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Frieda 10-14-2007 09:21 AM

ah, thanks, i'll edit it before anyone gets ill :p :D

here we have fry (frituren) and bake (bakken) -- baking requires a lot less oil/butter while frying only can be done in huge amounts of oil. putting stuff in the oven also is called baking.

quite confusing, huh?? :D

i have tons of nice recipes but no idea how to translate them.. i'll post another and maybe you could check again? yes? please?

brightpearl 10-14-2007 09:37 AM

^of course!! :D

Sticklers for gourmet cooking in English might draw a distinction between "fry" and "sauté" -- frying uses much more oil -- but most people use "fry" for both.

Frieda 10-14-2007 09:47 AM

ok here's another one:

baked pineapple



ingredients: (serves 4)
1 pineapple
1 tablespoon of honey
200 grams lemon ice cream
2 cinnamon sticks
2 rosemary branches
1 vanilla stick thingy

1. remove skin of pineapple, cut in 4, remove heart.
2. chop rosemary, cinnamon and vanilla
3. poke little holes in pineapple and put rosemary/cinnamon/vanilla mixture in
4. put in baking tray and cover with little bit of honey
5. bake 45 minutes in oven at 160c, turn pineapple every 15 minutes
6. serve with lemon ice cream
7. eat!


if you're a true hero, you put them in a frying pan and set the whole thing on fire with XO cognac after baking it-- but that's a bit dangerous. but very very nice.

brightpearl 10-14-2007 10:46 AM

^mmmm!
"vanilla stick thingy" is much more poetic than "bean"

Frieda 10-14-2007 01:03 PM

:D i don't even know the word in dutch :eek:

Frieda 10-15-2007 08:23 AM

lime gambas with mango salad

ingredients (serves 4):

40 grams brown sugar
8 gamba prawns (big ones)
10 gr cumin seed
fresh curiander leaves
1 lime (you only need the juice of half a lime but you'll have to buy a lime anyway)
2 mangos
4 fresh mint leaves
1 red chili pepper
40 ml sesame oil
1 onion

1. carve the back of the prawns with a bread knife, stick prawns on sticks
2. chop pepper, juice half a lime.
3. mix one half of the chopped pepper with half of the lime juice, all of the cumin seed and all of the sesame oil.
4. marinate the prawns with this mixture for at least 10 minutes.
5. remove skin of mango, cut the mango into thin slices. chop onion, mint and curiander. mix mango, onion, mint, curiander, other half of the chopped pepper, sugar, other half of lime juice and put on plates
6. grill the prawns and serve on top of mango salad
7. eat & enjoy!

can also be made with grilled chicken on sticks if anyone at the dinner table doesn't like shrimp! takes longer to marinate though.

brightpearl 12-16-2007 09:58 PM

The only reason I haven't tried this recipe already is that I am so overcome with joy at finding it that I must lie down for a while.

Italian Fried Olives
- 2 cups medium-large green olives, pitted
- about 1/2 cup smoked mozarella bits (about 1/4"x1/2" in size or as big a piece you can fit into the whole of the olive)
- about 1/2 cup flour
- about 1/2 cup milk
- about 1 cup fine breadcrumbs or Panko
- 1 toothpick
- oil for frying

Directions
- Heat oil in a fryer or a large saucepan with about 3 inches of oil to 370 degrees.
- Stuff each olive with a piece of mozarella.
- Place flour, milk and breadcrumbs in 3 seperate small bowls.
- Using a toothpick, coat olive in flour. Tap off the excess flour. Dip olive in the milk. Then, coat olive thoroughly in the breadcrumbs. Set on a plate and repeat for remaining olives.
- Dip a flat sieve in the hot oil so that the breadcrumbs won't stick to it. Transfer about 1/3 of the olives to the hot oil using the sieve and fry for about 30-45 seconds. Drain on a plate covered with a paper towel. Repeat for remaining olives. Serve hot.
- Serves 4.

Jaime 12-17-2007 04:30 AM

^ that sounds really good.

I have no official recipe, but I had a homemade Green Tea shortbread cookie today. The girl who made them just said to grind the tea up so it's very fine, and just put some in with a shortbread recipe. Very good. I will try it soon and let you know how it works out.

trisherina 12-31-2007 12:42 PM

Recipes from bulletin.zefrank.com people that I made and ate since December 21st 2007:

Peef's Pom Salad
Zen's Buffalo Chicken Wing Dip
Sparticle's Nonsweet Yams (as elsewhere acknowledged)
Avalon's Apple Cake
Madasacutsnake's Butter Chicken
Not madasacutsnake's but she pointed me to it Crock Pot Beef Burgundy

Some of these recipes are not available in this thread... but some are! And all of them made me look good. :)

Pixie Cherries 01-02-2008 07:39 AM

We make these every Christmas. My mom has the recipe, but here is one that is very close:

1 c. sugar
2 tbsp. shortening
2 eggs, beaten
1 c. molasses
1 c. milk, sweet or sour
4 c. flour
2 tsp. soda
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
1/2 tsp. cloves
1/2 tsp. allspice
1/4 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 c. raisins (optional)

Cream shortening and sugar. Add beaten eggs, then molasses, then milk. Sift all dry ingredients together and gradually add to first mixture. Add floured raisins last. Drop from spoon on greased cookie sheet. Bake in slow oven, 325-350 degrees, for 10-12 minutes. (These are called Cry Baby because little ones "cry" for more.)

l'azizza 02-09-2008 03:50 AM

Does anyone have a great casserole recipe? It's for my very pregnant sister. She suggested chicken noodle. I said okay but would leave out the chicken.

Frieda 02-09-2008 10:26 AM

^no casserole, sorry.. i'm not that much of a hero in the kitchen :eek:


frieda's favorite lazy saturday lunch:

cut 5 small mushrooms and 1 spring onion into bits and sautee in a bit of butter. sprinkle with a bit of garlic powder. or, if you're a little less lazy than i am, press half a clove and use this instead.

shove the sauteed mushrooms and onion on the side, add two small egs in the same pan and fry these. when one side is done, flip the eggs on their other side and cover the eggs with one thin slice of ham.

cover ham with a little bit of cheese (parmesan or emmenthal are best) and fold the eggs (ham and cheese on the inside). now let this fry for a minute to make the cheese melt.

eat on 2 slices of brown wholewheat bread. eat this with a big ripe tomato on the side and you will have all the proper enzymes to digest all of this!


mmmmmMMMMMMMMmmmmmmmmm :):)

trisherina 02-09-2008 12:11 PM

For casseroles, potato bakes always get eaten and they contain no chicken. I have a new one that I don't want to type out for anyone until it's been tried in my kitchen, but I think Best of Bridge can probably handle the job.

brightpearl 02-12-2008 10:52 PM

These sound delicious, but I'm not sure I would recommend biting.

The original Nestle Troll House Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe

2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt


1 cup (2 sticks, 1/2 pound) butter, softened

3/4 cup granulated [white] sugar

3/4 cup packed brown sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

2 eggs

2 cups (12-ounce package) NESTLE TOLL HOUSE Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels

1 cup chopped nuts



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMBINE flour, baking soda and salt in small bowl. Beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar and vanilla in large mixer bowl. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition; gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in morsels and nuts. Drop by rounded tablespoon onto ungreased baking sheets.

BAKE in preheated 375-degree [Fahrenheit] oven for 9 to 11 minutes or until golden brown. Let stand for 2 minutes; remove to wire racks to cool completely.

PAN COOKIE VARIATION: PREPARE dough as above. Spread into greased 15"x10" jelly-roll pan. Bake in preheated 375-degree [Fahrenheit] oven for 20 to 25 minutes or until golden brown. Cool in pan on wire rack.

FOR HIGH ALTITUDE BAKING (>5,200 feet): INCREASE flour to 2 1/2 cups; add 2 teaspoonfuls water with flour; reduce both granulated sugar and brown sugar to 2/3 cup each. Bake at 375 degrees Fahrenheit, drop cookies for 8 to 10 minutes and pan cookies for 17 to 19 minutes.

Frieda 07-08-2009 09:05 AM

tomato yum yum

necessary:
- box of small, sweet tomatoes (cherry or tasty toms or something)
- fresh tomato sauce, or fresh tomato puree from your favorite chopping kitchen tool
- fresh basil (dried works but fresh is so much better)
- dried oregano
- can of anchovies filets in olive oil
- can of sardines in olive oil
- brown bread or other dark bread with lots of healthy bits.

pre-heat oven at 120c (10 mins)

wash tomatoes and cut them in half, but not completely through. the two halves are supposed to fold open and have to remain attached.

put the tomatoes in an oven dish, the inside facing upwards. fit in as many as you can.

cover every tomato with a layer of sardine stuff. on top of this, curl up an anchovies filet.

cover the fishy tomatoes with tomato puree and sprinkle with oregano.

completely cover all tomatoes with basil leaves.

put oven dish in oven, for about 5-10 minutes, depending on the size of the tomatoes. the skin is supposed to be still skinny, but if you bite one it should explode cherry-tomato-like with warm tomato stuff. eath with bread on the side.

don't overheat, or you'll burn your mouth very very badly!

eet smakelijk!
mmMMMMmmmm :)

Frieda 10-25-2009 11:12 AM

any good sauerkraut recipes anyone?? :confused:

i know Ysa's sauerkraut soup is delicious-- maybe you should post the recipe!

i'm all up for mashed potatoes & sauerkraut & a sweet something, with sultanas/raisins(what's the difference anyway), i know people add canned fruit but that's really evil. what else should be really nice??

brightpearl 10-25-2009 06:34 PM

My friend's mom used to put a tart chopped apple in sauerkraut...yum!! She rinsed the sauerkraut, put a fresh apple in, peeled and chopped, and cooked the lot with sausages. I think it would be good without the meat, too, but you might add some caraway seeds while cooking.

I hope you enjoy your meal, sounds great! And sauerkraut has many health benefits -- salut!

MoJoRiSin 10-25-2009 07:23 PM

for a lovely /simple meal composed entirely of fermented foods mo recommends this ::
 
Hi Frieda :)

One thing that goes very nicely with sauerkraut is tempeh
just slice it and cook it with a bit of oil and a little soy sauce or salt
until it is nicely browned and serve with sauerkraut
..... the person that served this to me insisted
it goes really well with dark beer
not really sure about that :p

trisherina 11-29-2009 03:56 AM

I have a lot of pecans. I have a pie crust. I have corn syrup and vanilla. I would like to make pecan pie. If there were chocolate chips involved, I would be really interested.

priceyfatprude 12-01-2009 04:30 AM

You need eggs, sugar & butter...

priceyfatprude 12-01-2009 04:31 AM

Also if you have enough pecans, egg whites & cinnamon, you can make some yummy treats.

trisherina 12-01-2009 10:59 AM

Of course I have all those things! Now cough up a recipe. :cool:

brightpearl 12-01-2009 01:59 PM

My dad makes one similar to this one, without the bourbon, but it sounds like a nice addition:

Chocolate Chip Bourbon Pecan Pie
Courtesy of Michele's Pies in Nowalk, Conn.

1 10" piecrust
3 large eggs, room temperature
¾ cup sugar
1 ¼ cups dark corn syrup
½ tablespoon pure vanilla extract
1 tablespoons bourbon

3 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and kept warm
1 ½ cup chopped pecans
¾ cups semi-sweet chocolate chips

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350

Place the eggs, sugar, corn syrup, vanilla and Bourbon in a bowl and mix. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl at least two times while mixing. Add the warm butter. Mix well. Combine the pecans and chocolate chips and sprinkle them on the bottom of the pie shell. Pour the filling over the nuts and chips.

Place the pie on the baking sheet on the bottom shelf of the 350 degree oven and bake it for 30 minutes. The edges of the filling will rise, but the middle will still be a little bouncy. However, the pie will continue to bake after it is removed from the oven. To set up and have it firm enough to slice, give the pie 2 to 3 hours of cooling at room temperature, or a half hour of cooling at room temperature and an hour in the refrigerator.

trisherina 12-02-2009 02:30 AM

Interesting... thank you. I'd have to substitute Crown Royal...

brightpearl 05-25-2010 09:39 PM

Official recipe for U.S. Military grade Brownies
(abridged significantly from the original 26 pages)
3.2.5.3 Nuts, walnuts, shelled. Shelled walnut pieces shall be of the small piece size classification, shall be of a light color, and shall be U.S. No. 1 of the U.S. Standards for Shelled English Walnuts. A minimum of 90 percent, by weight, of the pieces shall pass through a 4/16-inch diameter round hole screen and not more than 1 percent, by weight, shall pass through a 2/16-inch diameter round hole screen. the shelled walnuts shall be coated with an approved food grade antioxidant and shall be of the latest season's crop.
3.2.6 Whole eggs, liquid or frozen. Whole eggs may be liquid or frozen and shall have been processed and labeled in accordance with the Regulations Governing the Inspection of Eggs and Egg Products (7 CFR Part 59). The whole eggs shall be egg whites and egg yolks in their natural proportions as broken directly from the shell eggs as evidenced by a USDA Egg Products Inspection Certificate. For liquid whole eggs, the USDA certificate shall state the date and time of pasteurization. Liquid whole eggs shall be held at a temperature of 400F or lower and shall be held for not more than 72 hours from the time of pasteurization until the start of formulation of the product in which they are used. Frozen whole eggs shall be held at 100F or lower and used within 120 days from the date of production. The whole eggs shall be free from off-odors and off-flavors, such as sulfide-like, fruity, sour, musty, or metallic, and shall be free from foreign materials.
3.2.7 Water. Water used for ice making, formulation, and washing shall conform to the National Primary Drinking Water Regulations.
3.2.8 Cocoa. Cocoa shall be natural process cocoa of the type known as medium fat cocoa.
3.2.15 Vitamins. Vitamin A shall be a refined concentrate of vitamin A ester (palmitate). When added to the chocolate or confections, it shall not impart a fishy or objectionable odor or flavor to the finished product. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) and thiamine hydrochloride, thiamine mononitrate, and pyridoxine hydrochloride shall be of Food Chemicals Codex grade.
3.2.16 Pregelatinized starch. Pregelatinized starch shall be derived from corn, tapioca, or any other farinaceous product. It shall be precooked and processed to produce a food grade thickener stabilizer of a white color and a powdery texture.
3.2.19 Fat. Vegetable fat for the chocolate coating shall be natural or hydrogenated coconut, palm kernel, babasu, tucum, or other high lauric acid oils or mixtures thereof, or a mixture of one or more of these which not more than 25 percent hydrogenated peanut oil or cottonseed oil, or both combined. The fats shall have a minimum stability of 100 hours when measured by the active oxygen method (AOM). They shall retain satisfactory odor, flavor, and color after heating to a temperature of 4000F. The free fatty acid content shall be not greater than 0.08 percent prior to the addition of an antioxidant mixture or 0.1 percent after the addition of antioxidant mixture A, B, C, D, or E specified in 3.2.19.1. The moisture and volatile matter shall not exceed 0.1 percent after the addition of antioxidant mixture A, B, C, D, or E. The fat shall be adequately protected against oxidative rancidity, at time of manufacture or by the processor, by the addition of 0.1 percent by weight of an antioxidant mixture specified in 3.2.19.1. The melting point and solid fat indices shall be as follows:
Wiley Melting Point:
1170F to 1190
Antioxidants shall comply with the Food Chemical Codex.
3.3 Brownie, oatmeal cookie and chocolate coating preparation and processing.
3.3.1 Brownie formula. The formula for the brownie shall be as follows:
Ingredient
Parts by weight
Sugar 1/ 23.0
Flour 2/ 21.0
Shortening 16.8
Nuts 3/ 16.0
whole eggs (liquid basis) 4/ 5/ 13.0
Cocoa 5.5
Dextrose, anhydrous 4.4
Salt .03
Chemical leavening
As required
Flavoring
Trace
1/ Powdered sugar may be substituted for part of the granulated sugar to control spread.
2/ Pregelatinized starch, malted barley flour, wheat gluten or any combination thereof may be substituted for a part of the flour to obtain proper dough consistency.
3/ Nuts shall be either almonds, pecans, or walnuts or any combination thereof.
4/ Frozen whole eggs shall be tempered/thawed and held at an internal temperature of 280F to 400F for not more than 24 hours prior to product preparation.
5/ Whole eggs, dried, may be substituted for whole eggs (liquid basis) by following the manufacturer's recommended rehydration and mixing procedures and shall have no less than the equivalent amount of whole egg solids as the liquid basis. The water shall be adjusted to ensure compliance with moisture requirements of the baked brownie prior to coating.
3.3.2 Brownie preparation. (NOTE: The contractor is not required to follow the exact procedure shown below provided that the brownies conform to all finished product requirements in 3.4.)
a. Whip eggs in large bowl on high speed until light and fluffy.
b. Combine sugars, cocoa, salt, and leavening; add to beaten eggs, and whip on high speed until thick.
c. Add shortening slowly while mixing on low speed.
d. Scrape bowl and whip on high speed until thick.
e. Mix flour, nuts, and flavors together and fold into batter; mix until uniform.
f. Pour batter into pan at a rate that will yield uncoated brownies which, when cut such as to meet the dimension requirements specified in 3.4f, will weigh approximately 35 grams each. (Experimentally, a panning rate of 14 to 16 grams per square inch was used.)
g. Bake at 3500F until done (30 to 45 minutes).
3.3.3 Brownie cutting. The brownies shall be cut to the appropriate size when cool (see 3.4f).
3.3.4 Brownie moisture content. The moisture content of the uncoated brownie shall be not more than 8.0 percent.
3.3.5 Brownie coating. The brownies shall be completely enrobed with a continuous uniform chocolate coating (see 3.2.14) in an amount which shall be not less than 29 percent by weight of the finished product.

MoJoRiSin 05-26-2010 09:27 PM

^ that made me chuckle far more than the
comic strip
come to think of it...
:)

brightpearl 06-27-2011 08:56 PM

New favorite recipe for Tomato Tart, could have eaten the whole thing myself.

crust:
1/2 c each all-purpose and soft white whole wheat flours
2 T butter cut into the flour, but leave some little lumps
2 T canola oil
pinch of salt
a few T ice water to make it come together...or just buy one.
Roll out, bake in a 10" tart pan at 400 degrees for 10 minutes.

Filling:
Roast some halved grape or cherry tomatoes at 225 degrees for a couple of hours, with some olive oil. Use about 1/2 c packed for this recipe, and eat the other ones on toast! They keep in the fridge really well.

Slice a whole red onion and saute on medium with a T of olive oil, 1 tsp balsamic vinegar, and 1/4 tsp vanilla extract (trust me).

Spread the onions and tomatoes in the tart shell, sprinkle with an ounce or two of shredded cheese (provolone, fontina, swiss...whatever).

Beat 2 eggs with 1/4 c of milk or half and half, 1/4 tsp salt, lots of cracked black pepper, and 1/2 tsp dried basil, and pour over.
Press filling down into the egg mixture a bit, and bake at 375 degrees for 20 minutes or until puffed and not jiggly. It's good hot or at room temp.

Really, really good.

Frieda 05-28-2012 08:19 AM

salad for hot days

(it has minerals and vitamins and things and who cares because it tastes good anyway)

cherry tomatoes
radishes
kiwi fruit
chopped fresh basil
pinch of salt

^ stick em in a bowl together and eat.

brightpearl 06-11-2012 02:42 PM

I cannot believe that it took me this long to find out you can do this...there are tons of recipes for it online. The butter flavoring in microwave popcorn is bad for the lungs, and all the fat and salt in it is bad for the heart, plus it is like 5 or 6 dollars a pound, but it's a bit of a hassle to pop it at home otherwise. UNTIL NOW.

Homemade Microwave Popcorn
1/4 to 1/2 cup of plain old popcorn
1 brown paper lunch sack
Optional - 1/2-1 tsp canola oil or butter, 1/4-1/2 tsp salt, or garlic salt, plus some black pepper if you like, or parmesan, or crumbled nori

Toss in the bag, fold over the top a couple of times, and microwave for 2 or 3 minutes, until there's only a pop every 2 seconds or so. Makes like 30 bags for a couple of bucks! And no popcorn lung!

I thought it might burst into flame or something, but I've had 3 bags in the last 24 hours, and so far it is only delicious delicious corny popcorn goodness.
:D :D :D

Frieda 06-11-2012 06:24 PM

Hassle to pop popcorn? Pan, oil, herbs & a metal sieve do the trick.. I'll try the paper bag for fun. I have to admit i like to wait for the first few ploinks, run to the pan in excitement and watch the rest go under the sieve.

brightpearl 06-11-2012 11:59 PM

^It's true, it's not that much of a hassle, but when I am in a snacky mood, I am impatient. :o And also the pan method is not something I could do at work.

Btw, I should have specified up there that unlike the salt and oil I don't think you can add the cheese or nori before popping...

Brynn 06-20-2012 12:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brightpearl (Post 431343)
I cannot believe that it took me this long to find out you can do this...
I thought it might burst into flame or something, but I've had 3 bags in the last 24 hours, and so far it is only delicious delicious corny popcorn goodness.
:D :D :D

I too just discovered I could do this a couple of months ago. To cut down on butter, I have an atomizer that will do lemon juice, so I spray it with that and a very light dusting of confectioner's sugar and salt.
Or I'll spray olive oil on it so the salt will stick. Oh my.

xfox 06-22-2012 12:20 AM

Blueberries. Rise and eat!

brightpearl 06-23-2012 11:10 PM

Lemon on popcorn!! Lemon is one of my very most favorite flavors -- I can't wait to try it. Thanks Brynn!

I sometimes add my own essential oils to home-made soap, and it's usually some mix of vanilla and lemon. I go around smelling like a snickerdoodle. It is not sexy, but I can't help myself.

This recipe for Chocolate Sorbet is vegan, and unbelievably chocolatey. I couldn't believe how smooth and rich it is when it's mostly water. I love it as it is, and it keeps a lovely soft texture even after several days in the freezer, but next time I am going to try it with some milk in place of the water.

Frieda 06-24-2012 07:01 AM

^
ooh that reminds me-- i recently melted a chocolate bar and added a whole bunch of chopped fresh mint leaves to it and smeared it on some chocolate cupcakes as a topping. it was awesome.

i bet if you let it harden in a bar and crush it, it's equally awesome as a sprinkles topping on that sorbet of yours

mmmMMMMMmmmm chocolate :)

Frieda 06-29-2012 03:59 PM

fresh fruit -> put in freezer

frozen fruit -> put in blender

add water

VRRRRRRRRRRRR

yum!

priceyfatprude 01-14-2018 11:27 PM

Frozen peas
Mayonnaise
Cracked black pepper
Cheese chunks, optional.

Mix. Eat.

brightpearl 02-22-2018 04:34 PM

Genius Kitchen brownies I made these with coconut oil instead of butter because that's what I had. Best non-boxed brownies ever -- and they're cocoa only, no mucking about with baking chocolate.

priceyfatprude 12-16-2018 07:10 PM

Peanut


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