very easy thing to cook, but I was intrigued by the fact that this one has a tbsp of cocoa in it and I wondered if it would make a difference. The pie was sensationally good. I don't like Guiness for cooking, or indeed most stouts as they are just too bitter. I tried Jennings dark ale which is from Aldi and the cheapest on the market and it seemed perfect. I used beef skirt and cooked it at 150C for three and a half hours. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Charmion Date: 20 Apr 13 - 07:10 AM Max, that sounds delicious. If I go to the Guardian site, where will I find the recipe? |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Pete Jennings Date: 20 Apr 13 - 07:22 AM Here it is, Charmion. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 20 Apr 13 - 07:59 AM "this one has a tbsp of cocoa in it and I wondered if it would make a difference. The pie was sensationally good." I don't cook beef but I do put cocoa in red kidney bean chilli, so I can certainly see how it would add a rich satisfying note to any 'dark' savoury dish. I like the idea and will experiment with it. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Mrrzy Date: 20 Apr 13 - 07:23 PM Love leeks - cooked, cold, with vinaigrette best, but as an ingredient in anything. West Africans cook with cocoa kind of the way North Africans do with cinnamon, in savory rather than sweet dishes. Yum. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: gnu Date: 20 Apr 13 - 10:17 PM Nothing special except to say that Fryday yesterday was graced with "Round Smelts", locally known as jack smelts BUT one smelt was, from nose to tailfin, about 14" long! THAT there is some good eatin! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: KT Date: 20 Apr 13 - 11:55 PM Last night it was Baked Halibut Caddy Ganty with a side of rice and a tossed green salad, loaded with fresh veggies like broccoli, carrots, lettuce, tomatoes, - The night before was a big ol' pot of Spaghetti with a simmer-all-day meat sauce, along with garlic bread and a tossed green salad. Tonight it was Murgh Kari (Indian Curry Chicken) over rice-hoping this one will cure the sniffles. Tried a wonderful, new Apple Cake recipe the other day - Surprisingly very moist, considering it has only 2 tablespoons of butter! Bon appetit, everyone! |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 21 Apr 13 - 03:25 AM For today's dinner I'm cooking a lentil and vegetable pie in shortcrust pastry, just like a minced meat pie but without the meat in it. We'll have that with mash, green beans and gravy. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: kendall Date: 21 Apr 13 - 06:35 AM I said "Relatively world famous". yes there is a secret ingredient. I start with a top quality oven roast. Pot roast tends to be stringy. 4 bits of beef bullion cubes, or Oxo cubes in the water from the start. The usual, carrots, onions and peeled potatoes.(I think of Dan Quayle every time I see that word). Simmer for an hour to the pound, then add veggies for half an hour or until tender. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Jeri, whenever you want to come and visit, I promise you a pot roast, a bed, a drink of Aberlour, a tune on my new banjo and witty conversation. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Max Johnson Date: 21 Apr 13 - 06:55 AM Last night I cooked another Guardian (HF-W)recipe for supper. I'm not a Graun fan and only get it for the weekend crossword (which lasts me a week), but sometimes the recipes are really worth trying. I did this because I'm very partial to devilled kidneys and I got some very good kidneys on Lancaster Farmers' Market yesterday. Dead simple, and absolutely the best devilled kidneys I've ever had. Ten minutes, start to finish. On their website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2013/apr/19/offal-recipes-whittingstall I'm not on very often and can never get the link thingy to work. Thanks for posting the previous link, Pete. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Joe_F Date: 21 Apr 13 - 01:21 PM This morning: Jewish french toast. Into an egg stir briskly enough milk to make the mixture smooth. In a little suet brown some cut-up onion, mushrooms, and something savory (in this case pastrami). Break into the egg mixture some matzoh. Pour into the frying pan & spread around. Cover with a plate, and wait till it gets hot. Drain the plate into the sink, not the pan. When the egg is firm, cut in quarters with a spatula & turn them over. Add salt & pepper. By the time you have done that, it is ready to serve. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 21 Apr 13 - 01:32 PM Cookies! Cranberry, Oat and Almond. No dairy or eggs. Wholemeal too. Baking in the oven right now.. (the leftover dough in the bowl is amazing!!) |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,olddude Date: 21 Apr 13 - 01:37 PM I whipped up a batch of some really good hot sausage that I put in my smoker ... it came out great. Old family recipie |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: gnu Date: 21 Apr 13 - 03:21 PM Cooking today is thawing out a frozen container of boilded ham dinner. An experiment to dertermine the freeze/thaw charcateristics of such, ezzzpescially the cabbage. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: gnu Date: 21 Apr 13 - 03:32 PM The experiment, although not completely thawed just yet, is a HUGE success! Here is the resulting recipe. 1. Cook a HUGE boiled smoked ham dinner. 2. Give what you can't eat to a neighbour. 3. Cook something else on accounta freezing a boiled ham dinner was a f****** stupid idea and you knew it. Fruit and cereal and ham for supper tonight. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Stilly River Sage Date: 21 Apr 13 - 03:48 PM I've concentrated on various dishes that use lots of peppers or eggplant lately. My freezer is still full from last fall. One thing I've created is a sort of broad application taco meat - at the heart of it is a pound of pot roast that I grind myself (I no longer buy ground beef - too many horror stories about how it is handled). I brown the initial seasoning (I grow my own onions and peppers, diced and frozen on a tray then bagged) and add the browned meat into it - in this dish I prefer poblano pepper. Add some fresh garlic, a generous grind of pepper, oregano (dried, from my garden), a teaspoon or so of ground chili pepper, a tablespoon or more of cumin (I LOVE cumin!) and let it cook together a bit. To this I pour in a pint of my diced home grown canned tomatoes. Simmer some more, then either open a can of, or if I had the forethought, have soaked and cooked, black beans. When it's pretty close to finished I add some cilatro or culantro (I finally can find that culantro - a long leaf, stronger flavor than the parsley-like cilantro). That is used to make tacos or burritos or nachos. I can use it to make a kind of fancy quesadilla on a tortilla with cheese in it to melt, though it is a bit on the lumpy side. I top it with homemade guacamole (I buy the avocados and make it then freeze it in ice cube trays and bag the cubes. If you defrost in a microwave watch it - you don't want to accidentally cook your guacamole). Another thing I make as a small meal or a snack is babaghouj (various spellings). Eggplant was roasted last fall when it was fresh, and I peeled and mashed it and measured 12 oz at a time, to which I added 1/4 cup of fresh lemon juice. After I thaw the mix I add 1/4 cup sesame tahini, garlic press in a couple of cloves of garlic, 1 tsp salt, a dollop (maybe a tablespoon) of olive oil, and I puree it in the food processor. There is a middle eastern bakery near where I work so I regularly stop in to buy warm pita bread. It goes into the freezer and I can eat home grown eggplant all winter. I have other eggplant recipes also, but this is probably enough for now. Some of the babaghanouj is spread on a plate, topped with a little olive oil, and scooped up with chunks torn off of a warmed pita bread. (This tastes like humus, but is creamier.) I'm not eating as much meat as I used to, and I'm losing weight now because I'm doing a method of fasting every other day. If anyone has seen the documentary Food, Inc. this is referenced in there. You can research "fasting diet" and find information. The best part of this is that because it means you're not eating as much beef (I am a meat eater) it lowers the blood serum levels of one of the hormones that can spur the growth of cancer cells. In the program the narrator followed this and found it successfully lowered the levels, and he lost weight. I'm not diabetic or no health problems. This isn't a true fast, there is one meal on the fasting day - in the middle of the day I eat up to 500 calories of fresh fruit. SRS |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 22 Apr 13 - 03:59 AM Thanks for recommending Food Inc. I found it here on a documentary video site: http://documentaryaddict.com/Food+Inc-2174-documentary.html |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Ebbie Date: 22 Apr 13 - 10:04 PM Man. I don't like to cook- but some of these recipes sound interesting. One of these times I'm going to print out this thread and put it into my cabinet. Today I made some oven-fried chicken, skinless and with spices; had some with coleslaw. Tasted pretty good, but not astonishingly so. Tonight I'll make up a fruit smoothie. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Bobert Date: 22 Apr 13 - 10:09 PM I'm the "sauce man"... I make Cole slaw dressing... I make BBQ sauce... Hot wings sauce... Tartar sauce... Salad dressings... Okay, I can cook, too... Don't tell the P-Vine or she'll have me doing that, too... B;~) |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Dorothy Parshall Date: 23 Apr 13 - 09:13 AM So quick and easy but different: Turn on cast iron frying pan - med heat - and throw in some thinly sliced or grated cheddar or other cheese. When it is melting, but don't let it get crunchy, (but that's ok if you like it) scramble in eggs (you are choosing the amounts according to your needs). When the eggs are sufficiently cooked to suit you, add a quantity of apple sauce. Yep! The friend who first cooked this for me, for supper, told me it was Swiss. We had it with green beans. Today R and I had it for breakfast in apple cinnamon pita! (Something I stumbled over at the store the other day.) |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 26 Apr 13 - 02:55 PM Not much, I had a hangover today - have mostly quit booze since new year bar a couple of folk do's, but had a bottle of wine last night. Ugh, bad move! Today I cooked one plain baked potato with salt and a little butter. It was just about all I could stomach! He had a big juicy steak (so much for going veggie!) and chips. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: Max Johnson Date: 27 Apr 13 - 06:26 AM Mushroom Omelette last night. A Normandy version from zabeth David's French Country Cooking. Lightly beat and season 3 eggs. Chop some mushrooms (and ham if you like) Saute the mushrooms in butter and season. Start the ommelette. Pour a tablespoon of cream into the mushrooms and heat but don't let the cream reduce. Add a grating of fresh nutmeg. Add to the omelette while the omelette is still creamy. Fold the omelette. I had mine with a rocket salad, some oven chips and a glass of red. |
Subject: RE: BS: What've You Been Cooking Lately? From: GUEST,CS Date: 27 Apr 13 - 06:41 AM Sounds perfect Max! I've always cooked the mushrooms *in* the omelette, never before considered adding them as a filling *to* the omelette! Always nice to have some piquent salad leaves to go with rich egg dishes too. |