Re: Cooking
Posted by Gorbachev on
Tue May 11th 2004 at 2:32am
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Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Can't say I'm much of a muffin man. English muffins I enjoy, "generic" muffins aren't my thing.
Re: Cooking
Posted by fishy on
Tue May 11th 2004 at 8:16am
fishy
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TB, your recipe looks very muck like what my dad would have for his lunch a lot of the time. i think it was common for people of his generation to make the most of what food was available. and as there were usually potatoes left over from the night before, they would get mixed with whatever else was left over, and mashed up with some eggs and cheese to bind it all together. seasoning would depend on what was actually in 'the mix'. this would then be rolled into golfball sized bits, flattened out slightly, and shallow fried.
my dad had some very colourful lunches. :smile:
Re: Cooking
Posted by DesPlesda on
Tue May 11th 2004 at 9:24am
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Student Pasta (tm)
1. Boil water. Add 500g pasta.
2. When soft, drain water. Add bolognese sauce.
3. Serve.
I live on this stuff :biggrin:
Re: Cooking
Posted by scary_jeff on
Tue May 11th 2004 at 10:14am
Posted
2004-05-11 10:14am
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You eat 500g worth of pasta at once!?
Re: Cooking
Posted by DesPlesda on
Tue May 11th 2004 at 11:37am
Posted
2004-05-11 11:37am
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I don't eat it all at once :razz:
Re: Cooking
Posted by $loth on
Thu Sep 30th 2004 at 7:23pm
$loth
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I like typical italian style pasta, oil in pan, put in some chopped onions, add some garlic and tomatoes, them when it's nearly done add some herbs. My girlfriends mum makes pasta quite a bit, it's f**king nice.
Re: Cooking
Posted by Crono on
Thu Sep 30th 2004 at 8:03pm
Crono
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[Useless Post]
I know how to make a mean steak and pretty much anything on the grill. I recently learned (not really just tried some stuff out) how to make Americanized-Enghiladas; damn they were good.
By the way, my steak doesn't require a knife. Man, wish I had some right now.
Re: Cooking
Posted by Hugh on
Thu Sep 30th 2004 at 9:03pm
Hugh
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Location: Amerika
I don't cook without boiling water for the most part since there's nothing to eat here that couldn't use some good 'ol cauterization. I can make eggs and cheeseburgers but mostly I'm too lazy to bother. When my brother's home we make little pizzas that once caused us oral surgery because the cheese burned holes in our mouths. :smile: Good times.
Re: Cooking
Posted by JFry on
Thu Sep 30th 2004 at 11:40pm
Posted
2004-09-30 11:40pm
JFry
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Crono care to elaborate on the not needing a knife thing? Is it shredded or something? I usually just eat whatever finds its way into my mouth. Lots of fast food, but I try to eat salads and stuff whenever possible.
Re: Cooking
Posted by Gwil on
Fri Oct 1st 2004 at 12:14am
Posted
2004-10-01 12:14am
Gwil
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what so you eat only with a fork? or just grab and tear at it with your teeth!? bloody savage :razz:
uber tasty = pasta, cooked, then rechilled. add in flakes of
parmesan/cheddar cheese, sliced chunks of tomato (preferably vine
ripened), sliced red pepper (and green, for colour?) chunky tuna (in brine is the best IMO, make sure you don't
shred it too much getting out of the tin!)
bind together with a slosh of extra virgin olive oil, light
amount of mayonnaise, a smidge of white wine vinegar and cracked black
pepper, et voila - a quick and
efficient tuna/pepper/pasta salad. the "dressing" for any salad should
be just enough to coat and bind the ingredients togehter. if you have a
residue in the bottom, you have too much!
it helps to use the wee shells for things like this - also try varying,
or adding in some other ingredients. i like spring onions, chopped
finely or chunky wedges of cucumber :smile: i like it, anyway :biggrin:
or even easier - cook pasta, heat up tomato soup. serve pasta into
pre-warmed bowl (otherwise it'll go cold while you eat it, thats a good
food tip :wink: ), tip on the tomato soup. grate a crapload of preferred
cheese over the top and smother liberally with cracked black pepper.
tuck in and enjoy, real student food. experiment with
oregano/basil/mixed herbs cooked into the tomato soup as well, if you
have a taste for the italian flavours.
Re: Cooking
Posted by asterix_vader on
Fri Oct 1st 2004 at 1:23am
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what are you all talking about ? Snarkpit: Cooking Edition
cooking, eh? i can boil water too :biggrin: and fry some eggs or...
but my GF cooks for her parents, too, i can't cook for mine, i can't even cook rice :eek:
..whatever
Re: Cooking
Posted by Hugh on
Fri Oct 1st 2004 at 4:15am
Hugh
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Definitely no offense if I'm wrong but it just might mean old.
Re: Cooking
Posted by Crono on
Fri Oct 1st 2004 at 6:44am
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Mayo is actually salad dressing, it just isn't used much anymore for that purpose.
Re: Cooking
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Fri Oct 1st 2004 at 7:24am
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Occupation: Graduate Student (Ph.D)
Location: Seattle WA, USA
Spicy Italian Soup: aka the best damn soup in the universe:
1. Wash and chop four large potatoes and add them to a four quart pot with about two inches of water. Cover and set to boil.
2. Squeeze the meat out of 3-4 spicy Italian sausage and brown as if it was hamburger.
3. While that cooks, chop 1 onion and 3-4 stalks of celery. Set aside.
4. Drain the cooked sausage meat over paper towels and add to the pot with the potatoes.
5. Saut? the onion and celery in the left over sausage grease until tender crisp. Add this to the pot once the potatoes are soft.
6. Add to pot: salt, garlic, oregano, bezel, and parsley in whatever amounts seems good to you. (I never measure)
7. Finally, fill the pot up the rest of the way with 2% milk.
8. Let it sit near boiling for a good 30-45 min to let the flavors permeate the mixture.
Enjoy!
Note that the spiciness depends on the type of sausage you use. I suggest that if you can't get ahold of really hot sausages you should consider adding some chil peppers.