Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Fred Sipe
Ultra geek
444
Thu Jul 13, 2006 11:34 am
Sunless Rust-Belt NE Ohio
Fred Sipe wrote:Love the fritattas. I'm a big fan of the Spanish Tortilla.
Tom NJ
That awful Tom fellow
1240
Fri Nov 20, 2009 9:06 pm
Northerm NJ, USA
Robin Garr wrote:I won't buy or eat industrial eggs now that better alternatives are easily available.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Fred Sipe
Ultra geek
444
Thu Jul 13, 2006 11:34 am
Sunless Rust-Belt NE Ohio
Tom NJ wrote:Robin Garr wrote:I won't buy or eat industrial eggs now that better alternatives are easily available.
This may elicit an astonished gasp, but: what's wrong with "industrial" eggs? Are they unhealthy? What makes the alternatives better? I'm asking out of ignorance here, as I cooked at nice restaurants for years where pallets of generic eggs were used to make - I thought - very high quality dishes. So that's what I continue to use at my home. Is there really an issue with them?
Tom NJ
That awful Tom fellow
1240
Fri Nov 20, 2009 9:06 pm
Northerm NJ, USA
Robin Garr wrote:One of the several reasons I've gone over mostly plant-based eating in recent years is that I simply don't trust the industrial food system much. Here's an article by New York Times columnist Mark Bittman that seems reasonably even-handed. It deals with poultry, but similar problems apply in the egg industry....
Tom NJ wrote:Robin Garr wrote:I won't buy or eat industrial eggs now that better alternatives are easily available.
This may elicit an astonished gasp, but: what's wrong with "industrial" eggs? Are they unhealthy? What makes the alternatives better? I'm asking out of ignorance here, as I cooked at nice restaurants for years where pallets of generic eggs were used to make - I thought - very high quality dishes. So that's what I continue to use at my home. Is there really an issue with them?
Frank Deis wrote:You have to kind of work to get the shell off an organic egg, it's thick and solid...
Frank Deis wrote:Not enough Calcium = malnutrition which is a point I was making. And I know Brown doesn't signify, but people who sell eggs have learned that consumers have expectations of brown eggs so a lot of the "organic" eggs sold happen to be brown. I buy white duck eggs at the Chinese market and LOVE them.
At any rate the subject of Persian cooking came up in a conversation and I realized I had never actually linked the Kuku or Kookoo to the concept of a Frittata. But it clearly is one of the best frittatas around. Thick, baked, we usually use a pyrex glass rectangular brownie pan. Some favorites are cauliflower kuku (I think kukuye ghole kolam), green bean kuku, kukuye sabzi or herb kuku with tons of parsley, cilantro, and other green herbs all painstakingly stripped clean of stems. This dish is a must at Persian New Year celebrations. And I think the green bean kuku basically transcends the ingredients, green beans have no business tasting as good as they do in that kuku!
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Thomas wrote:On the other side of the issue is taste and quality. Locally-produced eggs from chickens that have not been subjected to large-scale commercial feeding and handling are generally richer in color and depth of taste.
Jenise wrote:Thomas wrote:On the other side of the issue is taste and quality. Locally-produced eggs from chickens that have not been subjected to large-scale commercial feeding and handling are generally richer in color and depth of taste.
Not to mention flavor-robbing pasteurization.
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