Hossenfeffer

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

Someone's sitting there, mate.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Preach!

Who's got Tel's number?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago

I hear the colonoscopy is hilarious, at least according to all the stories I hear.

It was a surprisingly fun time. At one point the radiologist genuinely had to tell everyone to stop laughing because it was shaking the camera too much.

The worst part about the colonoscopy was the fasting and the drugs they give you to 'purge' your bowels.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 days ago (2 children)

This year I've had cameras inserted into pretty much every orifice I own. I'll take colonoscopy over endoscopy every single day of the week, thanks!

[–] [email protected] 60 points 5 days ago

There once was a bard from Japan
Whose limericks never would scan
When told this was so
He replied, 'Yes, I know"
"But I always try and fit as many words into the last line as I possibly can."

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)
[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 days ago (1 children)

White and un-toasted. Add the mearest smear of mayonnaise, a hint of salt and white pepper, cut the crusts off, and then cut each round into three rectangles to make finger sandwiches.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

She freezes well, so there's that.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

44'C is definitely too hot. As your doctor and attorney I prescribe a gazpacho soup, ceviche, and perhaps a watermelon salad.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 week ago (1 children)

So he just innocently went into town to get a takeaway wearing an ill-fitting St George’s cross t-shirt?

What a spot of luck for him!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

I'm a F.UK-er through and through!

 

... I think it was Farmer Geddon.

 

Kedgeree

Serves 4

Ingredients

  • two or three good-sized fillets of smoked haddock (I prefer undyed but it can be harder to find)
  • 300 ml milk
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 tbsp garam masala
  • 8 eggs
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tbsp mild curry powder
  • 1.5 cups of basmati rice, washed and soaked
  • a small bunch of flat leaf parsley, chopped
  • salt
  • lemon to serve

Method

  1. Add the milk, bay leaves, and garam masala to a pan large enough to take the haddock fillets in a single layer, and bring it to a simmer. Once it's reached a simmer, add the haddock fillets, cover, and turn off the heat. Leave for about 10 minutes. Then, remove the fish and save for later. Strain the milk into a jug.
  2. Hard boil the eggs. I like to use J. Kenji López-Alt's method for easy-to-peel eggs. I usually let them cook for 10 minutes, then straight into a cold bath before peeling them.
  3. Gently fry the chopped onion and garlic for five minutes, then stir in the mild curry powder. Once ithe mixture is fragrant, stir in the rice and add a good pinch of salt.
  4. For 1.5 cups of rice I like to use a little over 2 cups of liquid. I add one cup of the reserved milk, and one cup of water. Bring to a simmer, cover, and turn the heat down as low as it will go for about 10 minutes.
  5. While the rice is cooking, chop the parsley and flake the fish (discarding any skin if it was present). When the 10 minutes is up, check the rice to make sure the liquid has been absorbed, then top the rice with three quarters of the parsley and the flaked fish. Put a sheet of kitchen towel over the top of the pan, then re-cover, turn the heat off, and let it rest for about 5 minutes.
  6. While the rice is resting, cut each boiled egg into 4 quarters.
  7. Gently stir the rice, fish, and parsley into each other, then split between bowls. Add the boiled eggs and garnish with the remaining parsley. Serve with wedges of lemon.
 

Crows had to drink at home.

13
Chicken Milanese (feddit.uk)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

One of my favourites. And the kids eat it too since it's basically giant chicken nuggets!

Ingredients

  • One chicken breast per person
  • plain flour (I like to season mine with a little salt and pepper)
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • breadcrumbs (I use Paxo Natural, but you could posh it up a bit with artisinal breadcrumbs)
  • a frying oil (eg sunflower)
  • salt and pepper
  • parmesan
  • lemons to serve

Method

  1. Preheat an over to 75'c to keep things warm. Put in a baking tray lined with kitchen towel or greaseproof paper.

  2. Pop a damp sheet of kitchen towel on your worktop, then a chopping board on top of that. Get a large piece of clingfilm (double the size of the chopping board, rest it over the board, then place a chicken breast on the clingfilm and finally lay the rest of the clingfilm over the chicken. Using a meat mallet, a rolling pin, or even another chopping board, bash your chicken breast to an even 1cm or so thick. Repeat for all chicken breasts (if you have decent quality clingfilm the same piece should hold up for multiple chicken breasts).

  3. Heat the oil in a large frying pan.

  4. Lay out three shallow bowls, each big enough to take a flattened breast. Put the flour in one, the egg in another, and mix the breadcrumbs and parmesan with a little salt and pepper in the third.

  5. One by one, dredge the breasts in the flour and shake excess off, then dip in the egg and drip the excess off, then finally into the breadcrumb / parmesan mix and again shake off any excess.

  6. Fry each coated chicken breast for 3 to four minutes on each side (check the internal temperature with an instant-read thermometer: chicken should reach a minimum of 70'C / 158'F according to the World Health Organisation - most recommend higher but the WHO is good enough for me). Transfer the cooked chicken breasts to the oven to keep warm while you do the others.

  7. Serve with lemon wedges, a really simple tomato spaghetti, and a green salad.

50
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

A tomato-less pasta sauce cooked for many, many hours until the beef and the onions melt into each other.

The result is a rich, creamy sauce that makes a nice change from the Bolognese.

Relatively low effort as long as you’re staying at home and can give it a stir every half hour or so.

This was the first time I made it so I pretty closely followed this recipe.

Edit to add: this would probably work pretty well as a slow cooker recipe.

26
Carbonara (feddit.uk)
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Italians, look away now, because guanciale is hard to get round these parts. Besides, I bet your nonna used pancetta at least once in her lifetime and you didnt't even notice.

Carbonara is actually pretty easy, although like all recipes with a very limited set of ingredients it can seem quite intimidating because there's nowhere to hide.

  • Slice or chop 150g of the best pancetta you can find (guanciale if you can get it but it's hard to source) and gently fry until golden brown but not crispy. If you can't get either then an unsmoked streaky bacon will work at a push while also upsetting everyone in Italy.
  • Cook your chosen pasta (I do 500g for 4 people) to al dente in a pot of well-salted water. I've tried carbonara with various types of pasta: spaghetti, bucatini, linguine, fettuccine, tagliatelle (always tagliatelle with a ragu alla bolognese, I serve a tag bol in my house, not a spag bol) as well as short pastas like rigatoni and cavatappi (the best pasta for mac and cheese). Personally, I enjoy a tagliatelle carbonara.
  • While the pasta and pancetta / guanciale is cooking, whisk eggs, cheese, and freshly ground black pepper together. I use one whole, free-range egg per person, and an additional yolk per two people (I really like Burford Brown eggs because of the exceptional colour of the yolks). I use a mix of approximately 50/50 pecorino romano and parmigiano reggiano. Loads of both.
  • Once the pasta is cooked, reserve a cup of the cooking water, then drain and chuck it in with the meat. You don't need to be super careful about draining the pasta - any excess water will be incorporated into the sauce.
  • Turn off the heat under the meat and pasta. This is important and we're close to the only challenging bit of cooking a carbonara. We're going to add the cheesy egg mixture to the pasta and we want it to cook super gently to avoid serving our guests scrambled egg so we want it to cook in the residual heat, not any direct heat. Spend a minute or two tossing the pasta in with the meat and the oil that's rendered out of the meat as it's cooked.
  • Add the cheesy egg mixture and stir vigorously for a minute or so to combine with the pasta. Add as much of the reserved pasta water as necessary to make sure the sauce is creamy and luxurious. It can soak up more water than you expect!
  • Serve immediately with a few more grinds of black pepper.
 

Greek-style roast chicken

To achieve maximum juiciness, I like to brine the chicken for 24 hours before cooking.

  • Put a layer of sliced red onion on the bottom of a deep baking tray, a cast iron skillet, or a Dutch oven
  • Stuff the cavity of a large free-range chicken with some oregano, onion, a lemon wedge, and a lot of garlic, season all over with salt, pepper, and more oregano
  • Place the chicken, breast side down, on top of the onions
  • Season some new potatoes and slice them in half if they're biggish, then put them around the sides of the chicken
  • Add 250ml chicken stock, 50 ml white wine, and a little lemon juice
  • Roast for one hour at ~ 180c
  • Turn the chicken over so it's breast side up (the potatoes will fall into the space where the chicken was, but that's ok, just rest the chicken on top of them), and check there's still a little liquid in the bottom of the pan (add a drop more stock if neeed be)
  • Roast for another 30 mins to an hour (depending on the size of the bird) until done
  • Rest and serve with a Greek salad or a simple green salad.
 

Chicken Ramen

This is a quick meal which I've done in as little as 20 minutes, start to finish. Using the Itsu broth is a huge time saver but you could elevate things by using a home-made stock.

Serves 2 adults, 2 children

  • Season 2 large free-range chicken breasts with salt, pepper, and chinese five spice. Gently fry in toasted sesame oil
  • In large pot bring one carton of Itsu classic ramen broth and one carton of Itshu chicken broth to a simmer (the photo is of one I made a while back, with two of the chicken broth cartons, but I prefer the mix)
  • Cut the bak choi, separating the white stems from the green leaves, then add the white stems to the broth (reserving the leaves) along with some frozen edamame
  • Bring a large pan of salted water to a boil. Add your ramen and cook according to packet instructions. For the four of us I use three servings of Yutaka frozen ramen which only take one minute to cook
  • Add the green leaves to the broth and turn off the heat
  • Drain the noodles and split between bowls
  • I use a slotted spoon to scoop out the veggies and split them evenly between bowls, then pour in the broth
  • Slice the chicken and add some to each bowl
  • Add more fixin's as desired: chopped spring onion, finely sliced red chilli, chopped coriander, sesame seeds
11
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Rough sort of recipe - I tend to wing it without very accurate measurements of things:

Serves 4 adults.

  • Cook 500g of macaroni or other appropriate pasta shape to al dente (I generally go about 2 minutes under the recommended packet instructions)

 

  • Fry up 150g of well-diced chorizo and reserve.
  • Melt 125g of butter in the same pan (there should be some oil left from the chorizo)
  • Chuck in some flour (I guess about half a cup) and stir to a roux which is roughly the consistency of wet sand
  • Stir until not lumpy
  • Add some minced garlic, a level teaspoon of English mustard powder, a pinch of nutmeg, a bay leaf, stir and then immediately start adding the milk to bring the temp down a bit and make sure the garlic doesn't burn in the roux/napalm.
  • Total of about 2 1/2 pints of whole-fat milk. You have to add it in dribbles to start with and stir vigorously. The roux will glump up into a claggy mess at first but gradually combine with the milk. Once it's a reasonable consistency you can pour in the rest of the milk.
  • Bring the milk to about 85-90'C (185-195'F) then stir in some grated cheese. I used a mix of Emental, Extra Mature Cheddar, and Monterey Jack.
  • Season with black pepper

 

  • Once that's all thick and cheesy and gooey and nice, return the chorizo to the sauce, then stir in the cooked pasta.
  • Pour the cheesy pasta into an oven-safe dish or pot, sprinkle breadcrumbs over the top and bake for 20 minutes at 180'C / 360'F.
  • Check it's bubbling nicely under its breadcrumb hat then grill for 5 minutes to get those breadcrumbs golden.

 

  • Let it cool for 5 minutes while whipping up a simple green salad.

  I like it with some OG Tabasco to taste.

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