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Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2022 7:36 pm
by Cornelius_Gotchberg
"Making the goulash for dinner today."
My Dear late Mother used to make WeinerLash, to the delight of her seven (7) children.
The Gotch
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 10:52 am
by worth1
I had enough goulash left to add some water and diced potatoes.
Also have a roma tomato that needs attention so it will go in later.
Maybe some red serrano peppers.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 11:22 am
by Amateurinawe
@worth1 we have some left over slow cooked lamb. Seeing as it is permissible to substitute any meat and add the word "lash" to it, I think we will "goulash it up" too. The Serrano pepper idea sounds fab too!
Rice, avocado and salad garnish coming right up....
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 11:42 am
by Sue_CT
There are numerous versions of goulash, German, Hungarian, American. They are all different yet all legitimately called goulash,
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 11:50 am
by worth1
I added 4 chopped serranos some Chipotle powder and a pinch of cumin.
The amount of onions I put in it made it extremely sweet.
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Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 12:05 pm
by worth1
Sue_CT wrote: ↑Mon Jul 04, 2022 11:42 am
There are numerous versions of goulash, German, Hungarian, American. They are all different yet all legitimately called goulash,
My mom made the American goulash.
I do think it should be called American goulash and not goulash because it has no resemblance to European goulash at all
Especially if a bottle of ketchup is dumped in it.
One of my favorite dishes my mom made was called, conglom.
As in conglomerate.
You never knew what was going in it from one time to the next.
As it turns out it was very similar to ratatouille if not dead on.
Green and yellow squash onions tomatoes eggplant.
We ate a ton of it in the summer.
If memory serves me she also put in a few chunks of stale homemade bread like in French onion soup.
No meat was served with it.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 12:58 pm
by PlainJane
@worth1, we had a lot of dinners like that growing up. Until my mom remarried the 5 of us got by on mystery meals, a lot of breakfast for dinner (which we loved) and a little help from the neighbors. She called everything either goulash or meatloaf just to shut us up.
The one thing I hated was having smelt for a solid 2 weeks in season. Lots of Michiganders still love smelt but if I never eat it again I’ll be happy.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 2:45 pm
by Amateurinawe
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Thank you for inspiration
@worth1 . We live and eat again
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 3:59 pm
by PlainJane
Now that’s a feast @Amateurinawe!
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 4:26 pm
by Amateurinawe
@PlainJane it used the lamb up that's what I am pleased with. Doggies still got a little leftovers and some lamb flavoured cooked carrots.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 5:19 pm
by worth1
@PlainJane
I was raised up eating carp and Buffalo fish.
We would catch the things bleed them out and clean them.
Then my mom would pressure can them.
This would make the bones edible.
Then she made fried carp patties.
It was once considered a delicacy in the 19th century but over supply brought the price down and poor people could eat it.
Well we can't be having that now can we.
So carp became a trash fish the well to do wouldn't be caught dead eating.
Properly prepared it isn't bad at all.
The quality of the water it comes from has a huge influence on the flavor as well.
The US seems to be the only country that has this snob thing going on with carp and other foods.
Next is the lowly squirrel.
It was eaten by everyone until industrialized food came along.
Now it's considered hillbilly food for the ignorant and poor.
In other words if it doesn't come out of a nasty feedlot it isn't fit to eat.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 5:40 pm
by karstopography
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Bottled my fermented pepper sauce. Has a mix of peppers, Aji Cristal was one major component. Very mild, below tabasco sauce in heat. Seems like it would be good in a Bloody Mary.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 5:52 pm
by worth1
What's a Bloody Mary called that's made with gin?
Answer.
A Red Snapper.
And it's much better.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 6:24 pm
by karstopography
84660DA7-FA9D-4AE0-B6F9-A6C89F5647C0.jpeg
Korean Spare Ribs. Boiled for 1.5 hours in fresh ginger, soy sauce, and garlic.
Then in the 400° oven brushed with a ginger, soy, honey, sesame oil, gochujang, apricot, rice vinegar and garlic glaze. They are in the oven now, smell great.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 6:54 pm
by worth1
One of my all time favorites growing up was my moms fried squash.
It was salted to draw out some moisture and flipped in yellow cornmeal.
That's it nothing complicated no fancy breading.
Then fried until golden brown.
I could eat platters full of them.
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Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 7:38 pm
by worth1
4th of July feast.
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Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 8:10 pm
by rxkeith
good hamburger soup here in the big pot.
keith
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2022 10:18 pm
by pepperhead212
I made a one dish meal - an Indian dal/subzi, in which I put 3/4 c each of toor dal, red chori, and whole sorghum berries, and soaked it for a couple of hours, then cooked that on slow cook, while out in the garden. Later, I removed that from the IP, rinsed it out, then cooked a chopped onion and about a half cup of chopped garlic scapes in some ghee. Then I added 3 tb of a new sambar masala I made recently, and about a cup of chopped tomatoes, and cooked on low, until the mix turned thick, then return the cooked dal to the IP. I tossed the diced eggplants in a wok, while that cooked, followed by the okra, and added them to the IP, then cooked again in the slow cook mode, while I was outside again. Probably took longer to type this in, than the work time for the dish!
Sorghum, rather jowar, added to the sambar, which eggplant and okra is cooked in. by
pepperhead212, on Flickr
The okra, ready to stir fry briefly, in the leftover oil from the eggplant. by
pepperhead212, on Flickr
Finished dal with eggplant and okra, and some sorghum - a.k.a. jowar. by
pepperhead212, on Flickr
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2022 3:11 pm
by Danny
Just a quicky one pan meal with some beef strips , some stroganoff sauce, noodles and broccoli. Down and dirty, quick meal.
Re: Whatcha Cooking today?
Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2022 12:58 pm
by karstopography
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Spicy Peruvian Salsa with huacatay.
Really good. Not all that spicy. I used ripe (yellow orange) 2 Aji Cristal peppers and a small red serrano instead of the recipe calling for 2 jalapeños.
Otherwise, I followed the recipe which combines fresh garlic, lime juice, mayonnaise, cilantro, aji amarillo paste, huacatay paste (black mint) and that’s it, oh, and a bit of olive oil. Black mint is evidently more in the marigold family than mint. The paste is available online as is the aji amarillo paste, both made in Peru. Not that much gets used, so it’s a reasonably economical purchase.
Seem like in Peru, this salsa gets put on lots of foods. I’m cooking another steak picanha tonight and the sauce can be on the side. Might slice up a tomato or two and dip that in the salsa. There’s always tortilla chips!