The Deskthority Cooking Thread
- seebart
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Ah, that reminds me of my old "IBM 5155 monster".seebart wrote: ↑
Hey, I've got to try that. The chicken will probably catch on fire and I'll have to smash it through my window to avoid burning down the house.cookie wrote: ↑But just to come back on topic and actually contributing to this amazing thread, check out what my dad sent me... I salute his bossyness roasting chickens in front of his chimney
- seebart
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Don't try that.mr_a500 wrote: ↑Hey, I've got to try that. The chicken will probably catch on fire and I'll have to smash it through my window to avoid burning down the house.
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According to my dad it was just amazing, as you can see the chickens are in front of the fireplace so that they will be slowly cooked and no danger of burning.
If I had a chimney, I'd do this myself
If I had a chimney, I'd do this myself
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My roast chicken turns out OK in the oven...
...but I've noticed it's nowhere near as good as it used to be decades ago. The chickens themselves have changed. The skin used to be much thicker and crispier. I suspect that all this "low fat" nonsense has caused producers to breed huge lean birds with thin skins. (..that's my theory, anyway)
Last edited by mr_a500 on 09 Oct 2019, 20:00, edited 1 time in total.
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@mr_a500 I think you lack a chimney The picture is nice btw. I like it!
I've done some chicken with my gas grill, Hickory Smoke Box and water bowl. It was amazingly moist and tasty but I never had a nice crust.
I've done some chicken with my gas grill, Hickory Smoke Box and water bowl. It was amazingly moist and tasty but I never had a nice crust.
- seebart
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I would have thought you eat cookies all day.cookie wrote: ↑@mr_a500 I think you lack a chimney The picture is nice btw. I like it!
I've done some chicken with my gas grill, Hickory Smoke Box and water bowl. It was amazingly moist and tasty but I never had a nice crust.
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- vometia
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I like casseroles. Probably as they're quite easy: chuck stuff in big pot, chuck pot in oven, forget about it for a few hours, come back and eat tasty stuff. It's also a handy way of getting myself to eat some vegetables.mr_a500 wrote: ↑I don't understand the point of casserole either.
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I love casseroles. Pasta, potato vegetable variations you name it the options are great.vometia wrote: ↑I like casseroles. Probably as they're quite easy: chuck stuff in big pot, chuck pot in oven, forget about it for a few hours, come back and eat tasty stuff. It's also a handy way of getting myself to eat some vegetables.mr_a500 wrote: ↑I don't understand the point of casserole either.
- vometia
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Indeed. Today's is a lazy-arse curry using fairly typical ingredients that the big Le Creuset seems to like (today's are chicken thighs, onions, spring onions, carrots, stock, tinned tomatoes, bell peppers) and a jar of curry sauce, because sometimes life's too short to dry roast and grind a bunch of spices myself; and besides which, I'm not terribly skilled at doing it so the flavour balance is never quite right. I'm using a Loyd Grossman sauce, which I randomly like compared to the usual suspects I find in Sainsbury's. It's either balti or bhuna, I forget which. I suspect the former as the house doesn't particularly smell of fenugreek which seems to be a signature thing in his bhuna sauce.seebart wrote: ↑I love casseroles. Pasta, potato vegetable variations you name it the options are great.
I have been a bit lazy and unadventurous lately though, I basically use the same ingredients when I'm doing Random Casserole™ except if it's lamb it gets tomatoes and if it's chicken it gets white wine. And whatever else I find lying around that needs eating.
- vometia
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I love onions, though I'm less partial to raw onions. I used to be able to cut them with impunity thanks to my old contacts but my new permeable ones don't afford the same protection so I suffer the same as everyone else.
I still wish I could figure out the ingredients in the classic curry-house vindaloo: it's not a particularly complicated flavour but it's one I really like and something that's evaded my own experimentation and which the shop-bought stuff tastes nothing like.
One thing I've never particularly looked into is the flavour that chillies impart: easy to overlook when I'm using birds-eye chillies which just seem to taste of hot and nothing else, but when I think about Scotch Bonnets and their very fruity flavour and jalapeños which are definitely their own thing there could be something in it. I'm probably over-complicating the spice mix, though: I know it has cassia bark and star anise in it because I've found bits of them, but beyond that I'm stumped.
I still wish I could figure out the ingredients in the classic curry-house vindaloo: it's not a particularly complicated flavour but it's one I really like and something that's evaded my own experimentation and which the shop-bought stuff tastes nothing like.
One thing I've never particularly looked into is the flavour that chillies impart: easy to overlook when I'm using birds-eye chillies which just seem to taste of hot and nothing else, but when I think about Scotch Bonnets and their very fruity flavour and jalapeños which are definitely their own thing there could be something in it. I'm probably over-complicating the spice mix, though: I know it has cassia bark and star anise in it because I've found bits of them, but beyond that I'm stumped.
- seebart
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Sounds great I need to do more casseroles again with the hot weather we've been having here I'm more on a salad base right now.vometia wrote: ↑Indeed. Today's is a lazy-arse curry using fairly typical ingredients that the big Le Creuset seems to like (today's are chicken thighs, onions, spring onions, carrots, stock, tinned tomatoes, bell peppers) and a jar of curry sauce, because sometimes life's too short to dry roast and grind a bunch of spices myself; and besides which, I'm not terribly skilled at doing it so the flavour balance is never quite right. I'm using a Loyd Grossman sauce, which I randomly like compared to the usual suspects I find in Sainsbury's. It's either balti or bhuna, I forget which. I suspect the former as the house doesn't particularly smell of fenugreek which seems to be a signature thing in his bhuna sauce.seebart wrote: ↑I love casseroles. Pasta, potato vegetable variations you name it the options are great.
I have been a bit lazy and unadventurous lately though, I basically use the same ingredients when I'm doing Random Casserole™ except if it's lamb it gets tomatoes and if it's chicken it gets white wine. And whatever else I find lying around that needs eating.
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An Indian girl once gave me a recipe for home made vindaloo sauce, but it involved grinding up so many strange and unavailable spices, that I just gave up and went with the store bought stuff. (which comes from the UK, oddly enough)vometia wrote: ↑I still wish I could figure out the ingredients in the classic curry-house vindaloo: it's not a particularly complicated flavour but it's one I really like and something that's evaded my own experimentation and which the shop-bought stuff tastes nothing like.
(I use the paste, not the sauce)
Last edited by mr_a500 on 15 Jun 2017, 16:38, edited 1 time in total.
- seebart
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Yeah making your own curry's is pretty elaborate, the stuff I order is usually from the Netherlands.mr_a500 wrote: ↑An Indian girl once gave me a recipe for home made vindaloo sauce, but it involved grinding up so many strange and unavailable spices, that I just gave up and went with the store bought stuff. (which comes from the UK, oddly enough)vometia wrote: ↑I still wish I could figure out the ingredients in the classic curry-house vindaloo: it's not a particularly complicated flavour but it's one I really like and something that's evaded my own experimentation and which the shop-bought stuff tastes nothing like.
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Onions are the essence of life and you wan't to bomb them all? For what reason if I may ask?mr_a500 wrote: ↑I think onions are evil and should be wiped off the Earth using an aggressive bombing campaign.
I'm sure there are some onions in the vindaloo paste I use, but they've been boiled to death with so many spices that I can't tell.
If it's because you shoot tears out your eyes while cutting, then using a sharp knife will help.
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What? I don't care about tears. (I cry when I run out of pizza.)cookie wrote: ↑Onions are the essence of life and you wan't to bomb them all? For what reason if I may ask?
If it's because you shoot tears out your eyes while cutting, then using a sharp knife will help.
No, I hate the taste. It makes me sick. I first found out when I was young and somebody gave me a steak with onions on it. At the time, I loved steak, but this steak made me almost vomit. I couldn't figure out why until I realized it was the onions that made me want to puke. From then on, onions became my enemy. I'll kill them if they ever try to do that to me again! Those bastards!
Last edited by mr_a500 on 16 Jun 2017, 12:09, edited 1 time in total.
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I hope you did not use onions from the 70s and 80s ...mr_a500 wrote: ↑ I've already perfected 1950's rotary phones, 1960's lava lamps & reel to reel, 1970's portable B&W TV & tape, 1980's colour TV & VCR. Things after the 80's don't really interest me - except maybe watches. (...if they've got 60's or 70's styling)
Last edited by Slom on 16 Jun 2017, 12:06, edited 1 time in total.
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Generally fresh fruits and vegetables would be advisable slom !Slom wrote: ↑I hope you do not use onions from the 70s and 80s ...
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There seem to be a fair amount of controversial culinary vegetables; which given any amount of people in a room there's bound to be a few who have some contestation, they would be:mr_a500 wrote: ↑I think onions are evil and should be wiped off the Earth using an aggressive bombing campaign.
I'm sure there are some onions in the vindaloo paste I use, but they've been boiled to death with so many spices that I can't tell.
- Tomatoes
- Onions
- Pickles (Cucumber)
- Mushrooms
- Olives
*I really despite rhubarb and strawberry... I've always had rhubarb by itself in pastries and cakes traditionally, and I find the over-sugary strawberry flavour overpowers the awesome tart rhubarb. Oh well...
I'm okay with nice crunchy pickles, but I can't say I enjoy the ones in fast food burgers where you bite down on a soggy-sour piece of matter. Although Mr_A500 would highly discourage the consumption of fast food burgers (and yeah, I could rattle off all of the bad ingredients in them too, like tartrazine in the buns, BHT, sodium benzoate etc). Don't know what effects dimethylpolysiloxane has, but that's in many french fries for an anti-foaming agent.
Actually the worst thing about fried potato (like french fries) would be high concentration of acrylamides. Apparently both the phenomenon and affects of acrylamides aren't fully understood, however.
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In comparison to fried potatos it is proven that onions are healthy, in moderate quantities of course. None of those listed are "controversial culinary vegetables" IMO. Sure, too much of anything can get unhealthy. I love burgers and french fries, just not the ones from those well known FF chains.
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I mean 'controversial' for the palate of many people I knowseebart wrote: ↑In comparison to fried potatos it is proven that onions are healthy, in moderate quantities of course. None of those listed are "controversial culinary vegetables" IMO. Sure, too much of anything can get unhealthy. I love burgers and french fries, just not the ones from those well known FF chains.
- seebart
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Yes, that makes more sense. Again: in the right quantities not so "bad".micrex22 wrote: ↑I mean 'controversial' for the palate of many people I knowseebart wrote: ↑In comparison to fried potatos it is proven that onions are healthy, in moderate quantities of course. None of those listed are "controversial culinary vegetables" IMO. Sure, too much of anything can get unhealthy. I love burgers and french fries, just not the ones from those well known FF chains.