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File: 1712202686345.jpg (77.43 KB, 564x733, 992f676f338f2d5dfcd150d527f31a…)

No. 1949746

We have things we ate, things we're craving, but what about a general food thread? No ana-chan sperging please.

Possible discussion topics:
>Unpopular food opinions
>Cooking tips/advice
>Asking for dinner ideas
>Cuisines you enjoy/don't enjoy
>Food pet peeves

Picrel is a beetroot and goat's cheese terrine.

No. 1949757

File: 1712202879026.jpg (138.24 KB, 564x846, tofu.jpg)

I'll go first. I've been eating so much tofu lately. I don't eat meat and haven't for years, though I've always loved the taste and texture of tofu. I recently made mapo tofu for the first time and it turned out okay, but instead of cubing it I just put the tofu block in whole and broke it up after a short simmer which I regret because the chunks are all different sizes. Plus something about it just tasted….off. Not sure why, any tips for a good mapo tofu?

No. 1949772

There's a cooking thread on /g/

No. 1949773

>>1949772
sure but this is a FOOD general, not just cooking.

No. 1949885

Fuck yes! You made this about an hour after I was wishing this existed (and not making it because I expected it would be called shit thread and never replied to again…)
I hope this gets more traffic than the /g/ thread.

No. 1949888

>>1949757
Cannot give advice but ugh mapo tofu is my weakness as well and I don't even like Chinese dishes in general

No. 1949902

>>1949757
I enjoy mapo tofu a lot, but haven’t cooked it in a long while. I think cubing the tofu equally would help with even cooking of the tofu and sauce absorption, so maybe it’ll taste more uniform in flavor and texture. Also, if you can get fresh green onion to garnish, it adds a lot.

No. 1949909

I like this thread idea. As a fatty I'm spamming the things you ate thread too much kekk. I just like cooking nice food.

>>1949757
This looks so good, I'm always on the lookout for good vegetarian meals. Can anyone recommend a recipe?

No. 1950344

File: 1712247921201.jpg (247.49 KB, 1200x1500, Ramen-Eggs-Ajitama-Recipe-Take…)

I used to be unable to stomach eggs, gagged from just the smell of them, but I didn't like missing out on so much (especially if one day I get to visit japan for ramen tourism) so I've been trying to teach myself to enjoy them and just a moment ago I finally succeeded. Next step is ramen eggs.

No. 1950351

>>1950344
Same here, ate a boiled egg for the first time in a decade last week and I can’t keep myself away from them now

No. 1950356

>>1949757
If you like that kind of meatier texture from tofu, I always suggest draining it, pressing, cubing, and then freezing. If you freeze the tofu overnight, the texture becomes a lot more similar to meat and I usually prefer using that type for frying.

No. 1950415

>>1949746
does anybody else find that organic produce tastes a lot better than the non-organic/conventional variety??
Anyway, I'm going to Whole Foods tonight and I'm really excited. I want to branch out in the salty-acidic-spicy flavor domain… if you guys have any recommendations PLEEEEASE PLEASE give them to me I fucking love Whole Foods

No. 1950544

File: 1712256430383.jpeg (160.03 KB, 564x1221, fd944d3088ad65ddb2ca87ca2928ef…)

>>1950415
>>1949746
Love this thread photo, it was in my recipe book!
My suggestion for nona going to branch out into spicy at Whole Foods is to buy fresh veggies + one fruit to star in an amazing salsa-mango-avocado salad. You can add tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, avocado, mango, spicy salsa (premixed), bell peppers, cilantro, lettuce, and leave a few slices of spicy peppers in a separate bowl. Spicy mango salsa with shrimp and avocado is delicious and involves a lot of chopping and cutting fruits and veggies, which is relaxing in my opinion.

No. 1950552

>>1950415
Why? It's just a grocery store that doesn't really have anything different than any other avg grocery store these days. Maybe slightly more pretentious or diet-specific special offerings (like keto shit). If you want organic produce that isn't flown in from Mexico by Amazon (owner of WF), go to your local farmers market.

No. 1950585

File: 1712258252779.jpeg (109.45 KB, 800x800, IMG_9034.jpeg)

i’m in love with vegetables lately. i am now obessed with kimchi. i had kimchi fried rice a while ago at a restaurant and loved it. i looked up the recipe and it was suprisingly quick and easy. i just gotta buy the kimchi and i’m set. i reccomend anons to try and make it yourself.

No. 1950922

File: 1712272963166.jpg (85.63 KB, 564x564, 7d2186146fc3fb77f666b54faa5a65…)

>>1950415
The one organic product I'll never skimp on is canned chickpeas, funnily enough. They just tend to be so much juicier and larger than non-organic.

>>1950585
Yes I've been obsessed with kimchi lately too! Did you find you tried it a while back and hated it, but have since come around? Idk why I ever disliked it, the taste is delish and I really want to try it in a cheese toastie. I weirdly feel like cheddar would go but my bf says a softer one might be better.

No. 1950935

File: 1712273347480.jpeg (105.67 KB, 1200x1200, IMG_7542.jpeg)

>>1949746
i've been obsessed with tteobokki recently and I wanna it more this weekend!!

No. 1951482

>>1950935
Ahh I need to make tteokbokki again! I'm lazy so I just use a ready made sauce but still, it's so good. I love adding vegetables and boiled eggs to mine

No. 1951491

Had chicken instead of sausage for the first time in a long while and I love it so much.

No. 1952371

File: 1712352784228.png (5.19 MB, 2048x2048, 1000016580.png)

I want to create a beautiful condensed milk-based sago/Buko Pandan/other fruit and jelly dessert soup. Especially with mango.

No. 1952384

>>1952371
This makes me so uneasy. I think you can this liminal food.

No. 1952386

I had some cereal, but now I kind of want something salty. Do you ever wonder why is this cycle of sweet->salty->sweet->salty just so annoying? I usually just break it the moment I begin craving the other flavor by drinking water and brushing my teeth, but it annoys me how my brain just isn't strong enough to not even think of that.

No. 1952389

>>1952371
make mango pomelo sago! it's my favorite, the sweet mango and tart pomelo are super refreshing. it's also delicious frozen. i had it a lot as a child.

No. 1952431

>>1952386
Is that a thing? I normally eat savoury foods but just enjoy a little sweet treat for myself every so often

No. 1952508

>>1952386
i suffer from this constantly, i hate it so much.

No. 1952552

Sorry but the thing in the OP pic looks absolutely disgusting. Beets and aspic are nasty by themselves and worse together.

No. 1952631

>>1952552
the food threads always have digusting op pics, first that weird cheese thing and now this. why can't it be something normal like a crepe or whatever.

No. 1952657

File: 1712365449363.jpg (21.09 KB, 474x345, beef ribs.jpg)

Something I've been enjoying recently is organic untrimmed beef ribs. Just rub seasoning on them or marinate them and then slowly post roast them with lard in a cast dutch oven. I love that they're so fatty and dripping with grease, perfect for a cheap low carb meal.

No. 1952669

File: 1712366264546.jpg (129.32 KB, 564x844, d2d037e2dd6044643ac6a3e3c6d1bc…)

>>1952552
Beets are delicious anon, sorry you're not on my level. Beets and goats cheese too, great match. When they're in season they do great in a salad with pearl barley, herbs, and nuts.

No. 1952796

>>1952384
Is it the weird low-contrast lighting?

No. 1952801

I've been eating so much salmon lately. I love it so much.

No. 1952857

>>1950356
Don't do this for mapo tofu, or any dish involving silken tofu for that matter. The freezing process for textural benefits only applies to certain cases with firmer tofu.

No. 1956446

File: 1712619613208.png (6.19 MB, 2236x2236, Smokes-Sugar-1.png)

My dad is visiting and bringing his smoker, and we're going to smoke some meats, and some pantry items like rice and garlic and salt. Maybe brown sugar or flour, too.

No. 1956669

>>1952801
I would love to eat it more though but recently it’s been insanely expensive.

No. 1957941

File: 1712740433730.jpg (182.21 KB, 1200x1800, vietnamese-summer-rolls-with-c…)

I fucking L O V E summer rolls, I eat them like every week. They are so good, my favourite dish ever. I put crunchy veggies, mint and coriander, crispy tofu and slightly spicy peanut sauce, and sometimes fried egg on mine. I usually skip the noodles though.

No. 1958019

>>1950344
My god that looks delicious
>>1950344
On a similar note, does anyone have non-breakfast dishes they like that incorporate multiple eggs? I now have to eat them regularly for health reasons and it's been a struggle.

No. 1958173

File: 1712758999010.jpg (364.15 KB, 1200x1600, FullSizeRender 7.jpg)

>>1958019
oyakodon, chinese steamed eggs, custard, shakshuka (not sure if this is breakfast or not…) hope you're in good health nonna!

No. 1958190

File: 1712760102611.webp (18.14 KB, 320x320, Savory2BDutch2BBaby.jpg.webp)

>>1958019
Dutch babies! I love savoury ones but you can make them sweet too.
>Preheat oven to 425 with a buttered cast iron pan inside (butter will melt but not burn so long as you don't let it heat longer than the preheat)
>4 Eggs
>2/3 cups flour
>2/3 cups milk
Blend/whisk (I use a small blender cause it's easy)
Mix in spices if wanted (salt, pepper, nutmeg, sugar if making sweet version)
>Add egg mixture to pan once heated and bake for 13 minutes.
Add toppings of choice like cheese or frozen fruit if sweet
>Bake 8-10 more minutes until it looks golden
They're super light and fluffy so 4 eggs shouldn't feel like too much.
https://www.butteredsideupblog.com/wprm_print/3944 here's the base recipe I follow but change based on my toppings

No. 1958469

>>1958173
>>1958190
This is great inspiration- thanks nonnies!

No. 1958538

>>1957941
You inspired me to meal prep some summer rolls tomorrow. I always forget how much I love them.

>>1949757
This probably sounds super obvious, but make sure you're tasting sauce as you put it together. Between every ingredient check if you like how it's coming along so you know exactly where things go wrong. I'm a mapo tofu lover myself, and the biggest thing that improved mine was finding a brand of black bean paste and a chili oil I really liked (the first ones I bought had weird metallic aftertastes). You may also find that you like a version of the dish that's really different from standard recipes. Honestly all you need is something something spicy, something savory, and something a bit sour. And tofu.

No. 1958543

File: 1712781585154.jpg (5.57 MB, 4032x2268, 20240410_173837.jpg)

Found this in the supermarket, what's the best way to cook it?(baiting)

No. 1958565

>>1958543
Ummmm nona that's a gato.

No. 1958601

File: 1712784586132.jpeg (48.61 KB, 640x480, images - 2024-04-10T181742.835…)

>>1958565
> Gato
NTA, but where are you from? If you are brazilian, "espetinho de gato" is a famous dish from our cuisine… /j or not

No. 1958914

I hate anything with cauliflower. Nothing makes it taste good. It's the worst vegetable.

No. 1958916

>>1958019
Gyeranjjim and gyeranmari are both easy (gyeranjjim can even be done in the microwave) and I do them whenever I need a quick side dish or need to use up a bunch of eggs before they go bad.

No. 1958918

File: 1712817574935.jpg (41.33 KB, 317x400, beetmash.jpg)

>>1958543
Mush him up like mashed potatoes

No. 1958934

Sounds weird, but try miso mixed with greek yogurt as a dip for veggies, it's really good. I know miso mayo is already popular in Japan, but I sub in yogurt where I can and this one works.

No. 1958971

>>1957941
being a southern hemisphere anon and watching food content slowly find its way into more summery foods is so annoying because I'm merging into soup/stew season and i need decent inspiration.

No. 1959242

I love poaching eggs. Serve them over fiber bread, everything seasoning and tomato slices. Enjoyed with a latte.

No. 1959613

>>1952669
Sure, little pieces of beets as a salad topping are fine. But a literal brick of beets held together with aspic? You're out of your mind.

No. 1963355

I'm making sloppy joes tonight and probably have for lunch this week. What sides should I make with it?

No. 1964589

File: 1713176202305.jpg (221.13 KB, 736x981, 1000000181.jpg)

Last year I ate an Eritrean meal at a festival which consisted of two different vegetable, legume and potato stews and injera. I still dream of it.

No. 1965432

File: 1713219422455.webp (78.72 KB, 1200x799, IMG_6905.webp)

Alrighty nonnas, sharing a recipe I just made on the fly
3 eggs, tomato, basil (fresh), turmeric, onion and garlic powder, red pepper flakes.
Blend that shit up, throw it in the pan.
Second pan, tortilla, mozz, parm, some turkey pepperoni. Get it warm. Add eggs, fold into burrito, and grill both sides to get nice n crispy.
MmmmmmmHMMMMM BON APPETITE

No. 1965557

File: 1713229126628.jpg (20.6 KB, 356x337, buttermints.jpg)

I could eat a whole bowl of these like cereal

No. 1966607

>>1963355
Make a slaw, it'll keep well between now and the weekend as well as add nutritional content to your meal.

No. 1966632

>>1965557
omg what are these

No. 1966682

>>1966632
I don't know what OP calls them, but around here they're called butter mints.

No. 1966924

>>1965557
same!
>>1966632
They are called 'dinner mints' or 'after dinner mints' in America.

No. 1966927

>>1966632
I call them table mints bc they're only ever sitting out on tables

No. 1967352

File: 1713361151524.gif (10.81 KB, 31x41, fruit.gif)

i'm eating a big piece of mango, a big apple and a cup of blueberry mixed with strawberry smoothie

No. 1967822

File: 1713378891957.jpg (74.7 KB, 1200x1200, image.jpg)

Any other tempeh enjoyers here with recipes or dishes they like? I usually make them in a stir fry, then serve it over noodles with peanut sauce on top, but I need to expand my repertoire.

No. 1967827

>>1967822
I've been too scared to try it, but the way you make it sounds nice! I might have to buy some next time I'm at the Asian supermarket

No. 1967902

>>1967827
It's intimidating, but it's incredible with certain flavors (e.g. peanuts, sweet potatoes, doubanjiang). The quality/flavor can vary wildly by brand, so it might be worth looking up reviews for whatever you find at the grocery store.

My stir fry recipe (serves 2) is:
>1 block tempeh
>1/2 hispa or 1/3-1/4 regular cabbage, thinly sliced (can sub with another green vegetable prepared to your liking)
>1 small-medium carrot, thinly sliced
>1 spring onion, white part diced + green part sliced into rounds
>about an inch or two of minced ginger (can swap with powdered without a big hit to quality)
>oyster sauce to taste
>low sodium soy sauce to taste
>ginger powder to taste
>worchestershire sauce to taste
>2 bundles/packets noodles (I swap between soba, udon, and straight ramen)
Sauce (everything to taste):
>low sodium soy sauce
>sesame oil
>quality maple syrup
>gochugaru
>a bit of powdered ginger (optional)
>peanut butter or that peanut protein powder stuff
>a tiny bit of lime juice or rice vinegar (optional)
Steps:
>1. combine the ingredients for the sauce and adjust until it tastes good, then set aside. add a bit of water if it's too thick
>2. boil water for noodles
>3. sauté vegetables in normal stir fry fashion. crumble in tempeh as everything's cooking.
>4. once the cabbage and carrot starts getting a little bit soft, add the oyster sauce, soy sauce, worchestershire sauce, and garlic powder, then stir it in. cover the pan and put the heat on low. I eyeball and adjust the proportions of the sauce ingredients + garlic powder and it always turns out well, just don't go overboard in the beginning and add incrementally if you taste test and the food's not salty/flavorful enough
>5. cook noodles according to package, drain, and divide into bowls
>6. add stir fry to the top of the noodles, then add peanut sauce
>7. garnish with spring onion rounds (I also add furikake and it tastes great; if you don't have it you can also add sesame seeds)

If you get a variety of tempeh that's pungent, you can simmer it for 20 mins to remove the flavor. The ones that crumble easily are better breaking into small pieces and crisping a bit, so you might need to cook them first or separately from the noodles, while ime the less crumbly kind is fine more or less steaming in a bed of veggies. Vegan places often serve small batch tempeh, which might be worth trying before taking a risk with store brand quality. I know LightLife is common in at least parts of the US and is pungent and crumbly so probably not the greatest for a tempeh beginner. This post makes me look like a tempeh autist.

No. 1967923

>>1967902
'ginger powder' in the recipe list should be 'garlic powder'.

No. 1968877

File: 1713437889156.jpg (2.45 MB, 4080x3072, IMG_20240410_074732724.jpg)

Getting a zojirushi rice cooker and an air fryer has totally changed my eating. I also discovered weee! and have been buying so much Asian food. Picrel a mont blanc chestnut cake or something, which is the best thing I've ever eaten. Chocolate churro turtle chips are also the best crunchy sweet snack ever.

No. 1975454

My bf is a head chef at a restaurant, and brought home a WHOLE 10lb ham thats was a mispick in their order… so im gonna be freezing most of it.
Tonight, I am making a Ham Lentil soup!
I broiled tomatoes, carrots, garlic, onion and puréed it, tossed into slowcooker.
Lentils, ham, curry paste, broth, some herbage. Some coconut milk.
Then I made a Brazilian limeade, but with some leftover coconut milk added.
After dinner- I am baking banana bread and freezing leftover buttermilk in icecube trays, so I can use the rest over time.

Anyone else have any ham- related dishes I should make?

No. 1975521

File: 1713825460560.jpg (177.71 KB, 800x1200, Japanese-Macaroni-Salad-4525-I…)

>>1975454
I like buying big pieces of ham for cheap and freezing it so I always have some conveniently available, like you've done.
Soup is really the best and most convenient way to go but it's great in simmered bean dishes as well to add flavor and texture variety. Very convenient to make a large batch of that and rice so that you have something quick throughout the week.
I also like to use it as the protein in kimchi fried rice instead of the more common spam, works just as well and is marginally better for you kek. The flavor is sort of strong so I wouldn't recommend using it in other types of fried rice, though.
You can also use it in Asian-style macaroni salad (Japanese, Korean, Hawaiian all work). I sub it in instead of the sliced deli type ham they often use and it keeps well for a snack or side. Haven't personally tried it, but thinking about it, it'd probably also work well in potato salads from those same cuisines since the main difference between that and the mac salads is the carb involved.
Let me know if you come across other good uses yourself!

No. 1975636

>>1975521
Such great ideas, thanks! I love the ham fried rice idea!
Some other ideas I found:
>ham and shredded brussel sprout hash
>ham Shepards pie
>ham broth
>make ahead breakfast sandwiches
>collard greens and ham
>creamy baked gnocchi with ham and peas

Do you recommend any kimchi ? I get so overwhelmed with all the options. I also want to soy cure yolks!

No. 1975649

File: 1713831799369.jpeg (133.66 KB, 1280x910, croak!.jpeg)

Every grilled cheese is amazing but croque monsieur is the pique of grilled cheese

No. 1975716

>>1975636
Oh, these are great, thank you! I'm ashamed to admit that using the ham for breakfast items never occurred to me? LOL I'll definitely be trying these.
For kimchi, the selection will usually change depending on what market you're at, but if you have an H mart near you there are a lot of articles online breaking down what's the best! Personally, I tend to buy either Pulmuone or Jongga just because they're on sale often and it works just fine for me. The random grocery store brand I've bought have also always been good as long as I buy from a Korean brand. My only tip is that you should leave the jar out at room temperature for a day or two to ferment further once you buy it, especially if you're planning to mostly use it as an ingredient. Good luck!

No. 1975717

File: 1713835365987.jpg (178.32 KB, 1000x1000, turtle_injeolmi.jpg)

>>1968877
>Chocolate churro turtle chips
Turtle chips are seriously the best Asian chip to have come out in the past few years, that texture is addicting. Picrel is my favorite, I love hunting for the most powdered up chip.

No. 1975814

>>1975716
Thanks nonna! I’ll look out for those brands!

No. 1979211

Tried to make a quick pasta but only with tomato sauce (and some other minced veggies) + wanted to minimize dishes so I cooked macaroni in the sauce and I ended up with something very Spaghetti-Os adjacent but rather good. Better than the real thing at least. Win.

No. 1979352

File: 1714034066811.jpg (1.35 MB, 2500x3334, 1000024928.jpg)

I've craving a really good salad and I'm bored with my usual … everything. Anyone have good recipes? Cold, hot, whatever. No meat/fish, please. (Dairy & eggs fine.) I live alone so I kind of have to plan out how to consume all the perishable vegetables used in salad before they go bad. This tempts me to go buy delicious salads & not make them but I am being so good about saving money and that's what I need to do right now until I am out of this temporary break in paid employment.
I have many delicious salad places near my apt & uni. So I face temptation every day, nonas! please give me awesome salad recipes I can make at home.

No. 1979384

>>1979352
I really like red beetroot, goat cheese, baby spinach, walnuts, olive oil, balsamico and pepper.

No. 1979394

File: 1714037197867.jpg (186.4 KB, 1920x1280, Bowl-of-che-dau-den-and-coconu…)

Do you cook with black beans? What dishes do you like? I'm tired of lentils and I've read that black beans are very nutritious too so I just bought 1kg of dry bleack beans at a local shop.

No. 1979398

>>1979394
They make you fart

No. 1979407

>>1979398
I love farting

No. 1980199

>>1979394
Black beans are my default beans. Anything in the relam of tacos and burritos I use. I usually make them with vegetable stock and either boil or cook, if using the canned type, with chipotle and garlic, sometimes lime juice. Oven baked taquitos with refried black beans with salsa and rice on the side. Good in chilis and curry too. And they're perfect for making brownies. Weird to think but my black bean brownies always end up delicious.

No. 1980287

>>1979384
thanks, bought everything but the beetroot today - didn't find that. Might sub in another vegetable or some figs.

No. 1980614

File: 1714125201194.jpg (2.59 MB, 4080x3072, IMG_20240424_125730348_HDR.jpg)

I made this and I'm very proud of it. Fried rice with chicken and yum yum sauce. It was so fucking good.

No. 1982356

File: 1714248453240.jpg (35.26 KB, 550x550, 2021-Black-Soybeans-Dry-Roaste…)

If I can't find dried soybeans, does roasted edamame have a comparable texture and taste? I'm vaguely trying to recreate laoganma brand but loaded with crunchy soybeans. They use black soybeans which apparently have more umami flavor, but I can't get those where I live.

No. 1982360

>>1982356
Is there any reason you don't want to order them online?

No. 1982401

>>1980614
that looks amazing, idk what yumyum sauce is but I need it

No. 1982408

>>1982401
Omg anon tysm I have been waiting to be acknowledged.
Yum yum sauce is the white sauce they serve at hibachi places. It's like 1 cup of Kewpie (must be Kewpie) mayo, 1 tbsp butter, 1 tbsp ketchup, a splash of mirin, a few tsp of onion and garlic powder and a few shakes of paprika. Mix it and refrigerate so it melds, then thin it slowly with water/mixing until it's the consistency you want. I don't actually measure anything though so adjust to your taste. You'll love it.

No. 1982860

File: 1714271389053.jpg (200.46 KB, 1024x769, Salted-duck-eggs-1-month-updat…)

Salted duck eggs, wow! I'm still on the egg quest and I'd love some suggestions!

No. 1982873

>>1982356
No, not really. Even though they're the same bean, dried cooked soybeans taste very different from edamame in my experience and the texture is different. But I've never fermented soy beans for a sauce so I don't know if they turn out the same for that… is that what you're trying to do? the black beans in their jarred stuff is fermented.

No. 1982881

>>1982873
Not the fermented one (I actually tried it for the first time a few minutes ago), I meant the crunchy black soybeans in their chili sauce. I checked at my local asian market and they don't have black soybeans either. They do have soybeans though, I might come back later.

No. 1982984

>>1979394
Black bean soup is one of the easier soups to make so I always keep a can of them in my pantry.
>>1982356
Is there a reason you can't buy online? They're so common in east asian cooking that it shouldn't be hard to find a trustworthy seller at a reasonable price.

No. 1982988

File: 1714287428589.jpg (298.44 KB, 1200x800, 5afb423d30006c50c57a4106-633e4…)

>>1979352
"Patatas bravas" salad I used to fall back on in college:
>Dressing is basic "aioli" made of minced garlic, mayo, acid. Optional: spices like smoked paprika or cumin
>Components are leafy greens (arugula is my favorite), halved small tomatos (like cherry or grape) and pan fried diced potatos. Optional: nuts or crumbled feta
It's a flavorful and filling salad with an affordable base that's really easy to soup up if you have wiggle room in the budget. Picrel is a loaded ver of it.

No. 1983038

>>1982988
omg nona I will definitely try this out. Thanks! I always forget about potatoes when I'm thinking about salads. This looks great.

No. 1983057

File: 1714296356089.webp (131.74 KB, 894x947, 81RsS2LspoL._AC_UF894,1000_QL8…)

>>1979352
Sometimes I make a big mac salad chop salad. Preferred greens, halved cherry tomatoes, diced baby cucumbers, diced onion, diced pickle, garlic croutons, a cut up cheeseburger patty, and thousand island dressing.
This kitchen gadget upped my salad intake.

No. 1983066

>>1983057
I bought one of these for my ex as a gift (he hated cutting onions) and he cut himself a hundred times on it. I had to hide my laughter when it was bad enough for him to go to the walk-in clinic. I need to get my own chopper now.

Anyway that sounds interesting, I'd definitely try this but probably with minimal red onion.

No. 1983493

I LOVE LIVER I LOVE MEAT

No. 1983500

>>1983066
How do you cut yourself on this kek is he retarded
>>1983493
Based! I always eat liver on my period. Feels right somehow

No. 1983529

>>1979398
You're gassy because you don't have enough fiber in your diet so your body isn't equipped to process the beans. Skill issue.

No. 1983549

>>1983500
liver is high in iron which you're losing on your period so maybe you're subconciously craving it

No. 1983568

>>1983500
yes he never used the safety guards or read how to do anything. It was extremely funny.

No. 1983871

>>1983057
Super convenient for making shirazi salad as well, which is cheap and utilizable in a lot of other meals either as a topping or side salad to up the nutritional value.

No. 1985300

>>1964589
I LOVE ethopian food and it doesn't get nearly enough attention. African food in general is so spiced and tasty and full of all sorts of things you don't even hear about in western countries. We often discount the affect colonialism had on making western food as bland and boring as it is, with a reliance on the ~quality~ over the flavours and spices. I recommend doing some reading up on why French cuisine is so revered as the "height" of modern cuisine, why food in the UK is so bland despite it being a big part of the spice trade. Don't have an immediate source but essentially as spices became more mainstream and affordable to the average person rich people did a 180 and said spices were used to flavour foods that are bad quality (i.e. cheap meats and things poor people eat). And that's why today we don't see much food from african countries in the west, but that number is slowly growing.

No. 1985317

>>1985300
This post was so delicious it made my mouth and brain water yumm

No. 1985366

>>1985300
tbh I wasn't a fan, I'm glad I tried it once when a friend brought me to a restaurant to try it. It's not something I'll eat again.

No. 1985396

>>1985300
>Don't have an immediate source but essentially as spices became more mainstream and affordable to the average person rich people did a 180 and said spices were used to flavour foods that are bad quality (i.e. cheap meats and things poor people eat). And that's why today we don't see much food from african countries in the west
Interesting theory regarding the cuisines that are valued as high class but I don't think it really holds true for explaining African cuisine's general nonubiquity in the West. There are plenty of other highly spiced cuisines that are widely popular even if they're not necessarily winning Michelin stars.
If I had to guess it's more simply attributable to immigrant flow. Hence why foods with an African influence dating far back due to slavery are actually pretty common throughout the Americas (Michael W. Twitty's The Cooking Gene is a James Beard award winning book on this, very interesting read) but eateries that are more directly and purely, say, Ethiopian or South African, haven't been as easy to find until recent years. Not factoring in the general rapid diversification of the food scene in the past few decades.

No. 1987248

File: 1714586600786.jpg (34.28 KB, 556x505, image.jpg)

I can't believe I hated sweet potato most of my life. I don't know if it's because the cultivars in the US are worse than the ones where I am now or if my family's shitty cooking made them dense and mealy while I was growing up (probably the latter), but now I can't get enough of them.

Just made a shitty burrito with leftover roast chicken:
>tortilla
>leftover chicken
>1 large or 2 medium sweet potatoes
>vegetable oil
>plain yogurt
>spinach or arugala
>2 cans black beans
>chipotle paste
>chicken stock cube
>white vinegar
>cumin, cinnamon, garlic powder, onion powder, mexican oregano, paprika, bay leaf
1. Cut sweet potato into rounds, toss in a bit of vegetable oil, salt, cumin, and cinnamon, and roast for about 40 mins at 350F
2. Meanwhile, dump cans black beans into a saucepan or whatever with a tiny swig of white vinegar, liberal amount of cumin, oregano to taste, paprika to taste, a bit of garlic powder, a tiny bit of onion powder, the stock cube, and the bay leaf. You can saute real diced onion and garlic if you're not being as lazy. Simmer with the lid on for about 10-15 mins, then remove the lid and simmer until the liquid has thickened and reduced. You can break the beans with a spoon for a melty consistency.
>Add a few spoonfuls of yogurt to a cup, then a little bit of water until it's a good sauce consistency. Add cumin to taste, salt, and a small dose of chipotle paste
>Once sweet potatoes, beans, and sauce are done to your liking, heat up leftover chicken and as many tortillas as you need
>Put the stuff you just made on top of the tortilla with some leafy greens for extra healthy. Add the yogurt chipotle sauce to the very top.

No. 1987253

I made a really good sandwich for work today with just whatever I had in the fridge, so it was avocado, tomato, brie, pepper, honey and fresh basil. It was soooo good I’m going to start making this all the time.

No. 1987268

File: 1714588465549.jpg (88.82 KB, 800x1199, Easy-Crispy-Baked-Tofu-Recipe-…)

I love tofu so much, currently eating it cold straight out of the package

No. 1987281

>>1987253
That sounds delicious!
>>1987268
What are your favorite tofu recipes?

No. 1987826

File: 1714635805047.jpg (255.21 KB, 1200x1200, Baked-Tofu-A-Virtual-Vegan-HER…)

>>1987281
>What are your favorite tofu recipes?
I mostly do baked tofu in a high heat oven so it's really crispy, then it to wraps, soups, woks, curries etc. I vary the spices based on the meal I am using the tofu in. I really want to try making ranch dip and chocolate mousse with silken tofu soon

No. 1988290

File: 1714670687559.png (165.09 KB, 500x500, 1000021740.png)

I love fried plantain so much, I could eat this shit daily, with every meal of the day, I wish this wasn't unhealthy.

No. 1988793

>>1987281
NTA but I like buying tofu in bulk so:
>Cube and freeze
Really great to have a bag full of frozen tofu conveniently ready in the freezer. I add this to noodle soups straight out of the freezer (the porousness of frozen tofu makes it great at absorbing flavor) or defrost and airfry for a more meatlike texture. Use the airfried frozen tofu like chicken nuggets.
>Make it into vegan ricotta
Not vegan but this is really easy and cost-effective to make a bunch of in the beginning of the week and use for easy breakfasts. You can use vegan ricotta the same way you'd use regular ricotta for toasts. Some tasty examples are…
-topped with halved cherry tomatos and drizzled with balsamic/olive oil
-layered with jam
-in pizza toast. For this I also chop vegetables ahead of time.
>Braised tofu dishes
This is another one that keeps well as a meal prep item made at the beginning of the week along with a large batch of rice. I use a modified korean dubu jorim recipe.

No. 1988842

>>1988290
>unhealthy
Do you deep fry them? My mother always cooks it in the air frier or in the frying pain with just enough oil for it to not stick. I like eating it with beans.

No. 1992511

File: 1715005625157.jpg (113.25 KB, 1200x675, baking_with_animal_fats.jpg)

Let's talk animal fats. Schmaltz, lard and bacon grease, tallow, duck fat, etc
>which do you prefer?
>what do you use them in?
>do you render your own?
>crisco propaganda
>tips, opinions, recipes etc

Personally I've just started curing some lardo. I've never tried any charcuterie before so I wanted to start with something I can afford to screw up.
god i so wish we had a cooking board, /ck/ is worth less than nothing. or even just a cooking general that moves as fast as any given moid-centric thread

No. 1993557

>>1992511
I wish the same, nona. esp since I am trying to eat healthily while saving a lot of money - would be so helpful rn for ideas. Sorry I can't comment on the main topic of your post, bc I don't use those. I know duck fat used to be very popular in certain culinary circles.

No. 1996356

What would be a good continental euro dish to make for Eurovision? It'd just be for two people

No. 1996379

>>1996356
Depends on your budget and if you really want to do something complicated, maybe some kiche of some sort? Pasta? Potato stew with beef?

No. 1996384

>>1992511
>which do you prefer?
My main cooking fat is lard because it doesn't impart a strong flavour into dishes. My favourite is probably lamb fat because it does have more of a meaty flavour. It's delicious with roasted vegetables and works well with mediterranean food. I brush kebabs with melted lamb fat before grilling them.

>what do you use them in?

I mostly cook with animal fat because olive oil, coconut oil, avocado oil, butter and ghee have become more expensive, so almost everything. I avoid seed and nut oils and will only use a small amount for flavour. I like the taste of cold pressed rape oil and I will mix it with olive oil for salad dressings. I also enjoy adding walnut, almond or macadamia oil to coffee.

>do you render your own?

Yes. I buy fat off cuts and fat back from a butcher. All the meat is local, organic and pasture raised with high welfare standards.

No. 1996972

>>1992511
>spoiler
Same. We have 3 food related threads across boards now though which dilutes the discussion IMO. It's insane how worthless /ck/ is though given how much those moids screech about women actually being unable to cook kek.

No. 1997070

>>1996972
I support a consolidated food thread/board

No. 1997079

>>1996972
Not to mention a lot of it ends up in mundane shit and bechdel test.

No. 1997549

File: 1715317359607.jpg (140.21 KB, 1440x1440, how-to-make-banh-da-lon-vietna…)

Why is pandan so delectable I crave this dish on the reg and I'm not even a sweets loving type of girl. The local Viet bakery has ruined me IDK what I'll do to get my fix once I move away.

No. 1997593

File: 1715327011691.jpeg (150.11 KB, 640x409, IMG_7007.jpeg)

>>1997549
Banh da heo is so good! I’d get that and the sesame mung bean balls when I go to the asian market.

No. 1997921

File: 1715357624102.jpg (131.05 KB, 768x574, Chicken-and-chorizo-jambalaya-…)

I'm dying to try jambalaya. It looks so good, I have no idea where I got this craving to try it from considering I'm in the UK and our average cuisine is absolute flavourless dogshit but anyway I'm going to try and make it when I go shopping soon.

I also want to try baking stuff and even making fizzy sweets if possible. I want to try and control my cravings or at least make high-protein alternatives of stuff I often crave. I hate when people say "oh you're craving sour apple sweets? Just eat a frozen grape" bitch I want a sour apple sweet not a grape, I just need to find a good balance of stuff. I also want to try out making some nice protein milkshakes.
I recently found out that instead of eating doritos you can just thinly slice potatoes and put them in the air fryer, eat them nice and crispy with some dip and greek yoghurt and it tastes so much better.

No. 1997933

I could eat Mexican food every single day, I could never get tired of latam cuisine

No. 1997949

File: 1715358821558.jpg (105.58 KB, 800x380, 1000023244.jpg)

This shit must be crack.

No. 1997956

>>1997933
Me too, hands down the best cuisine

No. 1998057

What are you trying to perfect at the moment? Right now I'm trying to get gud at french omelettes.

No. 1998066

>>1998057
Rice, I suck at making rice.

No. 1998091

>>1998066
There's a chance it's not you. I started making good rice when I switched to a heavier pot.

No. 1998181

>>1998066
Getting a rice cooker is so worth it. Perfect rice every time.

No. 1999720

File: 1715493647593.jpg (230.02 KB, 947x540, Raspberries.jpg)

>>1983493
I LOVE RASPBERRIES

No. 2001569

File: 1715628686612.jpg (30.76 KB, 500x500, 1000018036.jpg)

What's your favorite spicy when it comes to world cuisine? Mine is Chinese. So yummy and it excels especially in snack form like these spicy kelp snacks.

No. 2001597

>>1998057
macarons. i fucked up every batch i made so far, except for one time when they turned out fine but i got impatient and didnt let them cool for long enough and ruined them anyway.
i think one of the big issues is that my oven is old and shitty, but i'm not ready to give up

No. 2001609

>>1998057
Cake decorating. Hate all the videos I watched for making it look so easy to get a perfect cake.

No. 2001804

I want spinach and eggs so badly rn

No. 2001823

>>2001569
These are delicious, as well as Kimchi. I can put Kimchi on anything, so it makes me love it more.

No. 2001847

>>2001569
Curries, mild or medium.
Palak paneer, butter chicken, kormas, tikka masala and more.

No. 2002066

>>1988290
You should bake them.

No. 2004993

>>2001597
Oh hey, same. I've made a dozen or so failed batches and unofficially given up. Mine doesn't develop a skin after hours of resting.

No. 2005604

File: 1715887776327.jpg (1.15 MB, 2661x2845, IMG_20240516_124637279~2.jpg)

It's me again, I made ginger chicken and it took like ten minutes of actual work. Tysm China.

No. 2011632

File: 1716264873933.jpg (1.23 MB, 1200x675, bread.jpg)

I hate how cheap and filling bread is. I love it so much, even just simple white bread and i need to have less of it.

No. 2011926

I may or may not order something at the bagel place nearby because I have a lot of time for my lunch break. I only noticed now that it's not that far away from my workplace.

No. 2015687

I just made my own protein bars and while they taste waaay better than the ones you can buy, I still feel like a dumbass because they are so filling its impossible to finish even one of them. I will cut them into even more smaller pieces but then again wtf am I going to do with like 40 protein bars. At least I feel good because the ingredients costed way less than store-bought bars.

No. 2015690

File: 1716440101599.png (782.84 KB, 598x800, IMG_20240522_225409.png)

>>1949746
What is this supposed to be?

No. 2015707

>>2015690
Probably a disagreeable, beet-y, eastern euro dish

No. 2015722

>>2015707
Salad with beet, nuts and feta is very tasty actually but picrel is a weird way to serve it

No. 2015733

>>2015707
>>2015722
>>2015690
Do people even like beet?

No. 2015811

>>2015733
I love beet but i admit that things made with beet look like gore to me kek

No. 2015864

>>2015733
It's ok, I once made borsht with a proper cut of bone in meat that I slow cooked and it was absolutely delicious. But I hate how I can't digest the food dye nicely.

No. 2016388

>>2015733
I'm not the biggest fan of eating root type vegetables like sweet potato, radish, jicama, carrots, even potatoes can be pretty mid to me, like, I never crave potatoes I guess, not even fried. I eat all of them of course but they're not my favorite. In that sense, beet is just fine, but I also really don't like it.

No. 2016395

>>2015733
Beet salad is delicious. Pickled beets are also delish. I could eat it every day but boiling and peeling beets is annoying and they stain a lot.

No. 2016470

>>2016395
I get 'nam flashbacks every time I think about this beet salad that is served in every hospital and school cafeteria (it's not actually a salad, just grated boiled beet and, yes, it's revolting).

No. 2016617

>>2015733
If the last time you had beet was as a little kid and it came from a can then you need to eat a roasted beet right now

No. 2016819

>>2015690
>>2015707
…It says in the OP
>Picrel is a beetroot and goat's cheese terrine.

No. 2016891

>>2015687
Post recipe please anon

No. 2017240


No. 2017321

>>1987268
late but I'm reading this while eating a tofu scramble, kek. If you've tried one before and it's been shit, I recommend adding way more salt and nutritional yeast than you think is right.

No. 2017325

>>1992511
>>1993557
>>1996972
nonnies same! That's why I started this thread to begin with, as a sort of catch all for anything food related. I could talk about food/cooking for ages. Dunno how fast a separate /ck/ board here would move though, and if it would somehow turn into a moid discussion.

No. 2018175

>>2015733
I have mixed feelings about beets, but they're fine as fries, borscht, cold borscht and chips.

No. 2018177

Sushi is so gross. Is everyone pretending to like it just because it’s from Japan

No. 2018184

>>2018177
no people like it because its delicious and has low calories

No. 2018186

>>2018184
Delicious is an interesting way to describe raw fish and soy sauce

No. 2018189

>>2018186
i never eat with sushi with raw fish, only without. i agree though raw fish is disgusting

No. 2018191

>>2018177
Have you had real sushi? It's pretty hard to find outside japan and costs a fuckton when you do find it.

No. 2018196

fish is disgusting in general. no amount of rice massaging can save it

No. 2018197

>>2018196
This is exactly how I feel about chicken and pork. Give me fish any day

No. 2018203

>>2018196
samefag fish and chips are good though, because they don't taste like fish

No. 2018204

>>2018203
Fatty fried anon i bet you like shrimp tempura too

No. 2018209

>>2018204
When we were in Japan we went to some tempura specialist where some old guy fried shrimps in front of us. The shrimps melted in my mouth. Felt so silky and savory.

No. 2018214

>>2018191
I bought from a Japanese owned place and it costed $100 and maybe that’s why I’m still pissy because it was just so ass
>>2018189
What does this even mean
>>2018196
Tuna and haddock COOKED are nice
Salmon is too fishy

No. 2018223

>>2018214
have you tried fried sushi? maybe you'd like that one.

No. 2018226

>>2018214
Maybe the fish wasn't fresh and the quality of rice was shit. Go treat yourself to an omakase if you live near a major city. It will be more than 100 bucks though

No. 2018227

>>2018196
Misfortune of an underdeveloped palate

No. 2018228

>>2018227
Mine is developed. Yours is overdeveloped.

No. 2018231


No. 2018235

>>2018227
nta but shes kinda right, not to mention most fish just doesnt taste as good anymore because the ocean is full of trash

No. 2018246

>>2018235
And chicken and beef are full of microplastics. Now what are you going to do

No. 2018248

>>2018246
tasty microplastics tho

No. 2018250

>>2018196
people who dislike fish are fishphobic. can’t stand them, fish is nutritious

No. 2018253

>>2018248
tasty disease peppered with nano plastics in the foul slaughterhouse

No. 2018254

>>2018196
finally a nonna with some sense. seafood is nasty and smelly

No. 2018259

>>2018246
well luckily i dont eat a lot of meat or fish!

No. 2018263

>>2018250
cum is nutritious you gonna eat cum now? you cumphobic?

No. 2018340

>>2018263
I wish I could unread this

No. 2018404

File: 1716583343685.jpeg (157.43 KB, 631x600, IMG_0873.jpeg)

This is correct in every way possible

No. 2018700

Wow, more replies at a time than this thread has ever had! Now we know the secret is to bait and infight.

No. 2018945

>>2018404
Where I am Italian pizza are just as cheap as American fast food pizza and taste way better. But when I was in Japan I saw thay Dominos was crazy expensive so I think it's safe to assume it really depends on where you are.

No. 2019001

>>2018700
That's what fuels /ck/ so true lmfao

No. 2019146

File: 1716618531044.jpg (27.85 KB, 450x177, lou.jpg)

>>2018404
>makes every other pizzamaking tradition seethe
>not bound by society's rules
>the only pizza that deserves the title of "pie"

No. 2019216

>>2019146
Is that deep dish? I'm scared

No. 2019229

>>2019146
no different from hot pockets at that point

No. 2019244

>>2019146
it looks kind of grotesque but I would absolutely demolish this

No. 2019249

>>2019146
that looks like dog vomit

No. 2019279

>>2018404
Unironically agreed, 'authentic' pizza is like 30% plain dough and bare minimum toppings.

But for me, it's pizza you get from kebab shops. They do a layer of cheese, then a layer of meat, another layer of cheese, then another layer of meat. idk if you get it in america too.

No. 2019292

File: 1716621681774.jpg (160.19 KB, 1280x720, maxresdefault.jpg)

Since the rest of you are being honest I'll admit that I love EA slop pizzas anove all else (ironically my fav after these is pribably minimalistic purist NY pizza). I'll only eat crust if it's been impregnated with sweet potato and encrusted with cheese, sorry.

No. 2019300

>>2019292
East Asian slop pizza?

No. 2019302

>>2019001
it was the best part of /ck/ tbh, shitposting and infighting about food is the best.

No. 2019307

>>2019292
>uncooked potato wedges on pizza
You burgers are really something huh

No. 2019327

>>2019292
I hate this shit, it doesn't even taste like pizza, more like a haphazard mix of clashing flavors.

No. 2019328

File: 1716623568111.jpg (344.47 KB, 1400x1400, DSC01141_Enhanced_NR.JPG)

>>2019300
Yes
>>2019307
It's Korean not American

No. 2019331

>>2019327
Sorry, I barely like pizza so I prefer pizza that's basically not pizza

No. 2019333

>>2019331
It's bibimbop with """Western""" ingredients

No. 2019359

File: 1716624559035.jpg (958.14 KB, 2000x1333, dominos-bubble-tea-pizza-01.jp…)

>>2019333
Bibimbap, not bibimbop, but kek, yeah, you might be onto something. I'm not gonna defend it, I'm Korean and I think our pizza is an atrocity even if I like it.
Would you nonnies try the Taiwanese boba pizza? I hate looking at it but NGL it sounds like it could work tastewise

No. 2019395

File: 1716625435412.png (150.5 KB, 1559x821, dough.PNG)

>>2019279
That's because the dough is delicious in itself. In theory.

No. 2019412

>>2019395
Then why is it always a little burnt at the edges?? You can even see it in >>2018404 and it's absolutely been the case every time I've had that sort of pizza, who tf wants to eat burnt dough.

No. 2019421

>>2019279
Seeing what doner/kebab shops have morphed into in the west feels like that 'wolf looking at a pug' meme. Cheese pizza??

No. 2019437

File: 1716626317140.jpg (1.73 MB, 1040x1040, 35056393.jpg)

>>2019412
It's not burned it's charred and there are tons of foods that aim for exactly that effect.

No. 2019490

>>2018177
It's something you have to eat at least 3 times to start to like it. When i first had sushi i gagged but second time it was better and third time i loved it. When it's very fresh it doesn't even taste like raw fish it just tastes like flesh.

No. 2019775

File: 1716636468329.jpeg (4.09 MB, 3024x4032, IMG_9035.jpeg)

Banana pudding inspired banana cream pie with crushed vanilla wafer crust, unsweetened fresh whipped cream and a sprinkle of salty crushed walnuts on top for that extra little yum! (This was a welcome home treat for a loved one who favors it hehe) not the most posed aesthetic photo but rest assured it tasted divine ♥

No. 2019781

>>2019490
I love how nona believe it's just a massive psyop and like 80% of her country is pretending to like it to hype japan.

No. 2019824

>>2018177
I like the combination of sticky rice with rice vinegar and the umami taste of seaweed. The fish is ok, I prefer tempura sushi that cooks the fish. I absolutely hate nigiri type sushi, the thick fish texture is too gross for my autistic brain.

No. 2019838

File: 1716642482788.jpg (108.9 KB, 640x427, 50272377366_fb5f489e2b_z.jpg)

>>2019437
I fucking love corn. This is a great soup for those of us blessed with delicious fresh corn.
https://smittenkitchen.com/2020/08/corn-coconut-soup/

No. 2020154

I hate food. I only eat it to survive.

No. 2020186

>>2020154
What's your favourite survival fuel, nonnie?

No. 2020199

File: 1716660121437.jpg (97.07 KB, 736x736, 1000027423.jpg)

It's stupidly hot today but I'm craving some hot chocolate with cake or some sort of pastry that will make me feel like life is worth living.

No. 2020213

>>2020186
I don't have a favorite. I dread eating every day.

No. 2020269

>>2019781
TBF Japanese cuisine IS overvalued in the West. But it doesn't mean it's bad.

No. 2020271

>>2020154
I know a guy who hates eating because he has no sense of smell and it's mostly just weird textures in his mouth. So he eats on a schedule, specific amounts at the same times every day. Just to live.

No. 2020288

>>2020271
That sucks. Eating hurts me every time. So I really physically can't enjoy it.

No. 2020292

>>2020271
I wish that was me.

No. 2020320

Stopped taking stimulant medication for two weeks and my appetite is back with a capital B. This morning I ordered breakfast from a local diner and I just want more of it. More runny eggs on homemade bread. More homefries with ketchup. MORE crispy bacon. MORE. God dammit! But I have to save money. So I'll be eating beans and tofu until next Friday. Here's my tip for a killer and cheap meal:
>dark red kidney beans, heated to boiling
>firm tofu air fried with oil and garlic salt
>sesame oil
>possibly scallions
>if you're feeling freaky also an egg
disgusting sounding and looking? yes. Disgusting tasting? Only sometimes.

No. 2020416

>>2020199
Nonna it is very warm where i live and I had a big cup of hot chocolate with my breakfast today so I say have it kek

No. 2021151

>steam kale/lettuce/collard greens/cabbage in soy sauce and butter
>tastes amazing
>can’t stop shitting hours later
wtf I thought greens were good for you
Are humans not meant to eat them?

No. 2021157

>>2021151
greens are hard to digest
most of them come out undigested and cause gas and irritation

No. 2021309

Jesus Christ stop making so many pointless fucking threads

No. 2021323

>>2021151
That's why it's good, it helps your stool pass through

No. 2021380

I went to Italy the other month and had risotto and I guess I just don't like "properly cooked" (i.e. al dente) risotto. Al dente pasta is great and doesn't bother me, but al dente risotto… it's undercooked rice… the texture makes me think of when I fuck up cooking rice kek. I told a friend about this and she said "risotto isn't supposed to be al dente!" but when I was chatting with our tour manager about the food, she said it was cooked perfectly (but she did say the flavor of this cauliflower risotto we had wasn't the best).

No. 2021654

>>2021151
Sounds like your digestive system wasn't accustomed to a high-fiber diet. Most people dom't get enough fiber and need to ease into upping their intake.

No. 2021925

>>2021151
You need to add greens to your diet slowly if you're not used to them, cruciferous vegetables in particular are brutal to your gut. You can get digestive enzymes to help in the meantime.

No. 2022064

File: 1716773784075.jpg (73.45 KB, 640x960, 1000027758.jpg)

I love plain oatmeal so much, but I kind of want to make overnight oats someday, specially if they don't suck like the ones I used to make thay were sugar free and shit.
I seriously wish I didn't despise protein powders, I seriously don't know what the fuck happened, like one day I would be able to drink protein once a day like a normal person and suddenly it was like I can't even smell an open jar with protein powder because I get really nauseous.

No. 2022082

>>2022064
To be honest I prefer the texture of overnight oats to regularly boiled ones. I always add a good heap of yogurt for added protein too.
Same on the protein powders though, they all taste oddly artificial and overly sweet to me. Can't get into it.

No. 2022095

>>2022064
I like my oats super undercooked and with a little honey

No. 2022750

Has anyone cooked with cornmeal before? Tortillas seem easy enough to make

No. 2023171

I love seafood- but everybody else in my family HATES it because of the "fishy flavor". I still eat a lot of fish, actually did a mini seafood boil the other day kek. But it sucks not being able to cook it for dinner so I'm wondering if I could slowly psyop my family into liking fish somehow. Anyone ever done this before, or have suggestions? What types of fish are the least "fishy", or what recipes/preparation methods help balance that flavor out? So far they really enjoyed this salmon pasta I made, I used a fuck ton of herbs and cream which I think helped a lot.

No. 2023333

>>2023171
smoked salmon has a tendency to taste like bacon, some smoked salmon in pasta or with rice and veg is perfect. honestly salmon is the least "fishy" flavor wise generally

No. 2024247

File: 1716912285216.jpg (94.95 KB, 493x740, Tomato-Soup-with-Grilled-Chees…)

i'm going to make tomato soup tonight. i've never made it myself before, i always just eat the canned tomato soup so i hope this is 100x better. i might do the grilled cheese croutons in it too but i'm not sure yet… they look so good but i'm having a hard time eating foods that arent pure liquid because of my braces. maybe theyll be soft enough though

No. 2025200

>>2023333
I wouldn’t say it tastes anything like bacon unless it’s smoked and/or candied in the way that they both can be. Tilapia is also very neutral tasting and inexpensive. Well seasoned fish tacos with marinated milder tuna like skipjack or breaded tilapia with pasta might be good options. Picky eaters are so frustrating honestly.

No. 2026618

>>2024247
i made it and it was SO delicious. it made a lot so i'm going to have it again tonight. i can't believe i've never made it myself before, so much better than canned soup and it was super quick and simple to make

No. 2026669

>>2026618
Did you do the grilled cheese croutons?

No. 2026675

>>2026669
yes i did and they worked out well! i cooked the grilled cheese a little bit longer so it was extra crispy and didn't just disintegrate in the soup. 10/10 would do it again

No. 2026701

>>2026618
Share recipe

No. 2026778

>>2026701
i kind of followed this tiktok but not too closely.
i roasted the tomatoes, onions, garlic and basil with olive oil, red wine vinegar, salt, paprika and pepper. then threw it all in a blender with 2 cups of vegetable broth and some red pepper flakes. i didn't have heavy cream so i tried adding a splash of milk but tbh i dont think it made a difference. it was delicious either way!!!

No. 2028133

File: 1717104198926.jpg (208.56 KB, 1280x1920, soon-dubu-jjigae-2-web-scaled.…)

Made a pork and kimchi soondubu today for the first time– I was surprised at how simple it was. Really no ingredients that would be uncommon to the kitchen of somebody who cooks Korean food regularly, aside from the soft tofu, so all I ended up spending on it outside of pantry staples was like $2 for the tofu and some radish for the stock. I can't believe I've been paying $15 to eat it at restaurants this whole time.

No. 2030554

What's the best way to cook mushrooms if you're just going to eat it with plain rice?
>>2028133
This sounds so good nonnie

No. 2030560

>>2030554
dont have a recipe off the top of my mind but going heavy on the spices/flavoring would be a safe bet. soy sauce, pepper flakes, garlic, toasted sesame or sesame oil, etc

No. 2030562

>>2025200
Tilapia and basa are both disgusting and I say this as someone who eats fish. It's insipid mush with a horrid texture. Cod or haddock are better alternative that don't have a strong fish taste.

No. 2030563

>>2030560
Thanks nonnie, soy sauce sounds good. I'll try it out! I'm super curious about mushroom/tofu adobo too.

No. 2030592

File: 1717269560715.jpg (258.52 KB, 1456x1952, lemon-risotto-with-asparagus-1…)

I crave asparagus with sriracha sauce and risotto but I'm too tired to make it.

No. 2030611

>>2030554
What kind of mushrooms?

No. 2032556

>tried Durian in the form of an ice cream pop
It tasted and smelled sorta like onions. Surprisingly not the worst, I can see people liking it, but it was really just onion ice cream.

No. 2032569

File: 1717367567341.jpeg (4.63 KB, 225x225, images.jpeg)

>>2032556
This makes me want to try it.
Semi related, here is the best dressing I've discovered in recent years. It's really good as a dip but a little thin.

No. 2032665

File: 1717371095097.jpeg (230.79 KB, 736x981, IMG_1848.jpeg)

spaghetti brutally mogs ramen

No. 2032668

>>2032665
hnnnnnnnnng
HNNNNNNNG that pic hnnnnnnnnn

No. 2032670

>>2032665
You're right and you should say it louder.

No. 2032701

>>2032665
i ate so much spaghetti when i was younger i got tired of it

No. 2032746

File: 1717375645684.webp (114.74 KB, 570x485, IMG_1861.webp)

>>2032668
>>2032670
the pasta industry should really copy the ramen industry and make things like instant pasta cups (instant of instant noodle)
I know it exists but I’ve seen it very rarely at grocery stores

No. 2032760

File: 1717376333001.jpeg (347.63 KB, 2560x1160, IMG_4076.jpeg)

>>2032746
that shot exists and it's really common in parts of europe, you can find them in every grocery store. you just microwave them, many working people eat them for a quick cheap lunch. then again pasta is immensely popular here.
they're absolutely disgusting though, even shitty ramen is usally better bc they're full of gross fake cheese goop and low grade meat.

No. 2032771

>>2032760
That looks like it would taste extremely starchy and bad

No. 2032773

>>2032760
yeah the problem with these is there's always a cheese and/or meat component that tastes completely horrible because those are not things that should be dehydrated and reconstituted with water. something like lemony butter noodles with black pepper would be infinitely better. or maybe it really has to be a soup and that's why ramen works. the consistency in the weird pasta ones or even mac and cheese is just awful.

No. 2032774

>>2032746
Chef Boyardee… forgotten….

No. 2032788

File: 1717377927136.webp (294.55 KB, 600x600, IMG_1863.webp)

>>2032760
>>2032771
Yeah that feels too heavy to be a lunch imo, maybe like this anon >>2032773 said that a pasta soup would would better, maybe with ditalini
>>2032773
The one time I had an instant pasta cup it had no meat but a spicy sauce, it was actually pretty good and light
>>2032774
I just want cute cups not cans, I feel like I am in the trenches opening rations when I eat canned food.

No. 2032792

>>2032774
Do they make dried chef boyardee?
I bet spaghetti-o’s could be dried out and rehydrated without lowering the quality or flavor (which is already quite bad but still)

No. 2032794

>>2032746
I had something like this but for macaroni and cheese and I fucked it up and it was all soupy and gross. Gave me heartburn. Also I feel like Italians would throw a fit over the instant pasta. I still support instant pasta though. I would try this >>2032760

No. 2032797

I looooove this thread!
Maybe this is a bit OT but do you have friends who are indifferent to food? I always want to try new stuff but most of my friends don't really talk about yummy food.

No. 2032912

File: 1717384432665.jpg (125.66 KB, 736x733, 1000029585.jpg)

I hate when I don't know what I want to eat, I tend to have basically constant cravings, specially when I'm stressed as fuck. But lately I've been wanting something but I don't even know what that something is, which could be from a single chocolate truffle to 1 million dollars in my bank account.

No. 2033043

What do anons make for weeknight dinners and lunches?
I made basil pesto pasta but because that goes bad fast, it'll only cover 2 days this coming week. I'll probably make a quick half-assed egg-kimchi-dumpling fried rice for the other days.
I used to make like 2 dozen breakfast burritos and 12 servings of curry, but I dont have the space to do that rn.

No. 2033055

>>2033043
Ah shit I do egg-fried rice too. With lots of green onions and shallots, and chiu chow sauce. Or else I have a sausage and a sweet potato.

No. 2033100

File: 1717392182780.jpg (8.85 KB, 191x263, images.jpg)

>>2032665
Define ramen. Are you talking instant ramen like the posts below? Spaghetti wins. Normal ramen is a hard call.

No. 2033102

>>2032701
this, the sauce has to be really good for me to appreciate spaghetti. spaghetti with butter is puke inducing to me.

No. 2033387

>>2032556
I'm going to be completely honest, that turned my stomach into Chernobyl. I am not strong enough for the onion durian.

No. 2033593

>>2033102
I didn’t know until recently that there’s a big variety of pasta sauces that aren’t just tomato and basil, there’s a lot of room to explore.

No. 2033644

>>2032788
Ayrt i feel like arrabiata would work better because it's just tomato and chili. cheese based stuff is more likely to turn into a horrid goopy mess. and god knows what they put in the meat

No. 2033654

we got a grill last night and made bison burgers, oh hot damn were they good! I can't believe how long it's been since I had a proper grilled burger. yummm I need ten more.

No. 2033898

File: 1717433376961.jpg (125.36 KB, 1500x1125, __opt__aboutcom__coeus__resour…)

Forget spaghetti. Rigatoni.
Oh and for that matter, paccheri! But good luck finding that.

No. 2033919

did the pasta summon the italians

No. 2034087

>>2033593
Oh anon, wait 'til you discover guanciale.

No. 2034148

>>2034087
I've been eating this recently. I like to finely slice it and serve it with a drizzle of olive oil and balsamic vinegar. It's too tasty to just use as rendering for fat.

No. 2034160

>>2033102
Have you tried the simple butter sauce with sage and pepper?

>>2034087
One pasta recipe I've enjoyed in the past was sausages with black cabbage/kale with fusilli
Now I'm trying to eat vegan so I made carbonara with tempeh and the kala namak salt for the egg flavour. Pretty tasty

No. 2035447

File: 1717517246725.jpg (82.92 KB, 680x1020, cucumber-lemon-mint-water-reci…)

I ususally add 1 cucumber x 1L of water to make cucumber water but I want extra flavour so I'm using 2 cucumbers and more lemon juice this time, do nonas like cucumber water?

No. 2035467

>>2035447
At that point, why not make a cucumber smoothie?

No. 2035497

>>2035467
I didn't know that option existed, I want that now

No. 2035512

>>2035447
cucumber water is one of those things you do when you have time, so it's definitely a 'prosperous' thing to enjoy. i honestly feel so clean when i have it, with mint and lemon

No. 2036416

File: 1717565875938.jpg (153.15 KB, 1200x1800, Watermelon_Slushie_Vegan_Glute…)

>>2035497
Watermelon in a blender is very refreshing. This looks like a good recipe: https://frommybowl.com/watermelon-slushie-recipe/

No. 2036472

File: 1717567710609.jpg (517.39 KB, 800x1200, 32935423150_dba9c66cce_o.jpg)

I looked this up because I keep seeing redditoids shittalking it, and what are they tripping on, this looks amazing. Mixed nuts bound with eggs and baked into a loaf. "Hurdudur bird food" if this is bird food I don't want to be human

No. 2036481

File: 1717568177819.jpg (207.34 KB, 1200x800, TJ-Seeds-and-Grains-Crispbread…)

>>2036472
Reminds me of these crackers my mom used to like from Trader Joe's, which did seem like bird food, but were less bland when you spread cheese or something on them

No. 2036508

>>2036472
What's it called?

No. 2036513

>>2036508
Reverse image searched the photo. It's called "Nordic nut bread" or "Nordic Stone Age bread"

No. 2036520

File: 1717570187987.webp (134.94 KB, 800x1200, Chalet-home-garden-chicago-bir…)

>>2036481
Those are crispy, they're not thick enough to be properly crunchy. Strange that they're bland, I'd imagine they taste super nutty. Maybe it's to do with the type of nuts you use, or a little salt. Picrel looks tasty anyways I don't know why it's an insult.

No. 2036526

>>2032797
Yeah. And friends who don't eat enough. I get sooo annoyed when I try a resto with a friend and they can't even finish their own food let alone order sides with me to try. I can finish everything on my own but what's the point of going with a friend then?

No. 2036532

>>2036526
Where do you live that people say "resto"? It reminds me of how kiwis abbreviate words (like "arvo") but I've never heard it.

No. 2036533

>>2036520
AYRT, I wasn't trying to insult it; I have a neutral opinion toward those crackers. This bread >>2036472 looks like it might taste good if it's chewy like regular bread rather than crunchy

No. 2036534

>>2036533
All good nonna, I was talking about the redditors.

No. 2036577

>>2036416
I was just craving this, I'm going to freeze the watermelon now so it will be a great weekend treat.

No. 2036585

>>2036532
Frogs do that, maybe she's French.

No. 2037357

File: 1717623531255.jpg (135.09 KB, 1500x1125, 13351-chicken-tortilla-soup-i-…)

I made chicken tortilla soup last night, it's so delicious and I'm so glad I made a lot so I can have it again tonight, I'm craving it again right now. I love soups so much

No. 2043037

File: 1717979322219.jpg (113.28 KB, 1280x497, 1000031376.jpg)

I love this cheese so much.

No. 2043440

>>2021309
>pointless thread
>active and anons are happily enjoying and participating

sorry you hate fun nonnie, you can always hide the thread

No. 2043459

>>2033043
Late but I keep a rotation of base carbs to work off of and adjust the veggies/proteins I use depending on what's in season/what the weather is like so for example an average week might look like:
>monday: pasta night, it's winter here so something with lentils, tomato sauce, etc
>Tuesday: rice day, with tofu and veggies
>Wednesday: Pearl barley in the pantry, make a stew with chickpeas and kale
>Thursday: leftovers
>Friday: Roast potatoes, veggies, maybe a vegan shnitzel

Of course this isn't every week, I do have leftovers from the previous days a lot of the time, or if there's say, leftover rice I'll make a fried rice with it. You're best of having a rotation of carb bases you enjoy, proteins you like, and then sort of mix and match them depending on what you have on hand.

No. 2044573

File: 1718068248367.jpg (92.83 KB, 600x902, mapo-tofu-10.jpg)

I'm really craving so many greasy Chinese dishes like mapo tofu and beef with black bean. But it requires so many Asian spices, sauces and ingredients that I don't have in my fridge and probably can't justify buying that I'll only use once. Fuck it maybe I'll just order takeout!

No. 2044668

>>2036532
I'm Asian American, I picked it up from other Asian American friends. I've never really thought about it haha

No. 2045116

File: 1718115919978.jpg (343.83 KB, 2048x1536, img_7223.jpg)

I'm still kicking myself for being too pussy and hypocritical to buy the pig's head I saw at the grocery store this morning. It just feels wrong to eat a face and a brain… as if I'm not eating a dead body any time I eat any meat! Next time, I swear.

No. 2045120

>>2045116
Pig brain tastes pretty good, I've had it at Chinese hotpot and even had it canned before. It's very creamy, fatty, and rich.

I'd imagine the entire head is a treat as well. I've never bought a whole animal head before but I've eaten plenty of the broken down cuts. The cheek meats if braised long enough are very tender. The ears and skin are great sources of collagen from the cartilage. Bet if the tongue was prepared properly it would taste very good as its own dish too, although I find tongue to taste very gamey.
Only thing I decline to eat are eyeballs.

No. 2045160

>>2045120
>The cheek meats if braised long enough are very tender.
Beef and pork cheeks are delicious. Beef cheek is best slowly braised. If I'm cooking it I braise it in porter ale and then make a rich onion gravy. The alcohol in the ale breaks down the meat and makes it very tender. Pork cheeks can be braised or it can be cured like ham or bacon. I prefer pork cheek for bacon over back and middle cuts.

No. 2045198

>>2045120
>>2045160
Braising is what I had in mind! I love braised pork skin in itself and I keep reading glowing endorsements of cheek meat so I'm hoping it'll be there next time.
By cheek bacon, do you it's smoked as well as cured?

No. 2045261

>>2045120
I know you can make tacos out of beef tongue so i wonder if you can do it with pig tongue too.

No. 2045267

What are your experiences with freezing cooked chicken (breast in my instance)?
I think I’ll try this week but I’m worried it’ll be gross or soggy when I defrost

No. 2045363

>>2045198
It can be both smoked and cured or just cured. There's different ways of curing pork cheeks like English bath chaps or Italian guanciale which was mentioned up thread. I'm now also wondering if pork cheek would work as a replacement for shoulder in Cajun tasso.

>>2045267
It depends on the water content of the chicken and how it was cooked. Boiled chicken breast tends to crumble, where as roast chicken will keep it's firmness.

No. 2045441

File: 1718135729223.jpeg (48.05 KB, 564x846, mango.jpeg)

I want some extra ripe mango, especially Ataulfo mango which ripens and it sweet like honey

No. 2045570

File: 1718142045916.jpeg (69.46 KB, 709x709, aa90be97-5d6c-4ba6-998f-e26a9a…)

"Double salt." They were not fucking kidding. It's not even edible. Finns, are you just playing a joke on us?

No. 2045627

>>2045570
What is this?

No. 2045707

File: 1718152112141.jpg (170.41 KB, 800x1000, Fried-Potatoes-017.jpg)

Made myself some delicious pan fried potatoes in olive oil, herbs, Cajun seasoning, salt, pepper, smoked paprika, and chicken bouillon powder and added some tuna, peas, corn, garlic and onion along with some butter. Tasted very nice but now I'm too bloated kek.

No. 2045710

>>2045707
I’m coming over.

No. 2045731

>>2044573
Nona buy 1 can of Lao Gan Ma doubanjang!! Add 1-2 blocks of tofu and 2 pounds of ground pork and you're all set!

No. 2045745

File: 1718153804358.jpg (181.1 KB, 1000x1080, information-about-the-benefits…)

I need my eyes to get healthier and I heard beets are a good way to do so. Anyone got good beet recipes or a way to make the taste indistinguishable? Not a fan of the taste tbh.

>>2043037
Same I love eating it on triscuits.

No. 2045753

>>2045710
Too late, I ate it all. Sorry.

No. 2045766

>>2045745
I love beets so I dont know how good my suggestions will be but what about borscht?You can also make beet kvass, horsedish beet, purée it and mix it with yoghurt, tahini for beet hummus or add it in marinara sauce.

No. 2045783

>>2045745
If you don't like the taste I'd recommend any way you can just hide it in another dish. A local place uses beet instead of roast beef for a Reuben so perhaps something like that would work? Boil beets, shred it fine, and put it in a sandwich with other toppings? I also think beets go well with chocolate, so you might be able to sneak some into a chocolate cake or brownies? I think you should be able to find some recipes for those options, never tried myself though.

No. 2046196

>>2045745
just eat carrots instead, they're also very good for your eyes.

No. 2046324

File: 1718208395356.jpeg (51.92 KB, 500x500, IMG_2756.jpeg)

I really want chocolate cornets and I found out the recipe is easy, but I'm missing the mould needed to shape it. I'll try to make one out of tin foil and hope it goes well. I have all the ingredients too

No. 2046425

I'm at a company event and I am eating so much food nonnies it's unreal. I have breakfast at a buffet and then they keep feeding us snacks all morning, then lunch, then they keep feeding us sweet snacks until dinner. I didn't go to the dinner because I'm tired but I'll have something at the hotel later. I love my company's events they always give us tasty food.

No. 2046476

>>2046425
Work influences eating so much kek. I was healthy when I was delivering packages and running around, then I got to work at a massive corporate office that had free buffet breakfast, lunch, dinner and coffeeshop. Long ass lunch break with outdoor seating. I gained 20lbs working there

No. 2046604

>>2045627
Salmiakki licorice. Try it if you enjoy drinking seawater.

No. 2046655

>>2046476
i gained so much weight working office jobs. where i am now they love to get donuts, ice cream cakes and have bbq lunches, i always felt guilty or antisocial saying no thanks but it's just so much food. i'm kind of glad now i have an excuse not to eat all their snacks because i got braces kek

No. 2047017

Learning that I can just microwave my tofu to drain instead of pressing it has been such a game changer. I think there is a bit of a textural difference but most nights I'm too busy so the former is good enough.

No. 2047112

>>2047017
>pressing your tofu
Naw that's a white pipo thing

No. 2047140

File: 1718250139777.jpg (40.37 KB, 800x558, plate-style-tofu-press.jpg)

>>2047112
kek explain why my friend's extraordinarily vietnamese family presses their tofu then

microwave is fine but it can also explode your tofu if you're not careful

No. 2047154

>>2047140
Wait is this how you're supposed to do it? Fuck, I've been getting a pan to lay ontop of the tofu and then pushing… Works well but sometimes the sides smoosh out

No. 2048364

File: 1718333883726.jpeg (71.17 KB, 768x768, Bamboo-Sushi-Rolling-Mat-Reusa…)

>>2047112
AYRT I'm Korean lol? What makes you think it's a wypipo thing
>>2047140
Wait seriously? I've never heard of it exploding
>>2047154
I don't own one of those tofu presses, but the way I learned to press drain tofu was by wrapping it in one of these first so that it doesn't come apart.

No. 2048383

>>2047112
You unironically sound ignorant as fuck

No. 2048516

>>2047140
Actually do you feel like buying a dedicated tofu press is worth it? I don't mind playing jenga with cans and pans to weigh down my tofu but if the tofu press is faster I'll jump on it in a heartbeat

No. 2048870

People who say white people don't like spicy food have clearly never had Hungarian food lol.

No. 2048888

>>2048870
Hungarian cuisine is one of my favorites, but it's not very spicy. Just flavorful.

No. 2048894

File: 1718374667136.jpeg (865.41 KB, 3000x2000, cawl-welsh-lamb-soup-71220-1.j…)

I'm absolutely craving some cawl right now, it's a traditional Welsh soup/stew with a thin broth, lots of veggies and big chunks of lamb. Fills the same hole that good chicken soup does, tastes super nutritious and is super tasty. (Also as its a Welsh word cawl rhymes with owl, not with shawl, so sounds a bit like Simon Cowell's surname)

No. 2048905

File: 1718376343885.jpg (121.92 KB, 1200x1800, thai-chicken-noodle-soup-2.jpg)

i'm going to make thai red curry chicken soup tonight. it's rainy and there's supposed to be a thunderstorm so i feel like it's the perfect cozy soup night

No. 2048921

>>2048894
Omg another Cymranon: pa hywl girlie? Now I’m craving cawl too: specifically my Nan’s circa 20 years ago. Diolch for the memories.

No. 2050245

OHHH MEIN GOT I THINK I FUCKED UP…HELP ME. Im making cakes and i fucked up cuttuing up parchment paper and I think my cakes will wind up a weird shape when it's done.. SIGH

No. 2054947

>>2050245
Was it ok nonna!? What happened

No. 2054988

south london you never fail me. burger place open til 1am, hell yes. my beautiful gf just bought me a burger and fries and i wolfed it down, it was the most epic burger and fries ever. keep in mind i am no preacher of mid fast food, this shit was juicy and crispy and chef's kiss.

No. 2055085

Nonnas what are your favorite vegan/vegetarian drinking snacks? I make tofu nuggets a lot but wanna branch out.

No. 2055558

>>1949746
For the first time i can afford to buy whatever food I want, we usually try to spend as little as possible and I grow a lot of it and make things like yoghurt etc from scratch. This week I walked into the shop and bought WHATEVER I WANTED, it ended up being only 70 euro somehow. The cheap gene dies hard I guess

No. 2055572

>>2055558
Haooy for you though nonna, to me that's when you've "made it"

No. 2055670

>>2055085
fried plantains (chips or slightly thicker)
anything with guacamole
roasted cauliflower with smoked paprika (can also be fried, but roasted is better)
summer rolls!
kimbap (lots of components though)
samosas
… so many more

The one thing I try to avoid when choosing or preparing drinking snacks is excessive acid. Maybe it's just me, but I'm obsessed with vinegary foods in general. I have to make sure that not ALL the snacks I have/make for game night include vinegary or mustard notes. Some can, but it's overkill if all do, and it can affect the taste of the drinks.

No. 2056708

File: 1718833259291.jpg (1.06 MB, 3456x4608, Avocado-Herb-Pesto-Sandwich_Ja…)

I recently learned that you can put pesto in sandwiches and it has been an absolute game changer. No more bland ass mayo!

No. 2056749

>>1997549
I want to make something pandan so goddamn bad but I don't wanna have it be like 15,000 calories.

No. 2057117

>>2056708
anon you can put anything on a sandwich, there are no rules, don't let your dreams be dreams, if it spreads put it betwixt the breads

No. 2057141

>>2057117
>there are no rules
True. My favorite sandwich is seafood mayo salad and banana on rye.

No. 2057190

>>2057141
Mine is hummus and grated carrot.

No. 2057398

>>2057141
>seafood mayo salad and banana on rye
what inspired this combo? very tropical kek

my favourite is pretty boring: salads with taramosalata on wholegrain, sometimes with cheese or meat if I'm feeling frisky

No. 2058949

File: 1718998385181.jpg (3.28 MB, 3120x4160, IMG_20240621_202309278.jpg)

I made myself a leak curry for dinner tonight. It was absolutely delicious. I followed the recipe from the IG account ku.ma2088 where a plush bear "cooks" different Japanese foods, if anyone wants to know where I had the recipe from.

No. 2058960

What do people even mean when they say they dress up pre-packaged ramen with veggies? I get adding eggs, meats or other sources of protein (for example I always add canned sardines). But what vegetables can you put in? Peas are a no-go because they're too tiny to be picked up with chopsticks and if you make stew ramen they end up at the bottom with all the crushed bits of ramen which is gross. Green onions are okay but they're more of a topping. Carrots are too sweet and they don't taste very good with most ramen pairings I've tried. I think it's just one of those things people say to make their habits seem healthier but in reality they're just adding a fried egg on top

No. 2058965

>>2058960
sometimes I add thinly sliced onion or potato (which can have the problem of not being easily pick-up-able with chopsticks). I've seen people add bok choy, but personally I haven't tried it.

Carrots (and peas) go really well with black bean sauce noodles/chapagetti/jjajjangmyeon

No. 2058967

>>2058960
Leafy vegetables are nice with ramen and are easy to pick up with chopsticks by folding them. Like bok choy, cabbage, spinach etc. I personally do add sliced carrots and think they taste good with ramen. Maybe pickled vegetables can be a good choice, too? Since Japanese people eat Japanese style pickled vegetables with their food, like pickled ginger or pickled radish.

No. 2058999

>>2058960
I eat ramen with a spoon and fork lol.

No. 2059017

>>2058960
The same vegetables that you would have on regular ramen…

No. 2059103

I hate toppings on toast!!! It always just slides off

No. 2059104

File: 1719009868051.png (315.49 KB, 515x658, salt.png)

>>2045570
my parents are from germany and I was born in america, so I have never understood why I love these so much

No. 2059107

>>2059104
I'm mexican and I love these too! A good finnish friend of mine gifted them to me

No. 2059108

>>2059107
salty licorice unites the world and I am happy

No. 2059114

File: 1719010353666.png (393.3 KB, 1071x470, la-liquirizia-scatoline.png)

>>2045570
as someone who eats black liquorice all day everyday i don't get salmiak… it's just gross. picrel is the superior option

No. 2059452

>>2059103
Depends on the topping/how much of it you put on toast. If it's fairly viscous (honey/jam/peanut butter etc.), then less is more.
I used to love pairing peanut butter up with salted butter on toast, but now prefer Turkish bread cause it's far softer than store-brand burger buns etc (which in my country are baked in the supermarket they're sold from and can be extremely dense and difficult to chew)

No. 2059457

>>2059103
I prefer a good toast/open faced sandwich over a regular sandwich 9/10 times. Sliding is one thing but I hateee when i take a bite and the innards squeeze out of a normal sandwich.

No. 2059458

>>2045570
oh no I love these. I don't really consider them "food" because they're so potent but they're nice for sucking on

No. 2059463

>>2059104
>salmiak
Anyone else know/remember salmiak lollipops? Grossest candy on earth! I like salted liquorice though.

No. 2059466

File: 1719040197052.png (431.22 KB, 650x700, chupachupeviltwin.png)

>>2059463
they make me think of stale chupa-chups in texture only, which I like very much, but I dislike this sucker
also I like the plastic hollow stick of the chupa-chup, the common paper sticks are more healthy but they get in spit unpleasant

No. 2059714

>>2045570
I’m not Finnish but I love salmiakki bc im a FREAK kek thank you forever to the Finnish exchange student who got me hooked. I like the kind that also tastes like tar! Now you’ve made me want some

No. 2059926

>>2056749
it is really that caloric? I don't know what's in it & have never had it, but a lot of Western cakes with cream aren't that high as long as you don't eat the entire cake

No. 2061645

Do any nonas know how social media accounts like vidrel make this style of cooking videos? I'm very interested in making ones like this but have absolutely 0 knowledge of video editing, how you would set up equipment/lighting, and my phone takes crappy videos. lol

No. 2061646

>>2045570
I pulled out a damn filling on the one and only time I ever bought these to eat lol

No. 2061652

File: 1719185256198.jpg (95.96 KB, 659x1000, 81IlRJvZBfL._AC_UF894,1000_QL8…)

>>2032746
Chef Boyardee, nona. It's disgusting sloppa but will be very useful when the nuclear fallout happens.

No. 2061683

File: 1719186881763.jpeg (17.58 KB, 236x233, IMG_7532.jpeg)

Hello nonnies, this is a question more so for Scandinavian anons , so my partners family is Norwegian, and I’ve been invited to spend the holidays with them. He told me to be prepared because his family eats lutefisk. Ive heard it’s incredibly incredibly smelly. What does it really smell like? I don’t really have any incentive to try it even though I know it it might be offered to me as I don’t really eat fish. But if anybody has any insight into what it smells like and kind of the fall out afterwards and how bad the smell is, please let me know. I’m also curious on how it tastes as well. Thanks in advance!

No. 2061892

>>2061652
ntayrt but the mini raviolis are the fucking worst. smells and tastes like actual garbage

No. 2061929

File: 1719207117278.jpg (93.67 KB, 392x500, I05-2-3-2.jpg)

>>2061652
Picrel is also terrible. Whether it be room temperature or boiled in the very fires of Hell itself, it tastes like a dumpster full of aged gym socks and (thankfully) I have not found it for sale in any supermarkets where I live.

No. 2061933

>>2032760
i still want to try it even if it's bad

No. 2062009

>>2061683
It's not that bad. It is a very intense smell but from my experience it's not like surströmming where you smell it even before you know it's there

No. 2065832

I LOVE onions in sandwiches and burgers… it's so refreshing

No. 2066337

File: 1719450268460.jpg (17.63 KB, 389x257, peggyhill.jpg)

Chocolate melted over the stove is so damn good. It feels like crack.

No. 2066592

File: 1719455932562.jpg (124.14 KB, 550x762, charcuterie.jpg)

Scenario: You're making a charcuterie board lunch that's just for you. What do you put on it?

No. 2066627

>>2066592
Is a charcuterie board still a charcuterie board if there's no meat? I love making "charcuterie" for myself with grapes, dark chocolate almonds, rice cakes, Good Thins crackers, peaches, apples, white cheddar, and laughing cow cheese. I like warm brie sometimes too but I find myself getting put off by the rind, and also when I'm eating it always remember how people say it smells and has the texture of semen. It doesn't to me but it disgusts me nonetheless kek.

No. 2066688

>>2066627
I've never heard that before and now I wish I had never read that too

No. 2066709

>>2066592
lots of salami, basically the whole board would be hard salami on the bottom. for cheeses i'd probably put slices of gouda, blocks of flagship cheddar, fried fava beans, garlic stuffed olives, kalamata olives, baby tomatoes, soaked mushrooms, ham slices, cherries, oysters, and tuna sashimi!

No. 2066750

I have a craving for Mexican or Tex-Mex food, which is hard to find where I live. What should I make, nonas? I'm vegetarian.

No. 2066751

>>2066592
Lots of fruit, spreads, cheeses, and nuts. No meat in mine.
The white chunks of fat in cured meat gross me out a lot… I told this to a girl once and she came back with, "Oh, I'm the opposite– I poke all of those out and eat them first!" There are so many kinds of people in the world.

No. 2066752

>>2066750
Toasted chickpea burritos are yummy and satisfying.

No. 2066756

>>2066752
those sound delicious + I've never made them before. I'll go look for recipe now, thanks

No. 2066757

>>2066592
cheese crackers pickles and pepper salami kek

No. 2066758

File: 1719465250837.png (186.89 KB, 386x386, sloppa.png)

>>2061929
the chef got u bb

No. 2066763

>>2066758
this looks so vile

make Käsespätzle instead … though it's better in the fall or winter. We're already broiling right now

No. 2066764

>>2066758
Isn't this weird and uncanny? I feel like it isn't real. I don't know of any old people who can confirm if he was a real guy

No. 2067332

I know this website attracts a lot of argentines (literally why are there so many of you people) but I just wanna say I’m Mexican and I drank a mate for the first day today and I threw up.

No. 2068145

>>2055085
smoked almonds are godly. I only ever buy them sometimes because if they're in the house I will inhale them like a vacuum.

No. 2068146

>>2057141
okay, maybe there are some rules….

No. 2068365

File: 1719552497553.jpg (70.96 KB, 1000x1000, M58-2nd-pic.jpg)

>>2067332
what the hell is yerba mate? i google it and it basically looks like matcha but instead of being whisked up, they just pack all the herbs into the teacup ontop of the straw and then pour a little bit of water on it. it seems really thick

No. 2068438

File: 1719557264469.jpg (874.27 KB, 1801x1344, Two_bombillas.jpg)

>>2068365
it's thick but you drink it through the metal straw which has a filter built in

No. 2068477

Japanese food is so bland and tasteless I will never understand why people pretend it’s a remarkable cuisine in any way

No. 2068484

>>2068477
sometimes the food being bland is what makes it good. Japanese food and a lot of other Asian cuisines use fresh produce and seafood so i think they prioritize that over seasoning. i agree though, japanese food is overrated and people tend to overlook better asian cuisines

No. 2068506

>>2068477
I like it but my native cuisine is mild too so I guess it fits

No. 2068516

>>2068477
Agree S. Korean is so much better

No. 2068519

>>2068516
ewww no

No. 2068521

>>2068477
indian and thai food will always be my favourite.

No. 2068525

>>2068477
Japanese food is good but it's definitely overvalued because the West has a massive culture boner for Japan overall.
>>2068519
What's wrong with Korean food?

No. 2068527

>>2068525
it sucks, either its too salty or too sweet (even the pasta over there is sweet) south korea in general has to one of the most overrated countries in the world,

No. 2068540

>>2068145
I love smoked almonds. Do you like other smoked things? Smoked tofu is so good.

No. 2068542

>>2068516
Apples to oranges imo
Aren't all cuisines just a matter of suiting your personal palate or not? The objectively presented "x is better than y national cuisine" that sometimes appears ITT is so odd

No. 2068548

>>2068542
Nonny we are always talking about our personal tastes here, we don’t need to clarify it every time we post kek. Nobody is acting like their opinion on food is a universal written rule

No. 2068560

File: 1719567819254.webp (195.81 KB, 1080x1350, IMG_4346.webp)

>>2068477
Samefag but to back up my statement: Japanese curry was brought to them by the British navy to fix the issue of Japanese soldiers dying from malnutrition since they refused to eat anything other than plain white rice. I’m not making this up

No. 2068708

>>2068477
So you don't like ramen, omurice, or sushi? Your loss tbh

No. 2068713

>>2068560
Japanese curry is the worst of the curries.

No. 2068869

File: 1719586220238.jpg (154.03 KB, 1200x536, Christine-McAvoy_315924-1200x5…)

i made pierogis last night. it was my first time making them from scratch and i think my dough was a bit too dry/too thick. some of them burst open when i boiled them but overall they tasted really good and next time i make them i'll know to make the dough thinner! i cooked onions to put on top and now i still smell like onion even after a shower and change of clothes kek. worth it i guess. i'm still very full too, i ate too many.

No. 2068940

>>2068708
The only loss is the flavor that got lost in those dishes kek. Even bread is more stimulating

No. 2069871

>>2068940
I want to hear more about the tragic accident that burned off your tastebuds

No. 2069908

>>2068940
You're either too poor to afford good quality Japanese food and your only experience with it is cheap gross American restaurants, or you suck at cooking.

No. 2069910

File: 1719622145709.jpeg (476.79 KB, 1200x1200, IMG_0270.jpeg)

>>2068477
You’re telling me that miso soup is TASTELESS?

No. 2069924

File: 1719623168078.jpg (318.42 KB, 1454x1454, 5r5f21.jpg)

It was very tasty

No. 2069936

>>2069924
oh my god i love halo halo nonnie

No. 2070061

>>2069924
I heard there's beans in it… how do they taste? What is in this?

No. 2070081

>>2069924
I wished liked ube so I could enjoy southeast asian desserts. Everything else about halo halo seems so good.

No. 2070092

>>2069924
Holy shit is that… p-pandan in there

No. 2070141

>>2070081
Get pandanpilled

No. 2070147

>>2069924
Halo halo seems like it would be good and I'd love to try it, but I can't get behind how it looks

No. 2070338

>>2068540
I loved smoked tofu too! I don't eat it enough honestly, it's hard to find where I am. I wish I could smoke certain veggies and stuff myself, the char grilled taste is excellent.

No. 2070345

File: 1719642459437.jpg (69.87 KB, 563x658, 64dff49e9a11d5d948c270015b296d…)

>>2068477
I agree that it's super overrated nonnie. I have a theory that the West loves Japanese cuisine so much because white people in the US and UK are used to such bland, seasonless cuisine that Japanese cuisine by contrast is so flavourful and complex. There's also that elitism about seasonless food being all about the "food quality" even though that's just a neo-colonial idea spread by the rich who want to feel better about their bland appetites.

I think ramen is so mid when it comes to noodle soups. Laksa is inherently superior in taste and mouthfeel to me. Plus as someone who doesn't eat meat, I appreciate the protein I get from tofu in a laksa rather than those disgusting dehydrated shitaki mushrooms I normally get in ramen.

No. 2070356

>>2070345
Laksa is definitely the best noodle soup, fml I want some rn.

I still love Japanese food but I like the boring stuff, it's comforting. I travel there once or twice a year so I'm not looking for like, michelin star ramen or fancy sushi, just give me some basic omurice or hamburg steak or doria.

No. 2070358

>>2070345
>Plus as someone who doesn't eat meat
Opinion discarded. Vegetarians and vegans should never be allowed to give their opinions on food.

No. 2070360

>>2070358
Enjoy your colon cancer nonnie, I'll be sitting here eating the delicious variety of foods and cuisines at my disposal.

No. 2070396

>>2070358
Weird thing to say about people actively trying to help themselves and their environment

No. 2070411

>>2070360
I also eat delicious food everyday and don't eat meat all the time but you don't eat meat at all, so your opinion on food and cooking is legit worthless. Do you eat fish from time to time at least?

No. 2070414

>>2070396
NTA but I find it so funny how meatheads will cope and seethe at the mere mention of someone being veg. One thing I've learned in my many years being veggo and also working in restaurants is that it takes way more creativity and ingenuity to make meatless meals with richness and complexity than it does to just cook a piece of meat with sides. The many chefs I worked with who short-circuited when someone didn't want to eat meat just showed me their years in culinary school clearly operated within a limited scope.

>>2070411
How is it worthless? There's several societies and cultures that barely include meat in their diet and still have a great understanding of taste and good cuisine.

No. 2070423

>>2070414
Because the best dishes in Japanese food are the ones with meat or fish. There are some cultures that have delicious food with little to no meat, but the OP complained that a specific cuisine is overrated while avoiding its best dishes. It's like me saying I hate Italian food and it's overrated, and then adding I actively avoid anything made of pasta, cheese and olive. Or like saying Moroccan pastries are overrated but I never eat almond and honey for whatever reason. I'd look silly.

No. 2070432

>>2070423
nonnie you're assuming I've never eaten meat in my life. I have, and did for the majority of my life, including a lot of Japanese cuisine, and I agree it's still overrated. You also said you disregard any opinion about food without specifically mentioning Japanese cuisine, which makes much more sense in the context given how fish heavy it is.
I think if your cuisine relies heavily on raw, unseasoned fish, it's mid, and I really love raw, unseasoned fish.

No. 2070465

What are the easiest, fastest, healthiest and most delicious Summer meals your regularly eat?

No. 2070481

>>2070465
Just cubed watermelon kek I also like to make a simple salad with lettuce, tomato, canned corn and chicken or tofu depending on what I have at home.

No. 2070485

>>2070465
Salads usually because of the heatwaves making cooking a pain in the ass at best, either tomatos and mozzarella, or something with salmon or leftover pasta and chicken. Or I make half assed sandwiches but only with a fresh baguette. And I also eat a lot more fruits than usual too.

>>2070432
>I think if your cuisine relies heavily on raw, unseasoned fish, it's mid, and I really love raw, unseasoned fish.
Honestly I love good sushi (emphasis on good) but I don't get why it's so representative of Japanese food. I guess because it's seems weird and exotic or because it's easier to find restaurants than, idk, sukiyaki or yakiniku restaurants in some places outside of Asia? Sushi in Japan taste so different and so much better than anything I ate in my country it's shocking, and I'm talking about cheap stuff like Sushiro or conbini food. And yes I didn't specify just Japanese food, it applies to most cuisines. It's hard to make accurate comparisons when you forget the taste of good meat even if you used to eat it before. This also applies to other food, at some point I couldn't eat cheese or good bread for months because it was hard to find and buy until I moved back to my country and I realized how it felt so weird not eating food you're used to and then eating it again for the first time.

No. 2070486

>>2068477
I see my post has started a debate kek but I don’t understand why some nonnies refuse to accept that I simply do not like Japanese food? Why is the reaction always “oh you’re just too poor to afford quality ingredients blah blah” Pretending that it’s impossible to simply dislike Japanese food for what it is and that the person must’ve eaten the dishes in the “wrong way” is highly delusional

No. 2070498

>>2070345
People just like mild combinations of umami. They like japanese dishes for the same reasons they like italian but with extra weaboo enthusiasm. I don't know about England but "seasonless" and bland european food is a myth that comes from the fact few people have actually learned to cook traditionally since our parents' generation (it's my impression as a frenchfag at least). It did lower the standards of flavor and complexity so you're not wrong about that, but it mostly shows in the success of shitty restaurants. Thankfully as people get used to it they're starting to see the difference between good and bad ramen.

Japanese cuisine actually meshes very well with french and italian when it comes to fusion dishes, there's a reason.

No. 2070501

File: 1719653255088.jpeg (87.75 KB, 700x467, IMG_4380.jpeg)

Our local Indian restaurant makes the best Kashmiri naan. It’s filled with dried fruits, nuts and coconut flakes. I like to have it as a sweet treat after curry

No. 2070561

>>2070501
Fruitcake naan now I've seen it all

No. 2070566

>>2070498
>few people have actually learned to cook traditionally since our parents' generation (it's my impression as a frenchfag at least).
Good French dishes can take time and effort so tbh it's understandable. The last thing I want to do as a fellow frog is to prepare a blanquette de veau after work at 7pm even though it's one of my favorite dishes ever.

No. 2070610

>>2070498
>bland european food is a myth that comes from the fact few people have actually learned to cook traditionally since our parents' generation
True. I cook traditional French and English dishes 100% from scratch and the result is always full of flavour. The problem is that it involves a lot of time consuming prep work. Most dishes require meat stock which needs to be made from roasted bones, so before you even begin cooking the main meal you have to roast bones, then simmer them for hours with herbs and other aromatics. Making a roux isn't difficult but it does require you to stir it constantly for 10 - 40 minutes depending on how dark it needs to be. Braising meat in alcohol is something else no one seems to bother with anymore even though it makes for tender meat and tasty sauces and gravies.

No. 2071051

>>2070061
It's obviously beany but not bad, has light sweetness from absorbing stuff around it imo.

No. 2071058

File: 1719692898653.png (437.35 KB, 600x400, Melon-Pan-600x400.png)

>>2068525
I was in Japan for several months and I agree. Except for some dishes like takoyaki and curry, it is largely boring if you prefer intense flavors. I still found myself preferring to eat mostly other cuisines like Korean, Indian, and Chinese while there. I always wondered why Koreans who visit the West always seem to eat only Korean food while there but now I understand why.

>>2070345
Haha, I remember when I first tried melon bread. I always thought it was going to taste like melon, hence the name MELON bread, but no. The name is only because it's in the shape of a fucking melon. It's just slightly sweet bread. I'm still so mad at weebs for overhyping this. What a disappointment.

No. 2071082

i love eating tiny ham sandwiches

No. 2071096

File: 1719695549817.jpg (58.76 KB, 680x1020, Conchas-recipe-pan-dulce-mexic…)

>>2071058
Wow I can't believe Japan stole conchas…

No. 2071109

>>2071096
I think they taste different enough (conchas are better)

No. 2071114

>>2071058
>I always thought it was going to taste like melon, hence the name MELON bread, but no. The name is only because it's in the shape of a fucking melon.
Wait wtf? Now I feel lied to

No. 2071181

File: 1719699886372.jpeg (163.9 KB, 1022x950, IMG_5539.jpeg)

I fucking love runny eggs. I can eat them at every meal if I’m allowed to.

No. 2071198

>>2071114
It does taste like melon though. It's just artificial flavouring, like how grape flavour doesn't taste like actual grapes. But melon pan tastes like melon soda or whatever other melon flavoured stuff there is in japan.

No. 2071209

>>2071058
>I always thought it was going to taste like melon, hence the name MELON bread, but no. The name is only because it's in the shape of a fucking melon.
I swear to god everyone I know and myself got tricked into thinking it's a melon flavored pan. We need to collectively sue for false advertisement.

No. 2071265

>>2071181
Me too, the best thing ever.

No. 2071266

>>2071198
I haven't had any Japanese sodas besides ramune, but their melon flavor has always tasted pretty authentic to me. Their strawberry flavor too.

No. 2071308

>>2071198
Sorry but I don't taste any melon in it. It literally just tastes like sugar and bread. Maybe they do have some kind of varities somewhere that are flavored, though.

>>2071096
They always remind me of conchas too!

No. 2071310

File: 1719708328861.jpg (570.84 KB, 1456x2184, 41595.jpg)

I was craving pad thai tonight and didn't want to order take out, so I made it myself. It was pretty good. Better than I thought it would turn out

No. 2071311

>>2071181
boiled eggs are so much better than scrambled or fried eggs

No. 2071715

>>2071198
Girl why are you out here lying for no reason kek
You can look up any number of authentic melon pan recipes and see that there's no actual melon or melong flavoring involved. The draw of the bread is the shape and the cookie crust.

No. 2071730

>>2071058
This is an interesting perception of Korean food that I see often from non-Koreans. Likely based on what foods have become popular with them?
I mostly eat Korean food day to day, having grown up with it, and I'd say the food I eat second most at home is Japanese just because it matches my palate well, preferring food that isn't too strong. I do have a hard time going out to restaurants and eating Korean food though, as they tend to overseason the food– this is particularly true when I'm in the States. Some foods like tteokbokki and galbi which are also popular with non-Koreans are genuinely just strongly flavored, but those foods are typically considered junk food/party food/food for children for a reason.
I think it's a similar to how Thai food is often very amplified to suit foreign palates.

No. 2071735

File: 1719726071596.jpg (533.06 KB, 1440x1336, Screenshot_20240630_004042_Chr…)

>>2071715
Nta but I did some investigation

No. 2071762

File: 1719727994845.jpeg (487.5 KB, 2000x1500, internal_1697941391193.jpeg)

>>2071715
>>2071735
I concede I could be wrong, probably confirmation bias on my part. Last trip to japan I kept eating the butter croissant version instead (top left, that shit is so good) so my memory of melon pan is distant kek.

No. 2071829

>>2071762
You're good lol. NGL I was so convinced melon pan was melon flavored before trying it that it took eating it several times to realize melon flavor was absent… My brain imagined it in.

No. 2072658

>>2071730
ayart
Isn't Korean food known to be spicier? At the Korean restaurant I went to in Japan I had fried chicken and tteokbokki and they were pretty strongly seasoned but I've also had bibimbap in a restaurant owned by an old Korean lady and tried cooking several Korean dishes by myself at home, like kimchi-jjigae and bulgogi. Assuming I made it correctly, the bulgogi in particular ended up tasting very similar to Chinese food and the Korean food I had in restaurants also was so I was left with the impression that it must be much closer to Chinese than Japanese.

No. 2072984

>>2072658
This is a good example because I think of the common everyday soups, kimchijigae is one of the most heavily seasoned and spicy, the majority are far more mild.
Bulgogi is not something in my meal rotation, as it's not healthy, it's something I'd maybe get at a restaurant on the cheaper end of the spectrum. When it comes to going out and grilling meat with other people, the heavily marinated meats only make up the bulk of the meal when you're having something like a picnic outside– think the equivalent of hamburgers and hotdogs for americans. You're generally expected to acquire an appreciation for the unseasoned cuts by the time you're an adult.
It does also come down to a person's personal taste though, there are obviously households who might prefer different foods than mine. But a "healthy" Korean diet doesn't really include a lot of the foods favored by foreigners.
I think the pantry for Chinese food is really different than that for Korean food so I haven't really had a lot of it. It's hard for me to say how similar it is. But I know that for Japanese food, while it's obviously not 100% the same, you can branch into it from a Korean pantry more easily. Which I don't think is that surprising given proximity and history.

No. 2072986

>>2072658
Also samefag yeah we have some spice but I don't think it's exceptionally strong? People get thrown off by the redness but SEAsia blows us out of the water when it comes to spicy food. It's true that Japan is remarkably spice intolerant for an Asian country, though. Even their spicy challenge foods are a joke.

No. 2073026

>>2071181
I wish I had a hen so I could have endless eggs..

No. 2076180

I'm slashing my food budget and my calorie allowance, all so I have enough money to pay my legal fees until ex is forced to pay me hundreds of thousands of dollars (hopefully). Also want to look good in court, which won't be hard since he's one guilty morbidly obese motherfucker. Actually, I think he may have some weird semi-incestuous relationship with his mom.

Anyway, to this end, I bought a huge bag of basmati rice, a large pallet of eggs (can give a few to my neighbors if I can't finish them) and a bunch of other staples in bulk over the weekend. Please suggest vegetarian poverty meals that will keep me lean. I have less time to work out than normal, because I have 50 billion appointments and shit to do, plus writing the end of my diss and finding a new job. I wish I could work out all day because nothing else helps me feel better, but a woman has to eat. I always feel fatter in the summer, though

No. 2076203

File: 1720014057868.png (1.3 MB, 718x717, shakshuka.PNG)

>>2076180
Shakshuka! You can make the sauce red (tomatoes/peppers) or green (spinach/avocado, etc.), and it's a one skillet dish. It's very filling and can be made as spicy or mild as you like. Good luck with your trial nonna and hope your ex gets dragged!

No. 2076244

File: 1720016190659.webp (53.48 KB, 550x550, IMG_4859.webp)

I had a brief vegetarian phase that made me discover my love for tofu. Now that I eat meat again I‘m excited to finally try mapo tofu. It sound so good

No. 2076247

>>2076203
omg thanks for this great idea, nonna! I loved shakshuka when I was working abroad and I haven't tried making it myself yet. Fuck, thank you, I'm actually really hyped now.

I also remembered about mujadara

No. 2076618

I've been too lazy to properly cook today, I saw a good quality whole chicken at the grocery store this evening after work and made the classic rotisserie chicken. I put it in an oven dish, spread some butter on it, with salt, pepper and herbs of Provence. I added an onion that I had, halved, and some potatoes, doused em in olive oil and spread some salt and pepper on em too, let the whole thing bake in my oven at 200-215 degrees Celsius over an hour, and now I've got plenty of leftovers for my lunch tomorrow, for tomorrow evening, and maybe freeze some of the meat too (since even chicken got expensive now). Having an oven is such a life saver sometimes.

No. 2076801

File: 1720042392959.webp (41.05 KB, 1032x608, healthysalam.webp)

Eating lots of salami right now wb y'all

No. 2076996

>>2076180
dahl is a great poverty meal for veggos! Also any sort of stew with beans or lentils. I like making a tomato stew with chickpeas, pearl barley, and kale.

No. 2077126

File: 1720066065530.jpg (57.54 KB, 650x974, DSC_2878-e1552153056988.jpg)

>>2076180
Variety is going to make this a lot more survivable. If you have eggs that helps a lot since they can be cooked so many different ways. Try shakshuka with canned tomatos (other vegetables are nice but not a necessity) or gyeranjjim (can be made in the microwave in a microwave-safe bowl, only really needs sodium, water, and green onion) for more "out there" recipes to mix it up.

No. 2077127

>>2076180
Good luck nonna! I hope the court guts him for all he's got and more.

No. 2077129

>>2076801
I wrote on vent a few days ago that I ate too much salami and ended up with furious diarrhea

No. 2077131

>>2076180
Canned chickpeas are also a cheap livesaver. You can blend them into hummus with common pantry staples (lemon, olive oil, garlic, salt, sub in a nut butter for tahini) to use as a dip for veggies, spread on sandwiches, etc. Toasted chickpeas are good even with just salt, oil, and pepper, and can be used to make salads heartier/eaten on top of yogurt for a bowl/in wraps as a meat replacer. Pan fry and simmer a bit with potatos for stew, and so on. I always keep them in the pantry for a cheap and easy meal.

No. 2077432

Please help me I have too many choices to eat outside near my hotel. What do? Everything is tempting me:
>ramen and gyoza for cheap
>wagyu burger, I went there yesterday already though but it's so good. Either that or some Hawaiian burger brand but it's not as good imo
>sushi, I only hate sushi at the very beginning of my trip once
>was going to say xialong bao but the restaurant I'm thinking about must have a long queue right so I'll try tomorrow for lunch instead

No. 2077798

>>2076996
>>2077126
>>2077127
>>2077131
Thanks nonas!! I'm trying to survive each day and set goals for getting shit done while feeling incredibly stressed.

I do have more than rice and eggs, I just mentioned those as staples I bought in bulk. But all the things nonas have mentioned kick ass and I'm definitely going to make dahl, chickpea stuff, etc. These are great ideas, and I know it is a little silly, but it feels less stressful because I didn't have to think about it myself. I can just kind of draw on your awesome ideas and not have to ponder the food question too hard, or agonize over whether something is "too expensive." Thank you all! If I can find a way to celebrate with nonas, I definitely will. The case is massively in my favor but ofc I am terrified nonetheless. And angry kek.

No. 2077910

>>2076180
>Eggs aside, nearly every culture has some variety of bean stew or lentil soup, and iirc beans and rice are a complete protein. If you buy legumes/pulses in bulk and look up '[cuisine you like] [legume you have] recipe' you should be good.
>Tinned sardines are a cheap and extremely filling source of protein, as are tofu and peanuts (albeit fatty in the latter case). Most cruciferous vegetables are cheap and have a very high nutrient density – as does spinach, which you can conveniently add to legume dishes easily.
>If you crave meat, the cheapest cuts are typically the ones that taste the best if you cook them low and slow, like pork shin. You can get a big old pork shoulder, process it into chunks, make borscht (very cheap & healthy) and carnitas with it, and forget that you're poor.
>Maybe not the best for health and calorie restriction, but cabbage, egg noodles, and smoked sausage tastes way better together than it should. There are also tons and tons of dirt cheap pasta dishes if you're willing to forego protein (with exception to sardines, canned tuna, and cheap braised cuts of meat).

No. 2077919

>>2077910
Forgot to add but if you can afford any kind of meat, you can turn a whole chicken into days and days worth of different dishes. For example,
>Day 1: Roast chicken leg w/ potatoes and cheap green vegetable
>Day 2: Leftover chicken risotto (lasts days)
>Day 3: Leftover chicken green thai curry w/ rice (lasts days)
>Day 4: Italian chicken, kale, and white bean stew (lasts days)

You can also make the bones and carcass into a healthy stock, especially if you make chicken often and freeze a few of them, but even one carcass in a pot for ~8 hours will yield enough for one soup recipe (though likely adulterated with water).

No. 2085543

File: 1720720786857.jpg (191.9 KB, 615x300, banhmi.jpg)

Anyone know where I could get meat for banh mi stateside? I checked in an asian grocery store near me and they didn't have any. I'm wondering because recently I tried bánh mì for the first time (After looking for Banh Mi Sandwich in Takadanobaba when I was in Japan and not being able to find it lol). It was great and I think it just because one of my favorite sandwiches. I'd like to recreate it at home but don't know where to find some of the ingredients.

Also, the order didn't mention cha lua specifically but it listed "steamed pork" and "pork ham". I inferred one of those must be cha lua but what is the other supposed to be?

No. 2090312

File: 1721002063966.jpg (474.9 KB, 1400x1400, 1000019759.jpg)

i love sill senap so much

No. 2090732

>>2090312
What's the texture like? Do you eat it a certain way? Very curious.
>>2085543
I'd say the other item was thịt nguội since that's what's commonly with chả lụa in banh mi. Not sure where you can source them in the states if you don't have access to a viet market, though.
Grilled chicken and grilled pork are also common banh mi types, though, that would be easier to replicate at home. Not really meat as much as it is spread, but the liver pate used in a lot of banh mi could easily be sourced online. Good luck, nonna!

No. 2090877

File: 1721026998655.jpg (48.53 KB, 488x488, GUEST_af331c07-30a6-49e2-8840-…)

I literally love hot baked cheetos, they're so good. I actually dislike how the original ones taste, too chemical. Same goes for every other flavor, the baked variant is always the best. I loved baked snacks in general. Craving these babies right now

No. 2090893

File: 1721027607116.jpg (88.62 KB, 700x700, Peanut-Butter-Pickle-and-Potat…)

just made a third peanut butter, pickle, and potato chip toast today. it has no fucking right being this good. damn.

No. 2091474

File: 1721070659888.jpg (138.07 KB, 1200x1200, image.jpg)

This is a long shot, but does anyone have a good tamale recipe that one or two people can follow?

No. 2091478

File: 1721071056438.png (337.12 KB, 1504x1514, Screenshot 2024-07-15 at 3.17.…)

>>2091474
https://plantbasedonabudget.com/tamales/
not vegan (just didn't want to deal with lard or shortening) but I used this recipe the first time I made tamales and it turned out good. made them by myself. I put cheese strips and roasted poblano/jalapeno peppers inside.

No. 2091500

>>2090732
>What's the texture like?
it's super soft, almost like a paste, because fish is already quite soft and then it's been preserved with salt
>Do you eat it a certain way?
whenever i get it, i just eat it on its own like a side dish lol even if it sounds a bit gross. i'm not swedish but i'm pretty sure a more traditional way to eat it is on toast or something

No. 2091789

>>2091478
Thanks nonnie!

No. 2095529

File: 1721327804152.jpeg (33.69 KB, 375x500, 0085419500204.jpeg)

I usually have a problem when it comes to pacing movie snacks but these are God tier. Will last you the whole movie and they're pretty tasty. The Wasabi can be strong but it doesn't last too long.

No. 2095544

I'm sad that I ate margherita pizza for the first time in a looooong time yesterday and it really bothered my stomach. Something similar happened when I ate ice cream a couple weeks ago so I'm afraid I might be turning lactose intolerant.

No. 2095675

File: 1721334792592.jpeg (149.45 KB, 736x736, IMG_4057.jpeg)

I can eat soup every single day for the rest of my life and I’d be so happy

No. 2095676

>>2095675
I love soup fuckkkkk. Your pic looks so appetizing. What's your favorite soup?

No. 2097293

File: 1721485885852.jpeg (64.17 KB, 488x488, IMG_1026.jpeg)

>buy a new type of salmon because it’s relatively cheap, wild-caught, and Alaskan
>prepare it, tastes fine but a little bland and dry
>googles the species of salmon
>find out that it’s called “chum” salmon and is the type of salmon used in dog food

No. 2098968

>>2095676
I think I like minestrone. luckily it’s easy to make but also tastes just as good from the can. hbu?

No. 2100754

File: 1721693692949.jpg (34.37 KB, 570x458, 1000044454.jpg)

I love this shit so much, I wish I could eat enough of these to suffer from a diabetic coma.

No. 2100815

i just ate a fatass bowl of spicy potatoes

No. 2100816

File: 1721697761400.png (483.97 KB, 625x453, cake.png)

I started trying to make a swiss roll Japanese-style but I completely fucked it up. My whites wouldn't peak at all for the meringue. I threw in the yolks and tried to save it afterwards but I guess I was too late because I couldn't get the right consistency no matter how long I mixed. Plus apparently my yolks were supposed to be room temperature but I didn't know since the recipe didn't mention it. I ragequit and threw everything out. What a waste of eggs and sugar (Plus flour since I prepared it but ended up not doing anything with it and couldn't even sift it properly because I don't anything appropriate for sifting).

No. 2100864

File: 1721700867988.jpg (30.72 KB, 320x320, 10c3ee08fbd447d73524e13e0ef404…)

>>2098968
NTA but being a southern hemisphere nonnie I've been living on dried bean soups and stews this winter. HATE canned beans, realised they're not nearly as good in food as cooking some up from scratch.
Quick soaking has changed my bean habits and my life. Instead of soaking for 6-8 hours I can boil the dried beans for a minute and then leave to soak for an hour. Works a TREAT. It's great in that I normally don't figure out what I want for dinner until a couple hours beforehand, so I can soak them in the afternoon to be ready for dinner.

I love making a tomatoey butter bean stew, with lots of paprika. Borlotti beans have been great as well, some kale and pearl barley. The possibilities are endless now that I don't have to wait a whole ass day to soak beans.

No. 2100882

>>2100816
Aw, you could've used that for pancakes or something. But meringue is a bitch to make, the eggwhites need to be completely free of yolk, the bowl needs to be spotless and the whisk also needs to be completely clean and dry. I usually wipe everything with papertowels before starting but it still fails sometimes

No. 2100897

File: 1721703777006.png (561.15 KB, 1080x570, Screenshot_20240722-215953~2.p…)

>>2100882
Maybe but my knowledge of anything baking is pretty low so I figured it's not worth it unless I was already some kind of pro..I'd end up stuck on not knowing how to ratio anything else with what I already have and probably just waste even more ingredients.

>egg whites need to be completely free of yolk

Yeah, I wasted several eggs in the process just trying to get them to seperate properly. One of them had a tiny amount of yolk get into the whites and I thought I managed to get it out with a spoon but I guess not? It was only like a small drop so I didn't think it would be enough to affect it…

>bowl needs to be spotless

Might have messed up there as well then because I usually clean as I go with bowls when cooking but don't bother drying them 100% since I know I'll be re-using them. Goes to show baking and cooking are just two different worlds…

No. 2104101

File: 1721912567188.png (1.11 MB, 964x872, Plum crisp.png)

I posted earlier in this thread about living on a budget. I got a bunch of discounted stone fruits that were still OK to eat, but I couldn't eat them all alone before they would have rotted. Decided to make a crisp out of the plums. It turned out really well. I lowered the sugar, so it's tart. https://blue-kitchen.com/2022/09/14/italian-prune-plum-crisp/ (website thankfully doesn't have a bunch of ads or BS)

No. 2104112

File: 1721913042891.jpg (80.34 KB, 1200x1800, CRCKF_85266.jpg)

My impossible dream as a eurofag was try crumbl cookies since they're all over social medias. So I made my own following bellewoodcottage "crumble sugar cookie for one" recipe, I did end up with something pretty close to the real thing, and it was just as sugary and disgustingly good as I pictured, but it also instantly gave me one of the worst diarrhea of my life. All my ingredients were fresh, I guess I just couldn't handle all that butter and sugar in one go.

No. 2104154

>>2104112
I tried crumbl cookies one time because someone ordered a ton of them at a party and it was absolutely disgusting and did also give me diarrhea so I guess your recipe must've been spot on.

No. 2104222

>>2104154
They’re gross I don’t understand the hype around them outside of it being a trend. Also the company is weirdly Mormon and hires primarily from local Mormon congregations which just adds to the bad vibes for me

No. 2104587

>>2090732
Thanks nona. I ended up getting all the ingredients and making one at home but it was a huge disappointment. Not sure what I did wrong. I found and bought the special bread used for it at my Asian grocery store too, but it was from frozen and I didn't notice it already came with a bunch of fillings like fishcake, plus the pate and carrots until I was done baking it. I tried adding all ingredients I bought and prepared anyway but wonder if I didn't just overfill it in the process. Plus, I was using defrosted cha lua and old cilantro. Maybe I should have used fresher ingredients.

No. 2104598

>>2104112
they kinda look like lofthouse cookies

No. 2104605

I got my wisdom teeth removed and I’m so depressed. I miss food so much. What I wouldn’t give to eat some cheesy mozarella pizza. I’m scrolling through food on pinterest with TEARS in my eyes

No. 2108777

File: 1722178223224.webp (327.3 KB, 2560x1707, image.webp)

Does anyone have recipes/dishes that they make on hot days?

No. 2113889

File: 1722447019150.jpeg (41.38 KB, 554x554, image.jpeg)

My nigel brought home some frozen precooked langoustines instead of shrimp. What the hell am I supposed to do with these? Any suggestions?

No. 2113890

>>2113889
What were you going to make with the shrimp

No. 2113893

>>2113890
Shrimp scampi. I'd make langoustine scampi, but the langoustines are rock solid, so I can't twist off the tails. The moid's gone back out to get shrimp, but what should I do with the langoustines tomorrow??

No. 2113899

>>2113893
>scampi
Isn’t that the same thing as langoustine? You want to turn the shrimp into scampi?

No. 2113901

File: 1722448359832.jpg (35.7 KB, 496x669, 496x670_5519.jpg)

>>2113893
I'm not really a cook but I looked it up because I was curious, it says the taste and texture are similar to lobster meat so I would just find a lobster recipe to your liking and replace it with the langoustine meat
https://www.ricardocuisine.com/en/recipes/5519-lobster-thermidor

No. 2113922

I don't get the big deal behind steak. It's either all burnt and hard or chewy and rubbery.

No. 2113944

>>2113922
Fr. Shit tastes like my period blood stinch when I wear a pad for too long. Who tf finds that delicious? And they only put salt, pepper, thyme or rosemary with some butter. Not enough to salvage the worst cut of meat.

No. 2113962

>>2113899
'Scampi' is a shrimp and pasta dish in anglo countries. Why? I don't know.
>>2113901
This is a good idea. I guess I'll decide between this and bisque

No. 2113972

>>2113922
I find it tasteless

No. 2114118

>>2113901
>Lobster thermidor
This just gave me the craziest nostalgia for Sims kek. I can't even register that this dish exists irl

No. 2114153

>>2113899
Yes. Scampi is langoustine that has either been breaded or battered and then deep fried.

>>2113922
You need to try high quality steak that has been seared in a hot cast iron pan. When cooked correctly, the outside will crisp giving an intense beef flavour and the fat will become rich and slightly sweet.

No. 2114204

>>2114153
Nta but what about the red insides of the stake? I think it tastes gross exactly because of the blood.

No. 2114212

File: 1722460772327.webp (178.18 KB, 2365x2365, IMG_0302.webp)

Not food but I love this shit so much. I tried to recreate it but I can’t. The design, the taste, the cheap cost, the tea filled to the brim.

No. 2114574

What are your favorite tips to elevate a dish? What do you like to meal prep? I need advice for my next semester and my cooking/inspiration has been lacking lately due to ibs limitations

No. 2114620

>>2114212
As a non-Amerilard I marvel at the existence of a gallon of Arizona tea. I wish my country was as free to have this.

No. 2114853

>>2113922
Agreed. It's exhausting to eat, too much of one thing even when it's good.

No. 2114949

>>2114574
Elevating a dish is very individual to the dish. A more general point of advise is to think about the composition of the entire meal. A grilled cheese sandwich isn't very fancy on it's own but if you eat it with tomato soup and a dessert it's a respectable meal. Focus on fresh (or frozen) good quality ingredients. Balance out rich meals with something light and with a little acidity, either incorporated into the dish or into a side dish. Vary up color and texture so the meal isn't a bland mush. An easy example is something like rice; on it's own it isn't super flavorful but adding finely sliced green onion and sesame seeds gives a plain bowl of rice variety in color and texture.

No. 2114951

>>2114204
Steak shouldn't contain a significant amount of blood. If you're eating steak with blood pouring out of it, it's because it's low quality meat that hasn't been hung for long enough and then hasn't been rested after cooking.

No. 2115052

>>2108777
I've been living on caprese (basil, tomatoes, fresh mozzarella + olive oil, balsamic, salt, pepper). I know it's simple and almost a bit overdone, but it honestly is all I want to eat in this heat.

Last year, I made a lot of burrata sandwiches with tomatoes, rocket, and pesto. Those were delicious, I should do that again.

Otherwise, I use summer to eat fresh fruits and vegetables as much as possible. Whatever I can't eat in my farm box, I try to use for marinated vegetables, pickles, caponata, etc. If I can find my caponata recipe in my disorganized files, I'll post it later.

No. 2125922

File: 1723055254610.png (600.81 KB, 943x999, myfinger.png)

I hate cutting carrots. I just sliced my finger…again. How the hell are you supposed to cut match sticks out of them when they're too skinny?

No. 2125932

>>2125922
Get a mandolin with a matchstick cutter nonners

No. 2125975

>>2125932
This is the Lord's way

No. 2125977

>>2108777
I live off of smoothie bowls. I don't want to stand over the heat at all.
I'll do a lot of cold noodle dishes too. Soba salads and somen soups and such.

No. 2126113

File: 1723062099181.png (330.02 KB, 333x499, juliennecarrots.png)

>>2125932
Is that supposed to give you thicker cuts than a grater? I already have a grater and have used that but I get strips that are too thin. I'm just looking for picrel.

No. 2129700

Making sandwiches like this today, but I feel guilty cooking the tomatoes since they are already delicious

No. 2139779

Not sure if it's a thing in the US but has anyone signed up to one of those "ugly produce" services that gives you a big box of produce that's rejected from supermarkets?

I've been using one the last few weeks and I thought I'd give some pros and cons:

Pros:
>less trips throughout the week to the grocery store
>Get a good variety of vegetables, some I rarely cook with which is forcing my diet to become more varied
>Fridge is always full
>A lot of the produce is pretty amazing quality, can't even figure out the "ugly" part of it
>Almost always comes with "base" veggies like potatoes, onions, carrots to go with various things.

Cons:
>TOO much produce, but I think I just need to go down a size.
>Keep giving me radishes and I don't eat them enough to use them, been having to pickle them
>Sometimes will give me veggies I don't like (eggplant) which I can't really control. I like most veggies so this doesn't happen often, just annoying when it does.
>Haven't received items like garlic or herbs, so still have to purchase those.

Overall I would recommend it, but only if you're someone that's a good home cook and can just look at whatever you have in the fridge to whip something up. They do give me a "featured vegetable" each week and a recipe to come along with it but it's never something that's on my level of cooking kek. If you enjoy being creative it does almost become a fun challenge each week to see what you can come up with.

Given I'm still in winter I keep getting beetroots, which is becoming harder to find things to make with. I've done stews, beetroot hummus, salads with lentils and goats cheese. I'm thinking of making a sort of chunky walnut and beetroot spread to put on toast with my eggs in the morning to get rid of some of them.
All this to say, anyone got any interesting ideas about what to do with beetroots?

No. 2139899

File: 1723872369386.jpg (263.84 KB, 1044x1536, pot-roast-recipe-1-1044x1536.j…)

Made a pot roast today and it tasted heavenly. I like to use a bit more red wine in mine
>>1952669
I haven't had beets in so long. Picrel looks delicious
>>2024247
I'll have to make some myself too then
>>2129700
I've been seeing these on ig. Looks yummy

No. 2139922

>>2139899
they can't be BEET!

No. 2139924


No. 2141196

File: 1723944103956.jpg (41.62 KB, 435x424, 1000002427.jpg)

I'm finally SO happy with what I eat after struggling with my relationship with food for a few years. I could not give up on certain foods even though they were giving me extreme bloating and other issues, I was diagnosed with IBS. The worst triggers were bread, pasta, oats and cow milk. But I also got very bloated from rice, corn and beans. Coffee and black tea triggered heartburn so I dropped them too. I was never fat, but the bloating (like going from flat stomach to 7 month pregnant looking after one meal) was concerning, also my bowels refusing to do their job for 5 days in a row and then having diarrhea for another few days. I also had anaemia for years. I started gradually eliminating those foods, telling myself I will find a new thing to replace each one of them. Now after eliminating gluten, dairy (except eggs and small amounts of goat cheese, greek yogurt, and cottage or philadeplia cheese per week), refined sugars, rice, beans and corn, I feel so much better. I eat protein bars but I choose those without artificial sweeteners. During week, I eat mostly veggies, fruits (especially berries), quinoa, chicken, turkey, salmon, tuna, shrimps, eggs, nuts, dates and organic maple syrup or honey because I still crave some sweetness. Only once a week I have some beef. I don't use any seed oils and I use only ghee or olive oil for cooking. Quinoa was a life saver for me. It's great for both dinner and breakfast. I replaced oats with quinoa and it works great with almond or coconut milk, yogurt, fruits and chia seeds. This is what I ate/drank today:
two small minced beef steaks from yesterday's dinner, 1 fried egg, 1 avocado, a handful of raspberries (plus vit d3, k2 and omega 3 supplementation)
matcha with maple syrup and almond milk
chicken breast with quinoa and sweet and saur sauce (made from 1 bellpepper, 1 carrot, some pineapple, tomato paste, honey, and lime juice)
1 protein cookie
a cup of bone broth with veggies I cooked the other day
a small cup of green tea and hibiscus gelatin
matcha again
two rolls made with roman lettuce, smoked salmon and philadelphia cheese
1 protein bar with peanut butter
1 cottage cheese
1 banana
a few dates with hazelnut paste and salt
I also drank like 1,5 litre of water
I don't count calories, I eat what I want and not every day looks the same (sometimes I don't eat as much fruit or veggies as I should, like today kek, but I make up for it later, there are days when I just eat various salads, tuna and eggs because I feel like it), my blood work is good, my weight is good, my sleep is so much better than before, I finally like food. Food is great

No. 2141217

>>2129700
this was amazing. I didn't put pesto on it, but did everything else as shown. I highly recommend - it was the perfect summer sandwich.

No. 2141474

File: 1723964023694.jpg (405.96 KB, 600x415, __original_drawn_by_natsumika_…)

My new obsession is iced oolong tea after trying it at a tea shop. I'm going to attempt to make my own at home and add lychee to it. Is there a brand that anyone would recommend for relatively cheap? Google gives me fancy, expensive recommendations which feels like a waste for my purposes.

No. 2141780

File: 1723991574296.png (1.03 MB, 864x1208, 1000032545.png)

>>2141474
That sounds delicious, anon. I'll have to make some this week too. Don't have lychees, but I can add some other fruit.

The problem is that the taste of oolong varies so widely depending on a number of factors, including where it's grown, roasting, and the season. I've liked most of the varieties I've tried, but ever since I got older and tasted more (and earned money of my own), I tend to gravitate toward varieties from Fujian, specifically Wuyi mountain. Unfortunately a huge range of types and qualities are produced even just within Fujian: some are incredible (+expensive), some are horrible. For an iced flavored tea, I'd look for one harvested in autumn, at least a medium roast. But this is just my opinion.

I buy a lot of tea loose or at Asian grocery stores, but if you give me an idea of what continent you're on, I can try to recommend some brands that aren't expensive. Yunnan Sourcing is highly recommended on tea forums for reasonable prices on quality teas: https://yunnansourcing.com/

No. 2147173

This was very interesting. It kinda seems ok and I'm curious what does it taste like.

No. 2147285

File: 1724256658104.png (1.64 MB, 1008x868, get in my mouth.png)

I wanna make 30 million chocolate cake pops but I don’t feel like buying lollipop sticks should I just use regular popsicle sticks?

No. 2147305

>>2147285
Are they for a bake sale or party?

No. 2147357

>>2147305
I was originally gonna make them just for me but that sounds like a good reason to throw a party, sharing your wealth of cake pops kek

No. 2148634

>>2147357
oh then just use the popsicle sticks! if no one will expect the smaller round sticks then use what you have. Enjoy your riches, anon!

No. 2151977

I just discovered the magic of frozen donuts. I froze them for later but i was too hungry and ate them right after i pulled them out of the freezer and my god! Perfect food for a hot day.

>>2147285
Do you even need sticks? Looks like it could work just as ball. Looks amazing though.

No. 2160915

File: 1726096782697.png (2.01 MB, 1200x1200, chocolatecake.png)

I miss eating sugar regularly so bad. I started trying to stay away from it because of a yeast infection but I can't take it anymore. What I would do to have a triple chocolate cake or something, right now…

No. 2161009

>>2160915
Use artificial sweeteners in your desserts (if you make them), that can help. Have more natural less processed sugars like fruits. And if you must have something processed and sugary from a sweets shop, then take a small enough portion to quinch your thirst for sweets but not enough to ruin your health, and do it every once in a while just to reduce the urge since restriction doesn't always work. I managed to eat less sugar this way and I started to find overtly sweet things unbearable with time. I hope this help you!

No. 2161117

>>2161009
I have Stevia but I find it disgusting and it makes my stomach feel weird. I also heard something about artificial sweeteners being bad for you and giving you cancer so I don't think they're a good idea anymore..
>Have more natural less processed sugars like fruits
Yes, that's what I'm trying to do right now. Fortunately I love fruits so it's not a problem. Just hope even the natural sugars aren't perpetuating the problem.
>take a small enough portion
Do you think 35g of added sugar would be too much? My mom brought back home a bunch of dark chocolate
wafers. They're really good and I've tried some but I don't know if I didn't just undo all my progress (If any)

No. 2161122

>>2161117
NTA but women aren't supposed to have more than 25g of added sugar a day to be healthy. I also have a sweet tooth but I had to stop being so crazy with sweets and now a lot of stuff I used to eat is disgustingly sweet to me now. Fruit + whipped cream is really good to help curb cravings and not as bad as cake. Everything in moderation anon, just be mindful of how much you're taking in because if you check the labels, sugar is added to everything to make it more addictive.

No. 2161124

For a few weeks now I've been really enjoying freshly sliced strawberries in soy milk. I had my doubts initially but damn if I'm not sold on it now.

No. 2161127

Throwing blueberries in milk with some honey. Depression temporarily cured

No. 2161527

>>2161117
Weird, I find Stevia nice snd better than white sugar. Stevia has no evidence of being bad for you so far, but other types of artificial sweeteners can cause vision issues and other health issues, but only if you consumed liters worth of them on a daily basis. I only have around 2-4 tsps of stevia in my tea or/and coffee. A bit more if I use it for desserts or sauces.
>Stevia makes my stomach feel weird
Yeah, artificial sweeteners cause bloating sometimes.
Idk about how much sugar a person is allowed a day, but I try to err on the side of caution and have suagr once a day only. I get a bit conscious about the amount of sugar I consume throughout the day because my health anxiety is off the charts, I have a dad with diabetes and a mom with cancer so I know the real effects of a bad diet. I'd rather curb some craving than end up like them, and that actually worked for me so far.

No. 2162765

File: 1726234801337.jpg (101.93 KB, 1000x1000, 8809054400802.jpg)

If I have a pack of instant tteokbokki and want to make it rosé style, should I cook it in water and add cream / milk at the end, or just cook it in milk entirely? Picrel is the kind that I have, I plan on adding in other ingredients too.

No. 2162785

>>2162765
i’m also wondering this as fresh made tt is out of my grasp for now

No. 2163017

>>2162765
If what you have involves a condensed sauce packet, then follow this recipe, just substituting the sauce for the gochujang mixture https://mykoreankitchen.com/rose-tteokbokki/ .

No. 2163033

File: 1726250457338.gif (290.76 KB, 275x204, 1725319938675.gif)

I'm making dinner for my boyfriend tomorrow and it's my first time cooking for him. Any ideas for what to make? He doesn't have an oven or any special appliances. I usually cook chinese, latin, and soul food for myself but he's from northern Europe so I can't go too crazy on the spice.

No. 2163075

File: 1726253817759.jpeg (493.32 KB, 2177x2540, IMG_6009.jpeg)

>>2163033
Put a few drops of this in his food. My last boyfriend loved it.

No. 2163113

>>2163033
Pasta with a protein is an easy staple if you're not super familiar with what he'll be alright with.

No. 2163136

I love buying new cheeses. And old cheeses that I’m obsessed with kek

No. 2163143

File: 1726258036407.jpg (75.66 KB, 1200x900, GCGWnjZa0AAkJ9q.jpg)

>>2163033
As someone who mainly cooks Chinese food and had an Eastern Euro ex who didn't like spicy food, this was what I cooked for him for the first time. Chicken and bacon pasta with creamy cheesy sauce. He ended up liking it a lot.

For 2 large portions :
300g chicken breast, cubed
Black pepper
Garlic powder
120g bacon, roughly chopped
1 brown onion, finely chopped
4 tsp minced garlic
200ml double cream
100g cream cheese / mascarpone
70g parmesan, finely grated
2 chicken stock cubes
1 tsp dried basil
1 tsp dried oregano
200g uncooked fusilli
Fresh basil

1. Season chicken breasts with salt, black pepper, and garlic powder. Add to a pan with lard and butter. Fry until almost cooked, then add in bacon. If necessary, remove the chicken from the pan once done, and continue frying the bacon. Once everything is cooked, set aside.

2. Add more butter to pan. Fry onion over low heat until golden. Add the garlic and cook for 2 more minutes.

3. Add in double cream, cream cheese / mascarpone, parmesan, stock cubes, dried basil, dried oregano, and black pepper. Meanwhile, cook the pasta 1 minute less than pack instructions in a separate pan.

5. Drain the pasta, but reserve a small amount of the pasta water. Add pasta water to the sauce, along with the chicken. Simmer until reduced to your liking. Add in the pasta and bacon. Top with black pepper and fresh basil.

No. 2163242

>>2162765
wtf where do you buy instant rice cakes?? am burgerfag for reference

No. 2163248

File: 1726262295148.png (1.31 MB, 998x620, deener.png)

It's a perfect rainy day! I'm torn between making a pot roast w/ mashed potatoes or lasagna for dinner tonight.

No. 2163260

>>2163242
You can find them in Asian grocery stores or online, the Samyang ones seem to be the most popular
>>2163248
Pot roast!

No. 2163262

>>2163248
2nd vote for pot roast!

No. 2163267

>>2163248
Pot roast!! I had beef stew today it was so good

No. 2163302

>>2163267
>>2163262
>>2163260
you've convinced me! pot roast it is!

No. 2164623

I'm really eyerolling the current protein craze.
I'm old enough to remember the fiber craze. Like, yeah, some people lack protein and/or fiber in the modern diet. But too much of anything is a bad thing. Too much protein can lead to kidney problems.
People will guzzle any overprocessed rubbish if it says PROTEIN in big letters on the package ignoring all the cancerogenic additives.
If you're not a bodybuilder and eat a balanced whole food diet you probably don't need extra protein.
Protein is, just like fiber was, hailed for giving the fullness feeling. Mind you, the fiber craze was happening the last time low rise pants and heroin chic was in. I see a pattern here.
And it's total bullshit. Just eat right, be active, and ignore the food industry and fashion industry marketing. They don't want you healthy, they just want your money.

No. 2165108

>>2163242
I am not in Burgerland but I saw them at my local Asian store. However, in my country (not Asian btw), they are also on amazon! This was my favorite snack during the cold winter last year.
>>2164623
This, and the gut health craze (though the latter isn't going to cause as many issues). I don't know what people are thinking. My vet warned me against too much protein for my dog, because of the kidney and heart issues it can cause. Dogs are omnivores, so they can't survive on a protein-only diet. I don't know why people are trying to survive on one. I hate seeing influencers shill the absolute worst diet for the environment, too.

I've been doing a part-time job taking oral histories in a rural Euro area. Some of these people are in their 80s and 90s and still farming. They bake cakes and eat fruit and vegetables. They aren't fat. Sure, genetics are involved but none of them - especially the farmers - would eat a protein overload. The farmers know exactly how expensive and time-consuming it is to raise a cow vs. growing some vegetables and grains. My research isn't on food but the one thing I've noticed is how all old people love almonds, walnuts, any kind of nuts. So maybe the "nuts are healthy" crowd get a point.

No. 2166190

Last month I bought a salad to attempt another healthy eating weight loss diet and felt too lazy to cook the steak I had for it, so I prepped it and ate a bowl of it alone… and now salad is all I'm craving! Not sure what changed my mind as I've detested stand-alone salads but now I just want-want-want salad, even if it's a bagged salad mix with some shredded chicken thrown in- it's always so filling yet so light it's weird but pleasant. I'm yet to try salads with fruit in them though. Sounds strange

No. 2168579

File: 1726609712607.jpg (121 KB, 1600x1067, squirrel-nut-cute-animal-natur…)

>>2165108
Nuts are definitely a super food. They have it all - carbs, protein, healthy fats, fiber, minerals and vitamins.
They are very nutrient dense so you don't need to eat a lot, which is great if you are old and losing appetite, if you don't have time for a full meal, or if you're on the move and can't carry a lot.
They are not perishable like most other food and can be stored for long periods of time.
They have that satisfying crunch!
They are a great addition to any other food - from breakfast foods like muesli, to lunch like in Chinese food, to desserts like cake, and are a great snack in their own right.
Can you tell nuts are my favourite food yet? I swear I'm not a squirrel but I sure have the taste of one. I could write odes to nuts.

Oh cashew, I yearn thine buttery bliss
Oh honey roasted peanuts your aroma I miss
I crunch on almonds that taste most divine
I grind walnuts to bake a cake so fine
Pistachio ice-cream is the best kind
Hazelnut spread is always on my mind
Even if the whole world goes bust
I'll still be munching on nuts, trust

No. 2170229

I would like to thank nuts and feta cheese for saving every and any salad.

No. 2170297

File: 1726715997483.jpg (16.75 KB, 474x265, coconut water.jpg)

Coconut water is plant endosperm.

No. 2170342

I’ve been eating so much cheese lately kekk and I don’t plan on stopping. Sometimes I’ll just eat a whole block of cheese but I mostly only feel comfortable doing this because I get so much exercise on a daily basis it’s never fattened me up or done me any harm. And dairy is what our ancestors primarily survived off for centuries before we had the grocery store and the market

No. 2170348

>>2170297
I fucking love fruit cum

No. 2170380

>>2170342
Are you still able to shit though?

No. 2170843

>>2170380
Yes I have been still able to shit! It didn’t clog me up kek

No. 2171897

Im craving ice cream with some nice chunks or a swirl of graham cracker in it. Im gonna order Ben and Jerry's Strawberry cheesecake ice cream later literally as soon as the stores open up. Van leewen also had a pumpkin cheesecake ice cream they sold around Fall like 2 years ago that was so fucking good and I have to see if they're selling it again this fall.

No. 2172234

>>2161527
My grandmother used to be a diabetic and it is strange because growing up I always loved having her sugar-free stuff over mine that had real sugar. They would laugh at me about it. lol Even back then they would tell me it's not good for people without diabetes to eat though.
>but I try to err on the side of caution and have suagr once a day only.
Diabetics don't have to quit sugar completely. My mother has diabetes and still eats it all the time. My grandmother used to as well. It's only a matter of controlling the amount you consume and always monitoring your blood sugar. This is a yeast infection that I'm dealing with however, so I feel like it's even worse in a way because I HAVE to go 0g. I'm not sure even controlling the amount is enough. Sorry to hear about your mother as well!

No. 2172853

I eat so much goddamn sugar I need to chill

No. 2172882

File: 1726879165582.jpg (488.32 KB, 1681x1484, 20240921_033903.jpg)

Made oyakodon for dinner. First time making it, forgot the water in the sauce, the chicken made the sauce too grainy, there wasn't enough sauce when I poured it in the pan, so I added water when I actually remembered it, then added extra soy sauce for color because it was too light, I only used 2 eggs because 3 seems like too much. I let the egg cook for too long and it absorbed all the sauce and when I put it on the rice, it was a bit dry but not too dry to flavor the rice thankfully. I drizzled some sesame oil and added some home made fermented onions I made for a microbiology class I have, picrel. It turned out nice despite all this!

No. 2172897

File: 1726879783691.png (229.35 KB, 420x562, anchovy.PNG)

I have a HUGE asian grocery store near my house and every time I go in I get completely lost in all the interesting ingredients. There's just so many things I don't recognise and want to try, so many frozen things that look delicious. They have these premium, very classy looking boxes of XO sauce and I'm dying to know why XO sauce is fancy.
The question I bring to the thread though, is there anything one might find in these stores that's a must try? Any ingredients off the shelf that a regular white person might look past that's worth trying? I don't eat meat, but I eat fish/mostly vegetarian.
The store I go to carries these snack packets of spicy anchovies that are so delicious (picrel) but I'll really take any suggestions. Dried produce that works great in soups, other snacks, sweet snacks, pre-packaged sauces and seasonings. If you suggest it, this store probably has it.

No. 2172951

File: 1726882566401.jpg (81.88 KB, 1200x1200, 1074028215-2695985880.jpg)

>>2172897
everything Weilong makes is ridiculously tasty, I love these. But you should try as many as you can, there is one called "fried pungent beancurd" that is especially good if you like more adventurous things, it's fermented tofu and has a very unique flavor.

No. 2172974

>>2172882
Omg I love anchovies!
My favourite pizza is Italian style with anchovies
Lately for breakfast I've been eating toast with baba ghanoush or hummus topped with anchovies and capers, plus a glass of goat yoghurt
Yes, it's very very salty. That's why I love it.

No. 2175735

>>2172897
The canned fish in vidrel– not healthy by any stretch of the imagination but super convenient for an easy but flavorful meal, and also very open to "dressing up".

No. 2178026

File: 1727205757955.jpg (2.85 MB, 4032x3024, 20240924_104829.jpg)

I made creton last night. It's great on white bread with butter and yellow mustard.

No. 2180403

File: 1727370532381.jpg (104.9 KB, 530x530, spicy-korean-noodles-530x530.j…)

So I want to make something similar to a Korean rosé sauce to use for a glass noodle dish, but I don't have gochujang or any other Korean pastes. I googled what the best substitutes would be, and the only ones I have are chilli garlic sauce, sriracha, and hoisin sauce. I was planning on using a mix of the chilli garlic sauce and hoisin sauce along with some chilli flakes, soy sauce, and sesame oil, then adding it to milk and cream. My question is, would this just end up turning out poorly? All of the recipes I can find for spicy creamy asian noodle dishes use gochujang, so I have no idea how something like this would turn out and don't want it to end up tasting like shit kek.

No. 2180549

>>2180403
Look up what gouchujang is made from and try to mimic its flavor profile. Imo, you can never go wrong with soy sauce, tomato paste, and chili flakes and any other spices you like, along with hot sauce. I think it will be fine. You can add some rice vinegar or wine for acidity, and some sugar to balance the saltiness.

No. 2180550

>>2180403
Thats so interesting, Ive never heard of rose sauce.
I would taste it before adding cream, just to confirm you have the right base flavors. Please report back afterwards! Love to hear about the results

No. 2180890

>>2180549
>>2180550
Thanks for the suggestions! Here is what I ended up using :

1 tsp lard
60g sausage
50g beansprouts
1 tsp minced garlic
50g spring onion
10ml Lee Kum Kee chilli garlic sauce
5ml Lee Kum Kee hoisin sauce
16ml light soy sauce
4ml sesame oil
5g sugar
2 tsp chilli flakes
150ml whole milk
25ml double cream
80g uncooked glass noodles
Sesame seeds
Furikake

It turned out quite nice, it was sweet, spicy, tangy, and creamy, but lacked the depth of flavour that gochujang gives. I think the best substitute for gochujang would likely be equal parts chilli garlic sauce and miso paste, instead of hoisin. I wouldn't suggest following the ingredients that I used exactly as there definetly needs to be some swaps and adjustments for the best gochujang-free outcome, but I listed them anyway just in case anyone is curious!

No. 2181331

>>2180403
Yeah you don't have to use gochujang, but I would try to avoid anything vinegary.
Thinking about this made me realize that rose sauce is kinda similar to vodka sauce.

No. 2181344

>>2180890
Thanks for reporting back! I will say, the chili paste is pretty cheap and has a long shelf life in the fridge once open; maybe its worth the investment!

No. 2181372

>>2181344
No problem! Yeah I'm considering getting some, I'm just a little hesitant due to corn syrup being a main ingredient, so I wanted to explore various substitutions first to see if anything else worked well enough to use as a replacement.

No. 2181494

Do you guys prefer ricotta or mozzarella with your pasta? Or neither?

No. 2181511

File: 1727402223556.jpg (150.62 KB, 1200x1200, ricotta-toast-featured-image.j…)

>>2181494
For what use? When it comes to pasta my first thought is usually parmesan.
Unrelated but I'm really into ricotta toasts lately. Quick nuttient dense breakfast with less hassle and more flavor range than mashing an avocado.

No. 2181513

>>2181511
Those look fire. What's your favorite ricotta toast toppings?

No. 2181534

>>2181513
Sweet: some sort of preserve (fig is my favorite) + rosemary
Savory: sliced grape tomatoes and basil, drizzled with balsamic reduction and olive oil + fresh ground pepper
You can do a lot of other variations but these are the two staples I always have on hand to make when I'm in a rush.

No. 2181549

File: 1727405757498.jpeg (132.35 KB, 828x1327, IMG_7812.jpeg)

>>2181372
Hey, I feel ya on that. I looked up the Trader Joes version, and this one has tapioca syrup- is that better? Its pretty affordable too.
https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/gochujang-paste-073246

No. 2181611

>>2181494
Neither for me. Usually parmesan or something close to it.
Also a bit of full/sour cream. Ate a lot of pasta as a kid that way.

No. 2181677

File: 1727413985184.jpg (140.4 KB, 1500x1125, AR-228126-caprese-salad-with-b…)

>>2181534
slightly related but is it just me or do balsamic reduction on things always look so tacky?
I like the taste, but whenever I see it plated it just looks so unappetising to me, like I'm about to get an overcooked veal from a cheap, touristy italian place. Tell me I'm not the only one that has weird food gripes like this kek.

No. 2181709

>>2181677
I think it looks delicious

No. 2181873

>>2181549
Unfortunately I am from the UK and we don't have Trader Joe's kek, but thanks for the suggestion, I'll probably look around to see if there is any like that here

No. 2182210

Ive been making scrambled eggs with turmeric and other spices, and whisking in a spoon of sour cream before cooking, and it's so fluffy and wonderful.
Today Im gonna use my left over crispy chorizo and beans to make a yummy breakfast burrito.
Its high calorically, yes, but I notice if I eat a hearty breakfast its better for my day.

No. 2182652

>>2182210
Personally I like adding cottage cheese when I make scrambled eggs

No. 2183153

I have trouble deciding what to eat when I am nauseated from stress or from my period. The past two days I've nearly passed out because both of these things collided (some of the most terrifying stress I've ever had).

Any suggestions? I don't eat meat or fish. I am somehow not really on Day 1 yet though probably that will be tomorrow. Ugh God I feel so stupid because nothing appeals to me except shit I don't realistically want to make (e.g., I'm not making a really complicated lasagna just to eat a few bites and be overwhelmed bc I feel like garbage). I just note down those cravings for a better time.

I spent almost the whole summer eating exclusively cold/room-temp food because of the heat, so I guess I need to get back into the mindset of warm food. Though it's still not even remotely cold.

No. 2183927

>>2183153
Miso soup on repeat in different variations for me in situations like this. You can easily find dozens of different types of miso soup to make on youtube if you feel so inclined. It's nice because it feels nourishing and flavorful like a much more complicated soup while taking like 15 minutes max to make (depending on ingredients, you can even just make it using an electric kettle for hot water).
If I'm really not doing great I sort of subsist on broth with some lemon in it. Not the best for me I know but I figure it at leats hydrates me and gets me some electrolytes. I like to use better than bouillon for this.

No. 2184112

>>2183927
This is a really good idea, thank you nona. I have an appointment today right by an asian shop, so I'll get the paste. Thanks again, bc I love miso and yet didn't think about this on my own.

Also gonna pick up some ginger for tea and ginger candies for the nausea since it's still awful.

No. 2184115

I ate too much salt today. I had ramen that the noodles of LITERALLY absorb all the broth and then I had another SEA soup… I'm a sodium-filled woman who's gonna die in 2 years flat.

No. 2184192

>>2182652
Me too, they become so creamy and salty
Other things I like putting into my scrambled eggs:
- leeks
- mushrooms
- leeks + mushrooms
- tomatoes
- bell peppers
- tomatoes + bell peppers

No. 2184230

>>2184192
All of those are excellent nonna, have you tried crumbling goat cheese into scrambled eggs with bell peppers and other veggies? It is so divine, the little creamy pockets along with the crunch of fresh veg and the salty buttery egg….I think it’s time for my breakfast kek

No. 2184293

>>2184230
I'm going to have to try it, lately I've been buying more goat yoghurt and goat cheese than cow ones.
Not only is the taste fuller and they're more nutritious, goats don't have added growth hormones so it's healthier in that regard too.

No. 2184380

>>2184115
What was the SEA soup? I honestly wish I knew more about food from that region.

No. 2184461

>>2184380
idk what anon ate but I just want to share that earlier this year I had the most hellish sinus infection (behind my eyes in a way I've never had before) for weeks. I was craving Tom Kha Kai soup, and to a lesser extent Tom Yum soup, but I was temporarily unemployed (to concentrate on my grad program) at the time so was trying not to order food. I was lying there, almost deliriously thinking about these soups - in retrospect, how stupid I was. Just order the soup if you are ill and alone, honestly!

I finally ordered both soups (biggest sizes) and another chili-laden soup after about 2.5-3 weeks of torture. I figured I could eat them over the coming days. Ate one on the first day, and the second a day or two later, followed by the third, which had gained a ton of spiciness and depth after being in the fridge for 3 days. I immediately started to recover. Probably a coincidence but it's still a good story about Thai soups.

No. 2184551

File: 1727547189560.jpg (177.53 KB, 1200x1500, Sizzling-Beef-Fried-Rice-54326…)

Does anyone else here use https://www.recipetineats.com/ ? If so, which recipes are your favourite? Everything I've tried from her so far has been really good, but there's so many recipes that I can't decide what to try next kek, I'd like to hear some recommendations

No. 2184634

File: 1727550412803.jpg (82.3 KB, 768x1024, Miso-Balls-18-of-19-768x1024.j…)

>>2184112
I hope it helps, nonna! I know how you feel, you deserve wellness.
If you know when your periods are coming BTW, miso soup balls are also a convenient thing to make ahead and have on hand so you can just pour some hot water over them when you're really feeling under the weather. I make ones packed with katsuoboshi and ginger (a regional style of miso soup) when I feel a cold coming on.
>>2184461
Wow, sounds yum! I feel like I'm going to remember this post and crave Thai soup next time I'm sick.

No. 2184728

>>2184461
All the times I've had sinus trouble, anything with mild or medium spice will clear it up to a certain extent.

No. 2184776

>>2184634
Nona these are amazing. I will definitely do this for the future. I got light and dark paste and made a light miso soup with scallions and tofu. Got some fresh mushrooms for tomorrow.

These balls are genius, thank you again.

No. 2185467

Do Italians seriously not drink coffee in the evening? I saw a video of a woman ordering a coffee after her pasta and everyone was shaming her.

No. 2190493

File: 1727847748274.jpg (59.9 KB, 564x846, 800e8f36a3eee0c55b5ce09bd9d0f3…)

Do you guys prefer your apple cider hot or cold?

No. 2190494

>>2190493
Mmm, hot cider and dark caramel

No. 2190597

>>2190493
Cold
Chilled so much you can barely feel the sweetness

No. 2191578

i love it when i bite into cheese and hear an audible squeak

No. 2191586

>>2190493
Cold! Hot sweet drinks are weird to me

No. 2198672

File: 1728401387946.jpg (391.7 KB, 1318x1350, swag.jpg)

Cracking up at this luxury burger you can get near me for $150 I kind of love it, I want to eat the gold

No. 2198678

>>2198672
you can buy gold leaf for $10 and put it on a mcdonald’s burger kek

No. 2198751

>>2184551
Yes! I love her! I found one of my favourite chicken marinades from her https://www.recipetineats.com/chicken-marinade/

No. 2211061

File: 1729182469095.jpg (38.8 KB, 240x300, 1000014645.jpg)

I can't stop thinking about cheese balls, the melty kind in breadcrumbs. I tried them for the first time a few days ago and they were heavenly. I really didn't expect to like them at all, let alone so much. They were the perfect temperature and so stringy, every bite was perfect to me. I got them reduced at the store, so it's not something I can afford usually, I'm quite sad I have been missing out so much. I am thinking about making some of my own, I just don't have breadcrumbs or anything alike right now. I'll probably have dreams of eating these gooey cheeseballs for the rest of my life, I look forward to going to bed now. Thank you cheese balls, ILY.

No. 2211070

>>2211061
>I just don't have breadcrumbs or anything alike right now.
If you have stale bread you can just blitz that in a blender/food processor. add seasonings and you have breadcrumbs. can also toast the bread if it's not already stale

No. 2211084

>>2211070
Bless you, nona, I don't have a blender or food processor but after googling it seems like I can just grate the bread! When I make these cheeseballs I'll dedicate them to you, I hope you get some good karma your way.

No. 2211093

>>2211084
>using a cheese grater for stale bread
Fucking genius. Thank you nonna. Hope your cheese balls are melty and magical!

No. 2211413

File: 1729197579599.jpg (2.12 MB, 2929x1474, 1000035373.jpg)

baking apple crumble right now!! come over nonas.

a few days ago I roasted a bunch of pumpkin and made a soup. It didn't turn out as I'd hoped (not the right kind of pumpkin - usually used for making pumpkin seed oil - I kind of just took it from a giant pumpkin-loaded field, though, so I guess I deserved a bad soup). The soup was barely okay. I roasted the seeds and they're really good though. This kind of pumpkin has black seeds.

what are other anons baking or cooking for autumn? Share your secrets, especially easy or budget recipes, or your favorites. Everything is so gd expensive now that I'm NOT eating out, I will NOT buy food at work or on campus. I am making it myself. (Sorry just have to remind myself. Please support me in my goal of not giving in to laziness, prices are ridiculous these days.)

Also anyone noticing the prices on butter skyrocketed? I'm making the crumble with a "butterlike" margarine, we'll see how it turns out. Need to check the "close to expiration date" section for cheap butter next time I go to the store. I prefer butter for certain kinds of baking and margarine for other kinds, but I've never made a crumble or crisp with margarine before today.

No. 2211417

I’m eating state subsidised butter cookies with vegetables inside

No. 2211423

>>2211413
Are you American? What recipe did you use for fhe crumble?

No. 2211442

File: 1729198631913.webp (159.56 KB, 1091x1536, 1000035611.webp)

>>2211423
Yes, one of my parents is American, and I grew up there. But I live in Europe now.

I used an adjusted version of this recipe: https://www.thechunkychef.com/wprm_print/old-fashioned-easy-apple-crisp
Most apple crumble/crisp recipes use Granny Smith apples, but those aren't so common here. I looked for a recipe that used a different kind of apple. Reduced the sugar a bit. Hopefully it's decent.

No. 2211452

I NEED UR HELP. I NEED TO LEARN TO COOK TO ACCESS A MAN'S STOMACH AND HEART.

>How do I balance flavors and textures?

>Taste fresh? and not like make food bland and barely edible?
Like how do I make my food TASTE homemade and like there's heart in it.

No. 2211481

>>2211452
This made me cringe.

No. 2211492

>>2211452
girl it’s over for you

No. 2211514

>>2211452
Add period blood and cyanide to his cereal

No. 2211617

>>2211452
I'll be real with you anon this is a lame and cringe post but I'll answer somewhat earnestly.
Your food isn't going to taste homemade and like there's love put in it unless you actually love doing it. My home cooking tastes great because I put my heart and soul into it and have been doing so for years. The love and tastiness comes intrinsically as a result of knowing what I'm doing and doing it well.
You'll learn these things only if you're willing and you love food. You have to research it, watch cooking videos, research different dishes. To do all this for a man, though, would be utterly pathetic.
And if your food tastes bland, add more salt.

No. 2211644

>>2211452
make him eat your pussy

No. 2211733

>>2211452
Shoot him in the face?

No. 2211831

>>2211452
idk cook him and eat him instead

No. 2212182

>>2211452
nonna you're going into this the completley wrong way. You must find a man who loves cooking himself.

No. 2212198

>>2211452
You get that way by cooking for yourself and figuring out what you like and don't like. You make food with the intent to nourish your body and sooth your soul, then you eat that food and decide what you want to do different next time to make it taste better. Do this every day for years and I promise you that your food will taste more heartfelt than it does now.

And IDK watch a few cooking shows or something. I watch these silly brit dudes on youtube and learn a bunch of weird shit from putting their videos on in the background while I do other things. Sorry they have soyface in like every video thumbnail ever.

No. 2212282

>>2211452
If you aren’t a cook, don’t try to start just for a moid. That’s so embarrassing. Do something else for him that you are good at if you must.

No. 2213617

File: 1729346321034.jpg (47.73 KB, 612x408, steak.jpg)

>>2211452
males dont have taste they enjoy eating slop. just cook shit to be as fattening as possible, mix together flavors at random, and make shit as oily and carby as possible.

Good examples of cooking for moids:
-fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy
-macaroni and cheese but put random stoner toppings on it like mayo and jalapenos
-tacos but make them greasy
-pozole
-steak but make it rare and then dont mention how rare it is because moids like to have dick measuring contests over how raw they eat their meat instead of eating a normal medium-mediumrare. but then if you actually take them at their word that they want that shit still mooing they wont eat it cuz its disgusting and they just wanted to sound like a macho man that likes raw beef

Bad examples of cooking for moids:
-any vegetable with an interesting or complex flavor. for example, fennel, kale, or chard. the moid is unable to distinguish flavors so all of these just taste "green" to him. I am not even joking. try asking a moid to put different vegetables in his mouth with his eyes closed and tell you what vegetable it is. he literally will not be able to tell. Its like how they cant distinguish colors either. all they taste is meat, oil, green, salt, and spicy. ask a moid to put a bit of pork vs a bit of beef in his mouth. he will not be able to tell the two apart.
-salads. unless it is something gross like lettuce with bacon, shredded american cheese, and ranch or bottled caesar dressing. dont try making that shit from scratch. they like slop
- vegetable soup.
- anything that you have to put effort or thought into. not necessarially because the moid wont like it, but because he will not be able to distinguish between the good food you just made vs random shit thrown together
- complex teas
- herbs. they cannot taste them and theyll see bits of thyme or whatever in their soup and be like "what are these specks". if you tell them its anything other than pepper, they wont eat it
- expensive food. they cannot tell the difference between expensive and cheap food except in steak. they like ribeye, but not filet because only pussies eat filet.
- nothing "girly" like berries with yogurt. they will take it as an insult to their masculinity

No. 2213627

>>2213617
This anon cooks!
Well done. I agree with enery single word.

No. 2213634

>>2211452
You don't even cook for yourself regularly so why cook for some useless moid

No. 2213722

>>2213617
tbh I'd be doing everything in the "bad" example just to filter out picky eaters and moids with shit taste. if he doesn't have enough tastes to appreciate good tea, his genes are useless.

No. 2213936

>>2213617
But I love rare steaks and putting mayo and hot sauce on things.
I can appreciate vegetables though.

>>2213722
Don't like tea either, though I've probably never had any that was properly brewed.

No. 2213988

>>2213936
Oversteeping or steeping tea in still boiling water makes it taste bad and bitter. If it's steeped right and still tastes bitter and gross, you might be sensitive to tannins. That's the opposite of no taste, that's extra taste. (Green, white, and rooibos tea are all low in tannins if it turns out that's the issue.)

No. 2227905

File: 1730135754012.jpg (148.81 KB, 564x1081, d93ec62b1485f2d361f032baf16fee…)

Things are getting cooler in the northern hemisphere, so soup has been on my mind recently. I wanted to share my minestrone recipe with nonnys here who are also feeling the drop in temperature. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.

1 11oz can red kidney beans
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon garlic salt*
1 clove garlic, pressed
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon oil
1/4 cup chopped parsley
1 small zucchini, unpeeled and cut into small cubs
2 stalks of celery, chopped
1 small carrot, diced
2 green onions, chopped**
4-5 leaves swiss chard, chopped
3 tablespoons butter
1 8oz can tomato sauce OR 1 can solid pack tomatoes, mashed
1 1/4 cup of water
1 1/4 cup of chicken broth*
1/2 cup of a dry white wine
1/4 cup uncooked elbow macaroni (optional)
grated Parmesan cheese

1.) On a low-med heat place undrained beans in a large kettle or saucepan; mash about 2/3 of the beans and leave the rest whole.
2.) Add salt, garlic salt, garlic, pepper, oil, and parsley stirring well.
3.) Add all vegetables; zucchini, celery, carrot, onion, and swiss chard. Add butter, tomato sauce, broth, and water. Simmer 1 hour or more.
4.) Add wine and, if desired, dried macaroni. Simmer 10-15 minutes longer.
5.) Sprinkle with cheese before serving. Serves 6.
If soup seems too thick add more water and salt to taste.

*Sub with two extra cloves of garlic in case garlic salt is not available
**Sub with a quarter of a yellow or white onion, diced
*Can be subbed with water to make vegetarian

No. 2228508

File: 1730159699752.png (1.89 MB, 1200x1200, magotajin.png)

Mango and tajin is so good. I ended up with a bottle of tajin that the woman who did my grocery shopping got me for some reason (Wasn't charged for it, so maybe she did it as a freebie when she saw I also ordered mango? lol). Outside of having a mangonada once, this is my first time having this combination and I love it.

No. 2229022

>>2227905
thanks, nona, I'll pick up swiss chard today and make this tomorrow, I think!

No. 2229023

File: 1730184946766.jpeg (329.98 KB, 736x1308, IMG_4644.jpeg)

i’ve never tried a seafood boil but it looks so good ugh

No. 2230637

>>2227905
I made this yesterday (vegetarian version) and it was so good. I can't wait to have it today bc I know the flavors will have intensified overnight.

No. 2236540

File: 1730594063418.jpeg (825.81 KB, 1125x1119, C72EFC63-04E3-4688-B689-248E0E…)

>>2229022
>>2230637
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! It’s one of my best recipes and I get requests to make it often. Hope it keeps you warm as fall turns to winter nona

No. 2236569

>>1950935
anyone have any tips for making it? I tried it for the first time recently using a kit and the heat kicked my ass. I thought I had spice tolerance, I guess not.

No. 2237164

>>2236540
nona, I am definitely going to be making this again, I love soup and it's delicious. I just finished the last of it yesterday!

No. 2238833

File: 1730742848811.jpeg (510.26 KB, 1065x1077, 956A2690-141C-4530-9C65-0A941F…)

Made two pints of apple butter over the weekend. I add cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, bourbon, and apple cider to mine to make it extra flavorful. I used a combination of Pink Lady and Jonagold apples so it has a pleasant level of tartness.

I like to use the butter as a secret ingredient in my sweet potato casserole for thanksgiving and as a glaze for pork chops. Does anyone else use apple butter as an ingredient? What with? If I make too much I usually end up canning it and gifting it to coworkers around Christmas.

No. 2239007

File: 1730746348427.jpg (94.83 KB, 394x865, 53e8389c0cae2ab62ae41beb94ffc2…)

Ate homemade smoked pepperjack and cheddar

No. 2239407

Love potsticker sauce, love vinegar.
Wonder if I'll ever bother trying to make them from scratch someday.

No. 2239733

File: 1730766194063.jpeg (227.02 KB, 2365x2365, 9e676d68-cc32-4162-9269-9b7af0…)

This brand of sweet chili sauce has WAY too much onion in it. I'm never buying it again, the onions totally overpower everything else. I used to work at a Hawaiian restaurant and I loved the sweet chili sauce they used, but that brand is only available in giant gallons for commercial use. Sigh.

No. 2241159

>>2227905
Gonna pick up the ingredients to make this

No. 2241408

Any nonas ever made garlic confit? What does it taste like?

No. 2241469

>>2241159
I bought cilantro instead of parsley bc I’m a dumbass I will make it tomorrow.

No. 2241791

>>2241408
it's good but risky to make due to botulism concerns. Roasted garlic is easier to make, safer to make and tastes pretty similar.

No. 2242468

i am nervous and tense over the election and am going to eat my anxiety since the weed isn’t working. i got myself a banana smoothie. one cheese enchilada. a quesadilla with cheese and mild chiles in it. a side of queso to dip the quesadilla in to be extra monstrous. a side of rice and beans. i hope it will be good and make me stop feeling my feelings.

No. 2242890

>>2242468
That sounds yummy nonna, I hope you feel better soon

No. 2242974

>>2242890
it fixed me i think we are going to win this election.

No. 2243101

>>2242974
Yes, we are.

No. 2246920

>>2227905
alright I finally made it, gotta give it a thumbs up, it's very flavorful. I made it per directions though I did sub additional garlic cloves for garlic salt as you stated and I omitted the cheese because I didn't have it. I also chickened out on the butter and just used half lol. I added some leftover teokbokki and it was a nice addition, like dumplings.

No. 2247595

File: 1730952715372.jpeg (780.02 KB, 1125x1125, 9C5D0B73-8526-4C9A-A05F-1099F6…)

>>2246920
Minestrone anon here. So glad to have another happy nonny. Never thought to add teokbokki but I bet it’s good. Did you still include the macaroni with it or no?

No. 2247644

File: 1730953952092.jpg (40.66 KB, 650x975, 1.-Garaetteok.jpg)

>>2246920
Just FYI, tteokpokki is the name of the specific popular dish. The particular tteok used in tteokbokki is called garaetteok.
Using it in Western soup is a really interesting idea! I'll have to try that this winter… if you want it to become even more "dumpling" like, you can use the popular method of pinching off sections of the garaettok by rolling it under a chopstick held perpendicular to the tteok.

No. 2247651

>>2241408
It's good, I like making a really indulgent pasta out of it and caramellized onions lol

No. 2249975

>>2247595
no, I will probably do that next time though

No. 2251871

wienerschnitzel ranch is sooo good

No. 2251892

>>2251871
Anon I haven't had wienerschnitzel since I was a child, you just brought back a flood of happy memories. Repost for no sage

No. 2262789

>>2247595
Made it a second time to use up the leftovers, this time I added the macaroni and I wouldn't make it without the macaroni again it makes it so filling. Having made it twice now I think the two most important ingredients are actually the wine and the butter because the proportions of each can drastically change the flavor of the final dish. The more butter the creamier it is in flavor and mouthfeel and the more wine there is the brighter it is in flavor due to the acidity. The second time I made it I actually cooked the celery and carrot first to soften them (sort of like a mirepoix) and I think I'd make it like that in the future.

I have my own minestrone recipe and I'll probably incorporate elements from yours the next time I make mine.



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