JUst a thought

On 1/15/2011 6:51 PM, Ema Nymton wrote:


I had the same problem on the thread I started about trying to change
the foods I want to eat, or basically changing my eating in general. I
hope I didn't come off ungrateful for any of the MANY helpful
suggestions. I'm putting some of them to work tomorrow with a beef stew
with lima beans. I'm leaving out potatoes, and I really like potatoes.
I figure I could add them later if I find the stew is missing them. I'm
going to load it up with veggies. And try thickening it with cornstarch
instead of flour.
 
On Sat, 15 Jan 2011 14:11:18 -0600, Andy wrote:


Quick question - how do I keep "soup" out of the recipe results? I
tried "condensed soup", then plain old "soup" but neither worked for
me.

--

Carrot cake counts as a serving of vegetables.
 
I much prefer to play nice. Sad fact is, there will always be people who
think that they actually obtain happiness by being mean to others. It is
in empathizing with folks, who have only cats as "friends" and whose
expertise is self-proclaimed, that we gain a better understaing of the
human condition.

I can see what Dave Smith is saying, and I invite his knowledge of food
into my world. But, as Mr. Smith pointed out, the biggist critics on
here tend to wear their idiocy on their sleeves. Maybe I'm alone in
this, but the clutter they cause with their useless critiques is, though
worthless from a culinary perspective, priceless in terms of humor.

A child is a reflection of his/her parent, and all these extra coarse
folks are demonstrating what happens when losers procreate. Let nature
take its coarse and some will leave via suicide, or end up
institutionalized from the collective guilt and shame they have built up
in their, already vulnerable and wounded, psyches.

Let it be.




--
Gorio
 
'Ophelia[_7_ Wrote:

If you fake roux with half arrow, half pulverized mushrooms, you really
egt the mojo. This is the only use I have for powder from the giant
puffball.

Still, I purchased shiitakes and maitakes from dollar stores, further
dehydrate them and pulverize in a processor or spice grinder and use to
thicken tomato sauces, gravies, and other things that just need a little
bit of glue to hold them together.

Hen of the Woods is an ideal thickener. Must be VERY dry to pulverize,
though. They can get tough and will test your processor. Puff balls are
the easist to turn to powder. Not the quality of a "hen" or boletes, but
decent.




--
Gorio
 
On Mon, 17 Jan 2011 15:01:48 -0500, cshenk wrote:


but it's kind of the nature of the beast. you asked about beef stew, and
people will likely think about the way they like to make it. plus people
are not always the most careful of readers. and there's always the 'but
you haven't had wine-soaked beef stew the way *i* make it' factor.

beyond that, there are other readers of the group who aren't averse to
hearing about it. take it with a grain of pink himalayan salt.

your pal,
blake
 
On Mon, 17 Jan 2011 20:20:43 +0000 (UTC), Doug Freyburger wrote:


i've never had a problem with cornstarch clumping if it's mixed with a
little water first. (i use it mostly in chinese food). i couldn't justify
the expense of arrowroot, at least for that reason.

your pal,
blake
 
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 13:48:05 -0500, blake murphy
wrote:


That's the method to use with cornstarch! IMO arrowroot isn't
appropriate for Chinese food, because the end result isn't as glossy
or as clear as cornstarch.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
"blake murphy" wrote


Sure and I understand that. By the time the replies got 20 deep, no one
recalled I specifically asked for alcohol/wine free beef stew recipes.


As I did, replying to the useful posts and letting the others enjoy the ones
not useful to me with each other.
 
'sf[_9_ Wrote:

Agreed. I never said cornstarch was a pain at all. I have a little
shaker I use for it with water and it is easy to work with. When doing a
low-carb pseudo-roux, though, I like arrow root and mushroom powder.
Still, nothing better than a high fat roux made with flour and butter.
Some folks I cook for can't roll like dat. These folks don't go Asian
often at home; much as I love it.




--
Gorio
 
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 20:32:46 -0600, Omelet
wrote:


I've tried them all Om, and the result I look at is thickness. I
don't make pies close enough together to be able to say which is best.
I'm just left wondering how they did it when I eat a pie at a
restaurant and the juices are thick, glossy, clear etc, etc.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
'Omelet[_7_ Wrote:

I have acess to woods and spend a lot of time not finding anything at
times. You just rmemeber where you tend to see fungi and hope those
places will yield the sweeties you can eat. Hen of the woods is one of
those jackpot fungi, hwere you find nothing, nothing, nothing, then a 20
lber at the base of a tree.

After much searching, though, I know when and where boletes tend to show
up among other mushrooms. You have have to love learning about them as
much as eating them. never eat one you can't identify exactly. I paid a
dear price for this once. Live and learn.

I'm on my 18th year foraging and still prize that lucky monet when I
find a Hen. I can usually hit between 30 and 100lbs. of morels in any
given year ( I live in the unglaciated area of western Wisconsin, aka
Coulee Region, and morels are happy here.)

Sorry, ophelia "get the mojo" , i.e., "hit the jackpot." I apologize for
my poor editing. I have to post between classes of high school kids and
at lunch.

The wild field mushrooms I think you're talking about are agaricus
campestris (campe/o meaning "field" in Latin). Some call them "horse
mushrooms." I like the binomial, as there are so many different common
names. Or you may have dumped the agaricus bisporus spores from the
store boughts on your lawn. Just as good. These are great dried and
pulverized. They don't pulverize as easily as some, though. They tend to
get leathery when dry. Make sure they are super dry before you
process(pulverize) them. Perfect in gravies. The finer ground, the more
they emulate the thickening aspects of flour. When combined with arrow
root, though, you get a thickener with added flavor. Who could ask for
anything more. I think wine based sauces are also improved by this dust
as wine and mushrooms are forever friends.

Danger Will Robinson!! It is often difficult to easily distinguish these
two yummy agaricus mushrooms from the "destroying angel" aminatas which
will kill ya dead. EVERY mushroom must be identified. Be sure to remove
from the ground by the bottom of the stalk. If there is a ball and cup
configuration at the very base, walk away slowly and wash your hands
before handling any more. The deadly amanitas have a habit of being
right in the midst of edibles, and looking like them. Boring white, with
a vail. They tend to be brighter, white, though, with white spores. I
wish your liver a long and healthy life. Eat one of the killer amanitas
and you'll need it promptly replaced or you will surely die. You seem
nice, and I wish to converse with you for many a year to come.

I generally avoid mushrooms with white spores (aside from puff balls.)

P.S. at times even dehydrated ones from the store need a little more
drying for perfect pulverization. Dehydrators, I see, are fairly cheap
of late.




--
Gorio
 
Gorio wrote:



All humour is based on suffering, i prefer a kitchen less cluttered with
sadness and sorrow for myself.

While i am willing to concede that cooking shows are a lot like porn,
entertaining and some times educational, i prefer to be in the kitchen
cooking rather than watching others do it on t.v.

Hence the strategic deployment of "newsgroups filters" works wonders in
this metaphorical space which has to then suffer only the odd and
irrelevant junk mail it occasionally gets and which, immediately
identifiable as such, it is dealt with, unread, accordingly.


Suum Cuique.
--
JL
 
I much prefer to play nice. Sad fact is, there will always be people who
think that they actually obtain happiness by being mean to others. It is
in empathizing with folks, who have only cats as "friends" and whose
expertise is self-proclaimed, that we gain a better understaing of the
human condition.

I can see what Dave Smith is saying, and I invite his knowledge of food
into my world. But, as Mr. Smith pointed out, the biggist critics on
here tend to wear their idiocy on their sleeves. Maybe I'm alone in
this, but the clutter they cause with their useless critiques is, though
worthless from a culinary perspective, priceless in terms of humor.

A child is a reflection of his/her parent, and all these extra coarse
folks are demonstrating what happens when losers procreate. Let nature
take her course and some will leave via suicide, or end up
institutionalized from the collective guilt and shame they have built up
in their, already vulnerable and wounded, psyches.

Let it be.




--
Gorio
 
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