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From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

UGH. I keep trying and trying and trying to even stomach pumpkin pie, thinking it was one of my childhood food foibles, but no, it was not. I do not like pumpkin pie, and I'm quite sure I never will.

From Talk

Do you blog? What's your URL?

Blog name: A Chicken In Every Granny Cart
My URL: http://achickenineverygrannycart.wordpress.com
What it's about/tagline: Sometimes it really isn't about roasting your own chicken. The adventures of an amateur cook with big ideas.

From Serious Eats

An Alice Waters-Inspired Sunday Supper

How did you find the blade roast Ed?
I made the same cut from Flying Pigs last weekend and though it was delicious, I found it way too fatty to enjoy in slices.
After dinner was over, I shredded it with two forks andremoved most of the fat. The leftovers were incredibly good, much better than the original roast.
Did I get a bum roast or is this cut supposed to be about 40% fat?

From Talk

Ideas for ground pork?

Chili Verde aka Green Chili, especially since tomatillos are in season.
I prefer it with chunks of pork, but many people across Colorado make it with ground pork. Good, tasty, delicious, hearty stuff, especially with a bowl of rice. YUM.

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From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

UGH. I keep trying and trying and trying to even stomach pumpkin pie, thinking it was one of my childhood food foibles, but no, it was not. I do not like pumpkin pie, and I'm quite sure I never will.

From Talk

Do you blog? What's your URL?

Blog name: A Chicken In Every Granny Cart
My URL: http://achickenineverygrannycart.wordpress.com
What it's about/tagline: Sometimes it really isn't about roasting your own chicken. The adventures of an amateur cook with big ideas.

From Serious Eats

An Alice Waters-Inspired Sunday Supper

How did you find the blade roast Ed?
I made the same cut from Flying Pigs last weekend and though it was delicious, I found it way too fatty to enjoy in slices.
After dinner was over, I shredded it with two forks andremoved most of the fat. The leftovers were incredibly good, much better than the original roast.
Did I get a bum roast or is this cut supposed to be about 40% fat?

From Talk

Ideas for ground pork?

Chili Verde aka Green Chili, especially since tomatillos are in season.
I prefer it with chunks of pork, but many people across Colorado make it with ground pork. Good, tasty, delicious, hearty stuff, especially with a bowl of rice. YUM.

From Serious Eats

Ancient British Eats: Roast Hedgehog

Oh dear, that's such a bad, old joke. My boss, who is British, had me going on that one for days. Never believe a Brit or European that tries to tell you about the Gypsies eating hedgehogs. Ever.

From Talk

Best books / web sites for a real newbie of a cook?

Nigel Slater's Appetite. He doesn't really give recipes, just guidelines and branches out from there. He has a lovely, easy style of writing that makes him feel immediately like he's your best friend in the whole world. And he's a guy. I'm sure your son would appreciate a manly voice in a world that tends to be a little womanly.

From Talk

What is your biggest food difference with your sweetheart?

Ketchp. I love it, he hates it. It's kind of nice, if there's something particularly delicious on my plate that I don't want him to eat, I'll just pour a little moat of ketchup around and then he won't touch it. It's kind of awesome.

From Talk

Fresh Mint!

Here's a recipe for Mint "Pesto" I whipped up lately. It tasted awesome on the peas and scallops but would probably taste good on anything else, including cardboard. It's that good.
I also love mixing mint into tuna pasta salads and using it to flavor anything made with beets. Beets and mint have an incredible affinity for each other.

From Serious Eats

Amish Snacks in Philadelphia

oh than god they mentioned those pretzels. I dream about them. Fantasize about them. Doughy, buttery, salty and served with their homemade mustard, they're one of the most perfect snack foods on the face of the earth.

From Serious Eats

Kid Kreplach's Deviled Pickled Red Beet Eggs

wow, if my grandmother knew what the internet was, she'd be gobsmacked to see her recipe put to such awesome use! Thanks Kid Kreplach for a new use for my favorite eggs!

From Talk

Recipe: The Amateur Gourmet's Chicken Stock

Did you leave the peels on your onions and garlic?
They add so much depth of flavor and actually a lot of the sunny yellow color we all associate with chicken stock. Onion peels have been used for centuries as a yellow dye.

From Serious Eats

Salt-Baked Potatoes

There's a dish from Central New York called salt potatoes. They're traditional at clam bakes (yes I know that's a little strange). You boil new, red, baby potatoes (the small ones) in the saltiest water you can manage, when they're tender you drain them in a collander, the salt will form a light, sparkly crust on the skins, then you eat them with drawn butter.
Not the healthiest preparation ever, but dang skippy, that's good stuff. They also keep well in the fridge for a quick snack. They're delicious cold!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was vege for 13 years and then I decided I wanted to be a chef. One of the chefs I worked for pointed out that I had to eat what I was serving my clients, and so I ate duck and rabbit and have never looked back

From Serious Eats

Is the Cookbook Obsolete?

Cookbooks are tiny snapshots into our past.

I collect vintage cookbooks because of what they say about the times in which they were published. There's cookbooks for rich people from WWI where they teach the uppercrust how to throw 50 person banquets, even though they must ration. There's cookbooks from the sexual revolution, written by Helen Gurley Brown that teach women how to step away from the stove, buy pre-prepared food and mix a stiff cocktail, and then there's cookbooks from the 1980s that are all about truffles and arugula.

Cookbooks will never become obsolete because they speak to us about us.

From Serious Eats

Everybody Loves Chicken Soup

There's totally something in the air as to chicken soup. I posted my experiences recently on making stock, and quite a few people let me know they had made some too. I think it's the winter doldrums, they need some liquid gold to brighten the days.

From Talk

Do you grow your own food or know someone who does?

I grow my own herbs; dill, basil, sage and lavender in pots on my windosills. This summer I'm going to try my hand at window box radishes on the fire escape. I read something by Nigel Slater that says it's doable, so I'm going to give it a go. I'm also going to try those wee bitty currant tomatoes (or whatever they're called). Very excited!!

From Talk

Question of the Day: When did you first realize you really loved food?

It was when I was in Germany in high school. My host family took me to a restaurant and I ordered a pasta dish, black & white linguini with roasted garlic and crispy sage. It was revolutionary. Nothing I had ever eaten in my entire life could compare. I came back to New York and tried to re-create it for my family. That was it, that was my time... I was hooked.

From Serious Eats

Noodling Around

I cannot get enough of the Dan Dan Noodle soup at Kar Won on the UES.
http://tinyurl.com/2abns6

From Serious Eats

State Tells Food Service Workers How to Wash, Dry Hands

when I worked in a kitchen we were taught to sing a song while washing our hands, and to not stop washing until we'd sung the song twice. My song was Freres Jacques, others used Christmas carols, the alphabet or Doe A Deer from The Sound of Music. Sounds sill, but it works, and its a habit I maintain when cooking at home, especially after touching raw meat.

From Talk

Why won't my dried beans cook evenly?

Please head over to the Rancho Gordo Bean Blog and look around http://ranchogordo.typepad.com/
As noted above, your beans may be old, but then again, they might be young and don't need the 24 hours of soaking.
Rancho Gordo are the best beans in the world, and Steve REALLY loves his beans, so if he can't help you no one can!
Good luck!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Who Taught You to Cook?

My mom, but also PBS cooking shows and books, oh and a restaurant in Germany where I loved the dish so much the chef actually came out of the kitchen and talked me through how to make it when I got back to the states.

From Talk

Need good recipes for my new Le Creuset.

No-Knead Bread! Just be sure to take the handle off so it doesn't melt! And go on and braise something... maybe pork loin or short ribs. YUM! Enjoy it!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Are You Going Out for New Year's Eve Dinner?

sorry, just realised I chastised the wrong Adam! silly girl. Happy New Year!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Are You Going Out for New Year's Eve Dinner?

We're cooking a super luxe dinner with friends: venison loin with perigueux sauce, savory mushroom bread pudding and fig tart for dessert and lots of wine, champers and good conversation.

And dangitall Adam! You live in Brooklyn now... get thee to the Park and watch the fireworks, they're absolutely AMAZING!!! You can basically get right underneath them. It's truly awe inspiring.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Oink, oink! How Do You Do Pork?

I recently discovered mini-roasts of wild Boar at Gourmet Garage (they're from Dartagnan) and they're trotters down my new porky favorite.

I cook them low and slow (275) in a dutch oven, basting every half hour for 2 hours with the herby red wine marinade and serve with polenta or taters.

utterly, fantastically, purely porcinely, juicely, tenderly DELICIOUS.

From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

Though I do like pumpkin pie, there are many pies that I would prefer any day, such as strawberry rhubarb or lemon meringue. I did find an AWESOME recipe, though, for pumpkin pie, and it was the second pie to disappear at a Thanksgiving dinner for 30 friends this year, out of about 7 other pie chioces. (The first to disappear was also mine- Dorie Greenspan's "Favorite Pecan Pie" with chocolate and espresso.) I'll be making it again for my family...it's Sherry Yard's Triple Silken Pumpkin Pie from "Desserts by the Yard." Baked in a springform pan, the bottom layer is pumpkin custard, then a layer of maple whipped cream, then a layer of caramel pumpkin mousse....truly an awesome pie and worth the work!

From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

I love pumpkin pie, sweet potato pie, and I will eat butternut squash right out of the rind once it's roasted. I bake pumpkin bread and pumpkin pie in autumn, not really for the holidays so much. I generally love squash. I once made pies from a squash in Peru just because it was a novelty. These squashes/gourds are so big it takes two people to carry one. It's important to remember that pies aren't just a desert - they are often the main course, filled with meats, vegetables, and spices. My family usually has pumpkin pie around Thanksgiving and Christmas, but we also get tired of traditional holiday foods. Frequently, for Thanksgiving or Christmas, we will decide to have something different at the table. Last year we had an incredible Italian dish that my father prepared for Christmas, and I smoked chicken and baby back ribs for Thanksgiving. It didn't change the spirit of the holidays at all for us. So, I guess the important thing is that you enjoy what you cook and eat during the holidays.

From Talk

Do you blog? What's your URL?

Cocina Savant
http://cocinasavant.blogspot.com/
Weekly pictures, recipes, and thoughts from a husband and wife who love books and cooking for each other.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian between the ages of 13 and 22. One night (about 2 months ago) I decided that I simply wanted a steak. Right there and then I went to a diner with my best friend and she watched me down a steak. It was incredible. Not only was that night amazing, but since then I have SO much more energy than I did before. For nine years I had issues with energy. It hit a climax last year when I literally could not stay awake at 2pm every day for months. That went away after I started to take insulin pills (I was diagnosed with pre-diabetes at that ime), but I was still kind of low on energy, moody, depressive...

I swear eating meat has been my savior! I feel like a new woman! I literally feel like a completely different person. I have energy now! And I'm not as moody or depressive... wow, things are different! Plus I feel more like "me"... I never saw myself as the girl who'd eat a salad at a steakhouse while her date had a rare one. I saw myself as the down-to-earth-red-meat-eating chick even when I didn't eat meat for 9 years.

I love steak! I can't ever be a vegetarian again!

From Talk

Why won't my dried beans cook evenly?

I live at medium altitude, have soaked overnight AND cooked 7 hours!!!! to only face beans STILL not tender! Could it be because I simmered in vegetable broth instead of plain water? Please help anyone - I LOVE pinto beans!

From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

mmm pumpkin pie is fabulous and should never be forgotten especially on thanksgiving! save the pumpkin pie! :)

From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

I laughed so hard at this blog, because my mom used to make me pumpkin pies for my birthday instead of cake, because I loved it so much. I still do. It is the BEST part of Thanksgiving and Christmas meals for me. I love pumpkin bars, pumpkin pie, pumpkin bread, and pumpkin cheesecake. PLEASE DON'T GET RID OF PUMPKIN PIE!!!

From Serious Eats

Does Anyone Really Love Pumpkin Pie?

I haven't swooned over pumpkin pie yet, but I sure do like it served warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

I want to swoon over it, though.

@Lippy: I must find that Beard pumpkin pie recipe with preserved ginger and brandy. I've got some Raynal V.S.O.P that needs a job.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I'm still a vegetarian although I will never refuse meat if someone has me over or out for dinner. As far as I can control, I don't eat it. HOWEVER sometimes I pretend to not notice the bacon on my Aussie Fries at Outback. :) I also crave fast-food burgers every once in a while...

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I never much liked meat or chicken or milk or eggs - even as a baby - but ate it reluctantly until about age 22 (I'm 43 now). I gave up fish a few years after that, when I got scared of contaminated water, overfishing, and mercury levels. I've been off and on dairy and eggs through the years, more of a digestive issue than a moral one. For the last few months I've been CRAVING sardines and salmon, and no vegetarian substitute or seaweed would do. I finally gave in and had some sardines and salmon the last 3 days and I FEEL WONDERFUL. I guess it pays to listen to your body as much as listen to the experts.

Thanks to all of the posters above for helping allay the fear that I'd get horribly sick in some way. I still doubt I'll eat meat or chicken, so you can have my serving of bacon....

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian for a while, maybe around 8 years, one of which was spent in India, where it is supereasy and superdelicious (if you love Indian, especially South Indian, food like I do) to be a vegetarian. A few years later, I moved to Brasil where it is a lot harder to be a vegetarian, but I lived in Liberdade (Asian neighborhood) in Sao Paulo, and with all the access to cool mushrooms, noodles, seaweeds, etc., I was pretty happy.

I remember reading that book "Eat Right for your Type" which theorizes that people with type A blook do better with a predominantly veg. diet and people with type O blood do better with a carnivorous diet, and perhaps there's some truth to that.

Later, I was taken to a Brazilian rodizio (meat until you can't no more) place here in NYC and all that beef was delish, although my stomach rebelled.

Since then, I still don't eat much meat - small portions and lots of vegetables. Eating meat in huge amounts seems to only perpetuate the dominant model of a few lucky people getting the lion's share of the world's resources, and the factory farming of animals to be eaten still continues to be inhumane and motivated solely by profits. Mad cow disease is still much more of a problem than the major media and the government will cop to. I'm careful where I get my meats from, and still ya never know.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

"I was a vegetarian from age 6 when I was a stubborn brat and declared myself a vegetarian to avoid having to eat a hamburger one meal."

Wow, Megannesta, your story is just like mine. Only I was 13, and the meal was the ubiquitous Sunday roast beef dinner. And like you, I'm making up for lost time. I had a cheeseburger for breakfast today.

The meal that flipped me (at age 19) was a hotdog at a fireman's picnic. Didn't get sick.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I becamse a vegetarian for a while in high school, but it was really only to annoy my grandmother, who I was living with at the time. She only had 4 stock dinners that she rotated over and over every week: meatloaf, green beans, mashed potatoes; roast beef, salad, baked potatoes; broiled salmon, broccoli, roasted potatoes; and spaghetti. She liked her meat and potatoes. There's only so long one person can deal with that if they're more adventurous. So I went veg.

These days I still only really eat meat twice a week. I feel like the US has a serious meat overindulgance problem.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

In-n-out

Damn you double-double with onions and extra sauce...the saucy korean bbq had no sway over me but you, with your two patties, hand torn lettuce, melting cheese, onions, and that sauce....

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

Being a poor student! I was happily veg for 4 years of high school, first 2 years of college while I lived in the dorms. Then I got an apartment. I have no problem cooking a totally vegetarian diet for myself in my home - I never buy meat ingredients at the store. And I still very rarely pay for meat when eating out, unless I'm really sick of just ordering the freaking veggie burger. But the number of free food events at my university and my poor student budget make passing up free meaty meals seem wasteful. I call myself a freegan now (vegetarian unless it's free). I've heard others use the term too.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian for 8 years. When I got a heart infection, my nurse told me I should eat cow's heart. Since I told her that was never going to happen, I decided to give normal cuts of meat a try. I went to a restaurant and I ordered a pulled pork sandwich. My husband thought I was daring and ordered the conservative chicken, thinking that if I didn't like the pork he could switch with me. My first bite was amazing, I was in shock. Although it may have been the fact that the meds I was on made me have a huge appetite, having meat for the first time in so long was fabulous. My husband thought I was being sarcastic and offered to switch. I told him he was crazy!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

i was a vegetarian from the age of 18 to 22. what did me in was a plate of prime rib at a hotel in kansas city. it just looked so good, i was starving, and the alternative was a crappy looking industrial iceberg lettuce salad and an anemic little roll. i had always been a meat lover, had embraced vegetarianism in college during the 70's after reading frankie lappe´, and always struggled against my carnivorous inclinations.

interestingly, years and years later, i find myself not especially wanting to eat meat at all these days. i haven't consumed animal flesh, except for the occasional tuna sandwich, in months. although generally i am a very healthy eater, and in addition to the fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains i eat daily, i eat plenty of nuts, seeds, yogurt, eggs, and cheese, i am bemused to report that my ability as an athlete seems to have suffered as a result. i don't recover as quickly after my workouts, i can't run as far or as fast, and i can't lift as heavy weights or complete as many sets as i was doing as a meat eater.

a few years ago i was in a relationship with someone who insisted on having meat at every meal, and when i left, it was such a relief to not have to cook and eat it all the time. i'm much thinner and happier basing my diet on salads and veggies, although i am somewhat concerned about my workouts deteriorating. we'll have to see. i don't call myself a vegetarian right now, because i don't want to label myself or call attention to my private eating habits {i live alone, so there's no one to please but myself}.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I grew up in a strict vegetarian household. Eggs and dairy products, but that was it. Veggies, brown rice, I didn't even taste candy until I was 8 years old. So, I get my first job, at McDonalds. They give you a meal. I had a Big Mac, large fries, cherry pie. That first bite? Into the Big Mac? Heaven. Half an hour later I was over the toilet, heaving. Back to work two days later. What did I eat? A Big Mac. I hid my meat eating. Like most kids do with the occasional joint or beer (which I was allowed, btw). I got permission to eat it at 19. I go back and forth now. I can go months at a time without meat and feel no loss whatsoever. But then I need a steak, or bacon, and it's awn.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian from age 6 when I was a stubborn brat and declared myself a vegetarian to avoid having to eat a hamburger one meal. Flash forward to being 18, at my boyfriend's house, and the smell of flank steak on the grill. I pointed out how good it smelled, and he asked, "why won't you eat it again?" and I realized I really didn't have a reason. I just didn't even see it as an option since I had completely forgotten what it tasted like. It wasn't for animal rights reasons, or health, it was just habit at that point. I had a taste, and now I am a fiend. RARE steak. I think i'm making up for lost time, although that was 8 years ago and I'm still just as into meat, hah!

BTW -- after 15 years as a vegetarian I broke my vegetarianism with two plates of rare meat. Felt great. I don't know why they say everyone gets so sick to their stomach.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

Bacon, sausage, ham. The pig is, indeed, a magical animal. And I live in Iowa. It's just too easy :)

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian for over 4 years, and then I decided to move to the ROK. It's possible to be a vegetarian, but it's difficult. And I had issues in the states making sure that I was getting an adequate supply of iron and protein, and I knew it would only be more difficult here. So I've started incorporating fish and chicken. Still no beef or pork though. I'm working on it :)

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

I was a vegetarian all through high school, but like another poster already said, living in the dorms in college did me in. It's probably better now, but thirteen years ago, I had to choose between greasy cheese pizza, salad or dry cereal. I lasted two months on those things and various side dishes, and then they did "BBQ night" with pulled pork. Pulled pork! My family is Southern, and there's really nothing that matches a pork product. I was done in...ate three pulled pork sandwiches, suffered some dormsuite-clearing gas, and was fine the next day. Haven't looked back since...although I'm grateful for my time as a veg because my veggie tastes are so much more varied than they were when I was growing up. Having the aforementioned Southern family meant that prior to going veg, stewed greens, creamed corn and various potato treatments were all I knew of vegetables. Now brussels sprouts are about my favorite thing ever...made with pancetta!

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

Never been a vegetarian, but I think of it from time to time. Mostly because I'm struggling with the ethics of eating meat; the conundrum of considering myself an animal lover and then digging into some animal-steaks off the grill at least once a week. I also love food in general too much to be able to say, I will never touch "_____" again.

While in college my sister became a vegetarian. I went to visit her once and she looked like sh#t. So I cooked for her. I kept it vegetarian. I made a batch of red sauce. Cooked some pasta. Topped it with a healthy amount of grated parm. And steamed/sauteed three different green vegs. After she ate. I had a long talk with her about her decision to be vegetarian, which no doubt she was doing because her friends were. First I told her she looked like sh#t, 2nd, if she was gonna be vege then she needed to do it right, make sure she was getting enough calcium, iron, protein, 3rd, if she didn't do it right, I'd come back and shove a chicken down her throat. By the end of the week, she was out of red sauce and greens so, she went and had a pepperoni slice at Piccola Italy.

From Talk

Question of the Day: Any former vegetarians out there? What happened? Why'd you go back to meat?

After five years I was having dreams about fried chicken and ham. I started eating meat again and never looked back.

From Talk

Why won't my dried beans cook evenly?

Don't know where you live, but if it is a high altitude, that is probably the reason. Try a pressure cooker.

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