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Dinner tonight - or last night.

 
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jul, 2006 06:28 pm
mmmmm, swiss chard!

I had left-over saag paneer and garlic nan.
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msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jul, 2006 12:56 am
Oh, that looks good, ehBeth! (the Swiss chard recipe)
I'm printing it right now!
Mmmmm! Very Happy
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msolga
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 06:32 am
Tonight: Roast pork (of the rolled up & tied variety) and apple sauce, with baked potatoes & pumpkin, plus steamed French beans. Not bad!
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dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 06:37 am
Take aways tonight.

Fri night is take away night. Flake, chips, fried chicken, deep fried and greasy as hell. I love it.
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msolga
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 06:44 am
dadpad wrote:
Take aways tonight.

Fri night is take away night. Flake, chips, fried chicken, deep fried and greasy as hell. I love it.


What, no potato cakes? :wink:
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dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 06:58 am
Do the numbers, chips are the same stuff and better value!

The bride has a Buller burger (yes of course it has beetroot on it) and shares my chippies.

We buy coke (from the supermarket cause its cheaper) and scoff the lot.

Except for what my (18 year old) daughter steals, as she wafts in and out of the motel she calls home.
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 06:55 pm
What's flake?

I had a red chile tortilla filled with hummos, spinach, roma tomatoes and fresh parsley. It was so good I had another, but added avocado and basil. Next time no basil. Thank god I finally went shopping.
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patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 07:06 pm
tonight: two fake chicken patties on wheat bread with mayo. ugh. long-ass day.

last night: scramble -- potatoes, green onions, diced poblano and dill peppers, two eggs shaken in a lidded jar with worcestershire sauce.

but two nights ago...
focaccia with chimi-churi (onions, vinegar, olive oil, honey and fresh herbs)
sashimi cubed tuna with ginger-soy dressing with Hawaiian seaweed and marinated sweet Brazilian onions
pistachio encrusted goat cheese with crispy beets, alfonzo olive crostini and aged balsamic
mesclun greens with granny smith apples, spicy pecans, Manchego cheese, and champagne
sauteed duck breast with collard greens and thinly sliced potatoes, plated over some tasty red sauce
fried banana-filled crepes
preceded and followed with caipirinhas, and accompanied with a potent vodka tonic



my baby loves me enough to pay for someone else to make all that for me. mmmmmmmmmmmmm...........
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ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 07:06 pm
Bought some atlantic salmon filet a few hours ago, having only done that once before, about a month ago here. Remember, I've recently moved from the land of fresh wild pacific northwest salmon. So, that obviously not at point salmon of a month ago still tasted fine enough, if not comparable it still isn't chopped liver... and gave me three meals, so I did it again.

This time I was going to bake it quickish with fresh ginger, basil, olive oil and lime, but ... no fresh ginger at hand. So, probably garlic, lemon, mustard, olive oil, ital parsley...

Usually I do an onion pepper thing as I love it so, but I need to branch out.
The key thing is not to overcook zee fish.
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patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 07:08 pm
yeah, that seafood transition is rough when you move from that upper US pacific coast. my heart still falls when i contemplate salmon (or crab, for that matter) in wisconsin...
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ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 07:12 pm
Yeah, patio, and yeah again. Though I suppose you can get various other fish there...

there seem to be no fishes here - oh, and around me, not much in the way of rivers, even though I cross the Rio Grande routinely - sheet, I didn't get it how fishless I'd be.
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 07:22 pm
a small lump of havarti with some lemonade, followed about half an hour later by one perfect slice of roast beef - dipped into the jus in the pan

now I need some crackers

~~~~~~~~~~~

what's flake? a chocolate bar?
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 09:10 pm
Osso, I think there are fish in the cochiti lake. But, maybe don't fish in the Pecos, least not downstream of the old mine. Don't the fresh-frozen fish compare at least slightly?
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patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 09:22 pm
i wants what the chihuahua in the purple flower patch had. mmmm.
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ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 09:29 pm
Yeh, slightly. Unfortunately or fortunately, I got some fresh wild salmon at the eureka coop that was leagues above any other fish I've tasted....
but, yeah, the atlantic salmon filet was not nothing.
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dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 09:59 pm
littlek wrote:
What's flake?



School shark fillet.
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jul, 2006 10:04 pm
sharks school?
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dadpad
 
  1  
Reply Sat 8 Jul, 2006 12:56 am
Flake is a term used in Australia to indicate the flesh of any of several species of small shark, particularly Gummy shark. The term probably arose in the late 1920s when the large-scale commercial shark fishery off the coast of Victoria was established. (Until this time, shark was generally an incidental catch rather than a targeted species.)

Flake rapidly became popular. It has a mild flavour, a soft texture that nevertheless remains well-defined after cooking, and a clean white appearance. These qualities, combined with the ready supply and a low price, saw flake become by far the most common type of fish to be served in Australian fish and chip shops.

Flake remains popular, but it is no longer especially cheap. By the mid to late years of the 20th century, Australia's growing population and more efficient harvesting methods had led to an alarming decline in shark stocks, and the fishery is now regulated in the hope of preventing any further deterioration.

Although the primary shark species sold as flake is the gummy shark, there are several others, as listed below.

* Gummy shark, Mustelus antarcticus
* School shark, Galeorhinus galeus
* Elephant fish, Callorhinchus milii
* Whiskery shark, Furgaleus macki
* Saw shark (any of several Pristiophorus species)
* Various dog sharks (Family Squalidae)

During the late 1960s it became apparent that larger individuals of several shark species were contaminated with high levels of heavy metals, particularly mercury, and a public outcry eventually led to a ban on the sale of large school sharks in 1972, which remained in effect until 1985.

wikipedia - Flake
0 Replies
 
eoe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 8 Jul, 2006 07:08 am
I roasted a whole fish for the first time last night. Spot-tail bass that we bought in Savannah on Wednesday and carted home. I also bought drum, red snapper and trout, all whole, heads and tails on. The spot-tail turned out pretty good last night, the natural tatse of the fish is delicious but once again, I should have followed my instincts instead of the recipe and seasoned it the way my gut told me to. Next time...
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Sat 8 Jul, 2006 09:18 am
Thanks Dadpad.... I think I have had sharkonce and liked it.

eoe - I always cook according to the recipe, but mess with the spices. But, that's hard to do the first time you attempt a dish.
0 Replies
 
 

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