Jeff Grossman/NYC wrote:Cynthia Wenslow wrote:Jeff, I just love your photos!
Thank you.
Those are just about the biggest pork chops I've ever seen. Er, WERE.
Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Jeff Grossman/NYC wrote:Cynthia Wenslow wrote:Jeff, I just love your photos!
Thank you.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Mike Bowlin wrote:Smoked sockeye salmon, cold sliced Fuji apple, cold sliced cucumber, dill and yogurt dip, pita garlic crackers, Billecart Salmon NV Brut Reserve.
Jenise wrote:Otto Nieminen wrote:Zanzibari fish and coconut soup. Which was nice.
What's a zanzibari fish--is it a particular type of fish or the name of a dish?
Otto Nieminen wrote:I meant that it is a fish and coconut soup that originates from Zanzibar. I used two fishes when I made it - Finnish salmon and Vietnamese Pangasius since I, of course, didn't have any of the typical Zanzibari fish species available here.
Robin Garr wrote:Otto, would you by any chance have a recipe - or even a description sufficient to back-engineer one? That sounds delicious and I'd like to try it. Well, probably not with Zanzibari fish species ...
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Ines Nyby wrote:My Dad is cooking for us. He says it will be slow-roasted pork belly, saurkraut and mashed potatoes. I'm to bring a salad, probably will be heirloom tomatoes with basil and a little goat cheese, since that's what I have on hand. Weird meal for this time of year, but hey, you can take the German out of Germany but you can't stop him from eating saurkraut in the summertime.
Otto Nieminen wrote:Sure. I work on the basis of this recipe (from some source that I've forgotten - sorry I can't give due credit )
Robin Garr wrote:Otto, it sounds delicious! And intriguingly, it seems to me to bear a considerable kinship to dishes of India's Malabar Coast, directly across the Indian Ocean from Zanzibar but a very long way ...
Cynthia Wenslow
Pizza Princess
5746
Mon Mar 27, 2006 9:32 pm
The Third Coast
That's cute. How was dinner? I hear everything Saturday went superbly. Wish we could have been there--did I tell you that I tried to get plane tickets about three weeks ago? I remember mentioning it to Annabelle but not sure I followed up with you, I'm so bad. We needed to arrive Saturday and leave Tuesday, and there weren't any affordable flights--Alaska had just announced a sale for Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, and the Saturday flights were gone in a nanosecond.
Jenise wrote:Mike Bowlin wrote:Smoked sockeye salmon, cold sliced Fuji apple, cold sliced cucumber, dill and yogurt dip, pita garlic crackers, Billecart Salmon NV Brut Reserve.
Yum! I'm planning to start the cure for your salmon recipe today. I may go ahead and do some via the brine method that has worked so well for me, too, for comparison. I had some questions that I'll address in your other thread, though. Btw, I cleaned Bellingham out of the remaining bottles of pre-rising Euro priced Billecart Salmon BR's in Bellingham last year, and have yet to open one. What am I waiting for?
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
TraciM wrote:I spent the day cooking for my trip--and my crew. So, I nibbled all day on corn and quinoa salad, a spinach and mushroom strata, and some zucchini, corn and bacon pasta. Kind of an in-house buffet!
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Gunther's so cute, I can just picture him cooking. He and I must drink tequila together again some time--his has no accent whatsoever when he drinks tequila.
Saturday sounded perfect--the bocce tournament and everything. Annabelle was so impressed with your food and so sorry that the things she would normally kill for (your terrine, for one) can't taste right to her at the moment. She oohed over your roasted tomatoes, though, which is good guidance on what might be appealing to her when they come up. Our garden toms should be at peak about then. Any favorites for you among the wines?
Carl Eppig
Our Maine man
4149
Tue Jun 13, 2006 1:38 pm
Middleton, NH, USA
Jenise wrote:Yum! I'm planning to start the cure for your salmon recipe today. I may go ahead and do some via the brine method that has worked so well for me, too, for comparison. I had some questions that I'll address in your other thread, though. Btw, I cleaned Bellingham out of the remaining bottles of pre-rising Euro priced Billecart Salmon BR's in Bellingham last year, and have yet to open one. What am I waiting for?
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Mike Bowlin wrote:Its Wednesday and we eat early dinner here. Dinner tonight:
Pasta alla Puttanesca con Vongole. Whores pasta with fresh wild razor clams served in a rich red gravy and a rather lackluster bottle of 2004 Dunham cab. Wont do a WTN because I did not like the wine well enough to find the high points. But the dinner was good and so was the Bocelli.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Jenise wrote:Can't say I loved any of the Beaujolais, even though we took care to keep them cool before tasting. Even my '03 Audras Julienas did not show well and that's one of my favorite bojo's ever. The cab francs fared better. I had a corked 2000 Del Dotto CF but was able to replace it with an identical bottle that was very good. Again, a good object lesson for those who couldn't detect the TCA in the flawed bottle (like Jim, he couldn't detect it at all, and it was stinky). BH of course hated it. He only liked the herbal Loire CF's. The votes were all over the place--most preferred the New World cab francs over the Old World, as could be expected in this group. Kriss brought a very interesting Italian Gamay which was one of my favorites in the bojo category.
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