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Welcome to LW Cooking, a community for discussing all things related to food and cooking! We want this to be a place for members to feel safe to discuss and share everything they love about the culinary arts. Please feel free to take part and help our community grow!

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FORMAT:

[QUESTION] What are your favorite spices to use in soups?

Other Cooking Communities:

[email protected] - Lemmy.world's home for BBQ.

[email protected] - Showcasing your best culinary creations.

[email protected] - All things sous vide precision cooking.

[email protected] - Celebrating Korean cuisine!


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submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I received the Dishoom cookbook for Christmas, I'm trying the Daal first :/. They don't say if I should cover the Daal while cooking. It seems like it would be far too watery with a lid on. They even talk of adding water if it gets low.

Follow-up edit: mistakes were made but ok for a first try. I left it off and simmering for 1.5hrs but it was still pretty watery. I should have started with less water. Then I forgot the cream until after the first bowl... Oops. Thanks for all the tips!

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Any idea of what to serve this with. I'm thinking a simple tomato soup.

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This isn't your mother's cottage pie, this is an epic two and a half hour culinary quest to conjure the most tastiest comfort humanity has discovered so far.

The pie is layered with beef or veggie mince, then crispy onions soaked with garlic, tomato, and chilli puree, butter soaked mixed vegetables, slathered in a vegetable and red wine gravy, and topped with a cheesy and creamy smooth potato and carrot mash.

My aunt and uncle now lie in a food coma whilst I have shed a single solitary manly tear as I fear this might be my peak, though I will never stop climbing to greater heights of taste!

Title picture shows a large beef mince portion for myself and my uncle. The picture in the body text below shows a small meat-free portion for my aunt.

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the final product

this is the final product, really the best pasta I ever had.

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submitted 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I used Kenji López-Alt's recipe, but did it in my BGE and smoked it a bit. Here's the final product:

When I do this again, I would make two adjustments. One is that I'll cook it to an internal temp of 175F to make it more tender (Kenji's recipe called for 165 which I feel is too low). The other adjustment l'll make is to crisp/puff up the skin a different way. It was too difficult to crisp evenly using the rotisserie, so next time I may pour hot oil over it or take a Searzall to it instead.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Still not focaccia 😭

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I went to a cooking club meetup where we wanted to practice cooking on flame & coals for camping, and I brought this to make. It tasted better than it looks.

As it's a pretty simple dish, I wanted to get a few types of mushrooms to add some flavor variety, and used some oyster, trumpet, lion's mane, and miyatake. Sauteed them till most of the water came off, then added the coined leeks and chopped cabbage. Added a little broth, salt & pepper, and let it cook till the leeks were done.

I mentioned that I wanted to find a recipe that could accommodate vegetarians, and someone replied "this ain't no accommodation, it's good enough to be the main dish!"

High praise from a carnivore!

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I have both and wanted to see what difference there was (if any) between them.

Banana Bread w/ dried cranberries and black currants.

Same recipe, same measures in both.

Ceramic pan has a blonde interior, cast iron is black ceramic.

Baked at 350° for 30 minutes, rotated left to right and front to back, then 30 minutes more.

The ceramic baked slightly taller. This may be a function of the loaf pan being just slightly narrower than the cast iron. 5" vs. 5 1/8" (127 mm vs 130.175 mm)

I THINK I shared this recipe before, but I find the pan comparison interesting.

At the 30 minute mark I caught our two youngest cats sitting on the stove trying to figure out where the smells are coming from. LOL. Was not fast enough to get that picture!

INGREDIENTS for blackcurrant banana bread:

3 ripe bananas
60g melted butter (1/4 cup or 1/2 a stick)
150g sugar (2/3 cup)
200g unbleached flour (1 1/4 cups)
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 egg, beaten
1 teaspoon baking soda
150g of fresh or frozen blackcurrants (without defreezing before use) (1 1/2 cups)

PREPARATION of blackcurrant banana bread:

Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C)

If using dried cranberries or currents, soak them in cold water for 30 minutes, dry fruit sucks the moisture out of the bread otherwise).

Mash the bananas in a bowl

Add the egg and butter

Put all the dry ingredients together into a fine mesh sieve or sifter and sift into the bowl

Mix well with a wooden spoon

Bake in a buttered loaf pan until a toothpick stuck into the bread comes out clean, 55 to 60 minutes.

Slice and serve.

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I've been sous viding for years but I always struggle with the darn bags floating. I've tried spoons (what a joke, does nothing for me), magnets, clips. It doesn't matter if I'm cooking three pounds of meat or one little vegetable, my bags always want to float up at least enough that some portion of my cook isn't fully submerged. Others report success with these techniques, and I can usually rig something after several minutes of fussing but it's an ugly ordeal every time. What am I doing wrong? Any good videos of a technique that really works?

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Made by the missus.

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We grew the plant by accident, and while the usual harvest is just a handful at a time, they taste really fresh and great.

Edit: Thanks for the attention to this post. There's a lot of insistence that these are jalapenos and not bell peppers. They are in fact bell peppers, for the following reasons:

  1. They're sweet and not spicy.
  2. Jalapenos tend to have a more elongated shape.
  3. Green jalapenos tend to have a much brighter color.

I'm also in Southeast Asia so our pepper varieties are different.

Hope this helps!

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Does anyone have any good deep dish pizza recipes? Specifically for the crust? The craving has struck again for a Chicago deep dish and as there is no deep dish to be found in the land of flat crusts, I am in need of recipe suggestions.

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Starting at the beginning of 2023 I started to track every meal I cooked. I continued to do this in 2024. At the end of each year I looked back at everything j made and then ranked them all based on how they tasted to me. Here is the list of everything I made in 2024 and how each tasted to me:

What I made in 2024

If anyone wants recipes for anything in particular in the list let me know. For most of the meals I cooked I followed a recipe online.

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My first is this silicon spatula. It's construction isnt just a silicon tip with wooden handle. Its the red silicon for much more of the handle, which I've felt makes it easier to clean and last longer, since gunk isnt getting wedged between the handle and tip. I like it so much I have two.

The second is probably just a spray bottle with water and dish soap. I clean up messes and the stove and countertops with it, and it's incredibly convenient.

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Happy New Year!

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Should be tasty, filling, and have 5 or less ingredients, preferably easy to prepare.

Chicken Parmesean

INGREDIENTS

  • Chicken (burger) patties
  • Marinara
  • shredded cheese

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Bake patties at 420 for around 15-17 minutes on each side (flip and put back in, 30-35 minutes total)
  2. cut up patties into many bite-sized pieces
  3. Put pieces in mason jar and add shredded cheese and marinara and shake the hell out of it
  4. Eat out of mason jar with fork
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Hope this is allowed. I have fun writing stupid things on my breakfast food.

In an attempt to be a bit healthier, I started making egg white omelettes with spinach, parm, and ham. The sriracha art keeps me sane having the same-ish breakfasts each day 😂

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I love cooking, and most dishes I cook contain some kind of onions or garlic in varying amounts. Unfortunately, my partner doesn't handle them well, so I want to replace them as much as I can.

Leek is one decent alternative to onions, and I've recently discovered Asafoetida, a spice that creates an oniony flavor. But onions are also important for texture, especially in saucy dishes, and both leek and spices replace that poorly. Fennel works sometimes but alters the taste.

Garlic generally seems hard to replace, although I've had some success with only slightly squashing the cloves and fishing them out before serving.

Anyway, I'm looking for suggestions. Anybody know any good alternatives, any cool tips or tricks I could try?

Edit: To clarify, the issue is that my partner can't digest them properly and they cause pain (likely a mild food allergy). The flavor is not an issue, and we both enjoy the stuff that we cook apart from this issue.

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Hey all,

I've recently been working on purchasing more stuff made and grown here in Canada, and have been making changes to my diet to account for that. One product that has me curious that I've never had before is "sour cabbage", which can be bought in the produce section and is apparently grown the province over.

While I haven't bought it, I was wondering what some ideas are that I can make with it. Thanks in advance!

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hi, all; hope this is appropriate.

i was saddened to find out that yummly was killed off over the weekend even though it was one of my favourite places to find new recipes.

does anyone have any good replacements? especially which make it easy to search by cuisine or dietary type?

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This was a riff off of this recipe:

https://www.food.com/recipe/gordon-ramsays-sticky-lemon-chicken-301320

But I replaced the honey and lemon with yuzu cheong that I had made (pretty easy to find this in Korean stores labeled as citron tea). I also added in some chiles and zucchini.

The original recipe is pretty tasty and I'd recommend making it, but if you happen to have some yuzu cheong on hand it is even better IMHO.

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Tepache de Piña (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Making tepache out of the skin from the pineapple that I grew. I had to cut the recipe in half since my pineapple was tiny.

https://nourishedkitchen.com/tepache/

My pineapple: https://lemmy.world/post/23114989

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

2 cups (8.5 oz.) flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cardamom (optional)
2 cups buttermilk
3 egg yolks
3 egg whites beaten to soft peaks

Whisk together the flour, salt, baking soda and cardamom until well mixed.

Mix in the buttermilk and egg yolks and mix until smooth.

Fold in the egg whites.

Grease or spray an æbleskiver pan and heat over medium heat. When water sizzles, the pan is hot.

Fill each cup 2/3s full and cook for approximately 3 minutes until it expands slightly above the rim of the pan.

Using a skewer, turn them so the cooked side is on top and cook the other side about 3 minutes.

When an inserted skewer comes out clean, they're done, transfer to a wire sheet to cool.

Eat however you'd like pancakes. Cut them open, stuff them with butter and jam, sprinkle powdered sugar on top, syrup, whatever floats your boat.

Batter says it makes 35 to 40, I'm 21 in and there's still a LOT of batter left. edit Cooking #36 to 42 now and it looks like we'll get about 50(!) - Final count - 44(!)

Alternate recipe:

Fill each cup 1/3 full, add whatever filling you'd like, then the remaining 1/3 of batter. Turn and cook as normal.

Cardamom is not part of the orginal recipe, it's my secret ingredient for Swedish pancakes. ;)

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