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From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

My grandfather used to eat chocolate cake with french's yellow mustard

From Serious Eats

Mayonnaise Is Second Most Popular 'Treat' For American Dieters

@JGordon:
Try this...have some always soft spreadable BUTTER around by keeping some in a little covered croc outside of the fridge. It won't kill you because it's at room temp, I promise.

I was really surprised by margarine at number three. I really thought that we had started to make some headway in the learning process as far as nutrition was concerned.

The oils in margarine are so processed and then combined with emulsifiers, food coloring, etc. And while I am sure that lower end butter has it's own over-processing cross to bear, at least there are excellent quality alternatives where the ingredients (CREAM, SALT) come from reputable sources. I'm not so sure that they make a margarine with the same guidelines. Maybe Healthy Balance.

Just use butter! In moderation! It's better for you.

From Serious Eats

All About the Inauguration Luncheon

@Tombolo: I was pretty apalled at that...and the wax beans. Couldn't they have just called it something different so that it wasn't blatently incorrect?


Also not a fan of the canned bing cherries in the "sour cherry chutney".

And what part of the dessert is a cake? Did I miss that in the ingredient list? Isn't it really a bread and butter pudding?

So sad...

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From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

My grandfather used to eat chocolate cake with french's yellow mustard

From Serious Eats

Mayonnaise Is Second Most Popular 'Treat' For American Dieters

@JGordon:
Try this...have some always soft spreadable BUTTER around by keeping some in a little covered croc outside of the fridge. It won't kill you because it's at room temp, I promise.

I was really surprised by margarine at number three. I really thought that we had started to make some headway in the learning process as far as nutrition was concerned.

The oils in margarine are so processed and then combined with emulsifiers, food coloring, etc. And while I am sure that lower end butter has it's own over-processing cross to bear, at least there are excellent quality alternatives where the ingredients (CREAM, SALT) come from reputable sources. I'm not so sure that they make a margarine with the same guidelines. Maybe Healthy Balance.

Just use butter! In moderation! It's better for you.

From Serious Eats

All About the Inauguration Luncheon

@Tombolo: I was pretty apalled at that...and the wax beans. Couldn't they have just called it something different so that it wasn't blatently incorrect?


Also not a fan of the canned bing cherries in the "sour cherry chutney".

And what part of the dessert is a cake? Did I miss that in the ingredient list? Isn't it really a bread and butter pudding?

So sad...

From Serious Eats

Liberté Yogurt: My Holy Grail of Dairy Products

I buy the Liberte 2% milkfat by the quart. I can't seem to consume enough of it. It has the smoothest, creamiest texture without feeling like wallpaper paste in my mouth.

From Serious Eats

Cocktails: Punch for the Holidays

there is an article about punch in Martha Stewart Living this month as well

From Talk

Cream of Wheat: Way or No Way?

WAY!!! Cream of wheat is sexy...especially when it gets chewy lumps in it. I'm a total mushy food fan,though. The gene that gives me a love of porridge will totally get me through this recession.

From Serious Eats

Do Apples Make You Hungrier?

Thank god...I thoughtI was crazy. I often wondered why friends would have an apple to tide them over until a meal. I feel like I haven't eaten for days right after I eat an apple. I always thought the pectin was supposed to make you feel full, though. Makes me want to eat a cow.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Food Giveaway: Russ & Daughters

Anything that I can fit into my mouth off of Egg's brunch menu

From Serious Eats

Holiday Giveaway: Zingerman's Praise the Lard Gift Box

My favorite pork memory is back when I was a sous chef at a restaurant and I dared a waiter to drink a quart of pork fat......and he did. It was a good day.

From Serious Eats

'Top Chef' Season 5, Episode 4: Accents Are Good for TV

Seriously....someone please explain to me why Rocco will not go away. He doesn't have a restaurant, or a tv show, or talent, and apparently (according to Dancing with the Stars) he can't dance. WHY does Rocco DiSpirito continue to torture us with his flaccid non-talented self?

From Talk

What's with the tiny hamburgers?

People eat at Chili's? Huh...didn't know that. I figured it was a front for a mob operation.

From Serious Eats

Filet Mignon vs. Skirt Steak: Which is Better?

Gimme a piece of that skirt!

The thing is, if cooked properly, skirt steak doesn't behave like a cheaper cut of meat. It's rich and fatty and just melts in your mouth. And supersu75, you can TOTALLY pan sear a skirt steak and it will be every bit as delicious as it is grilled.

Skirt steak has all the visceral sexiness that makes you a meat eater in the first place. Filet is just a flaccid, mushy mess that requires bacon and compound butter in order for it to taste like anything.

From Serious Eats

Should Picky Eaters Fake Allergies?

I used to work in a Tex-Mex restaurant in Texas and always found it amusing when people would try to tell us that they were allergic to onions or cilantro WHILE they were eating the salsa that had both of those ingredients in it.

I could never really figure out why people don't trust that chefs or servers will understand that if you just say no onion that we won't put onion on it.

From Serious Eats

Sweet Potato Fries -- Who Likes These Things?

Flaccid, insipid, never crunchy on the outside, never fluffy on the inside sweet potato fries. It is such a disservice to the sweet potato.

It just wants to be baked in its own skin until its spitting sugar and then given a little pat of butter.

From Serious Eats

Liberté Yogurt: My Holy Grail of Dairy Products

having tried different liberte flavors- I have something slightly blasphemous to add: I might prefer Liberte's yogurt over most ice creams.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

jello with a middle layer of sour cream, bananas and strawberries (from the freezer) - for school lunch, a scrambled egg sandwich made that morning on white bread with, yes, ketchup - pork roll and swiss cheese with relish and ketchup on english muffins for dinner - still love them all!

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

Mac & cheese with a can of tuna... which I still love to this day.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

I only eat french toast with granulated sugar on it. No syrup, butter, fruit, nothing. Just granulated sugar.

Ultimate favorite sandwich: cream cheese and jelly. Grape Jelly.

Graham crackers broken up in a bowl and drenched in milk for breakfast.

Not too weird, just not common. :P

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

We also had the bologna/pickle/mayo sandwich filling growing up in Kansas. Though it was usually saved for traval occasions - we'd pack a cooler with the hash and a loaf of bread and stop at picnic tables to eat. I also loved the potato chip/mayo sandwiches.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

We too had SOS (but ours was Budding sliced lunch meat with a can of cream of something on toast), dad too implied it was some sort of Army way of doing things. Also, when we were sick, we could request "milk toast" which was basically cinnamon-sugar toast, cut up into bite sized squares drenched in milk until soggy. And mac-n-cheese with ketchup. Chicken noodle soup with ketchup. Eggs with ketchup. You may be sensing a theme.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

Seeing all the references to bologna reminds me that when I was very small we had a maid and she would give me whatever I wanted to eat. It always really annoyed my mom when she found out that I had bologna with ketchup on it for lunch. Not a sandwich, just the bologna.

My sister taught me to eat hot dogs right out of the freezer and to put salt on sliced pickles.

My family still likes something we call "weenie stew" which is basically a red gravy with hot dogs cooked in it. You eat it on spaghetti. But that's the only thing in this post that I still eat, though it's been years since I've had weenie stew. I wonder if I have any red gravy in the freezer.......

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

Cheetos dipped in lemon yogurt. In retrospect, I'm roughly a hundred percent certain that my Dad thought this up while stoned.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

My sister and I would put Kraft singles on a small plate and microwave it. She liked hers still gooey so she could scoop it up with a shrimp fork, while I liked mine cooked right before burning, so I could peel it off and eat it like a chip.

Also, asparagus and shrimp dipped in mayo, eggs cooked in the microwave mixed with either ketchup or soy sauce, broken up uncooked Taiwanese ramen noodles, toast dipped in hot chocolate, no salt & pepper on the table...only soy sauce.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

My favorite sandwich as a kid was an omelet with jam in a pita. The other kids thought it was strange, my sister's fav was yogurt and olive paste. But our food didnt get really weird til we went to high school, it was a boarding school, where everyone have yogurt sandwiches in like a hot dog bun with potato chips and sugar. I still find myself buying hot dog buns every so often.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

I'm glad to see someone else ate cream cheese and green olive sandwiches. I loved these--the green olives with the red pimentos, on white bread. This was my favorite sandwich to take to school. And yeah, I haven't had one since, I now have a craving!

Also, one dinner my mom made was potatoes and spinach with sour cream. Mash up boiled potatoes, add cooked frozen spinach, eat with butter and sour cream. This must have been a left-over Depression-era thing. I now eat it occasionally as comfort food.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

Pei dan. I remember watching a fear factor and watching people withdraw in terror from something I'd been eating for as long as I could remember. Pansies.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

@lollie - re: the boxed mac and cheese with sliced hot dogs... my family used to do that too... my parents called it "polka dot macaroni and cheese". (I would always pick out the hot dogs, though... I've never liked them. Loved the mac and cheese as a child, but I would have none of it being defiled by evil hot dogs.)

And I remembered one more: tuna sandwiches with Pringles in them. Not real potato chips... it had to be Pringles.

From Serious Eats

What Weird Family Foods Did You Grow Up Thinking Were Normal?

Wow, lets see here...
- potato chips in sandwiches, and french fries in sandwiches too (before I discovered Primanti's)
- french fries dipped in applesauce
- chicken nuggets slathered with mashed potatoes
- ketchup sandwiches
- broken up graham crackers in a bowl of milk until they get absolutely mushy
- my sister and I would eat curls of margarine when we were little
- condensed soup with so many saltines crushed up into it that there was no broth left (a trick I learned from both of my grandfathers)
- buttered toast dipped into morning tea (the whole English side of my family does it)

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

Thank you for participating, and congratulations to our winners:

Catrona_sweeps
amylou61
mr guy
amaLosAngeles
nsord33

Winners have been notified by email and also appears on our Contest Winners page.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

It's a tie: Thai or Japanese sushi. Both rate high around here!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

i wish i knew how to make chinese..shrimp lo mein

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

I would love to learn how to make some really spicy Thai dishes.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

I live Thai food and would love to be able to make it myself.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

I'm hoping to learn to cook Turkish cuisine next - my son and daughter-in-law will be stationed there for the next two years so I'll have access to native ingredients.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

I would love to learn how to cook Japanese food at home.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Modern Spice'

I would love to learn ..

1. Authentic Mexican Cuisine.

2. Authentic Chinese Cuisine

3. Authetic Louisiana Gumbo!

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