What do your meals look like (show me pictures)....
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Starter of salad with blue cheese and candied nuts. Main of gai yang drusticks, braised pak choi, roast potatoes.
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Roasted Brussels sprouts over rice and topped with two over easy eggs.3 -
Leftover steelcut oatmeal "risotto" from two nights ago with some sauteed spinach.
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SafariGalNYC wrote: »@SafariGalNYC
Are peonies in season? I must get to the flower market next weekend. Yours are beautiful.
Thank @acpgee ! Yes, they are! They are my favorites.
We used to live in the Netherlands and consume cut flowers the thrifty Dutch way. In Holland people never buy expensive mixed bouquets (unless for presentation as a gift), but often have a vase of single variety blooms that are cheap and in season. So that means daffodils in January and February, tulips in March and April, roses in June and gladiolas in July and August. In Amsterdam we used have a flower stall next to our local vegetable market, but in London we buy $5 single variety bunches at the supermarket. I thought I would need to get to the weekend flower market for peonies (my favourite) but they had a bunch at the supermarket! Not open yet.
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SafariGalNYC wrote: »@SafariGalNYC
Are peonies in season? I must get to the flower market next weekend. Yours are beautiful.
Thank @acpgee ! Yes, they are! They are my favorites.
We used to live in the Netherlands and consume cut flowers the thrifty Dutch way. In Holland people never buy expensive mixed bouquets (unless for presentation as a gift), but often have a vase of single variety blooms that are cheap and in season. So that means daffodils in January and February, tulips in March and April, roses in June and gladiolas in July and August. In Amsterdam we used have a flower stall next to our local vegetable market, but in London we buy $5 single variety bunches at the supermarket. I thought I would need to get to the weekend flower market for peonies (my favourite) but they had a bunch at the supermarket! Not open yet.
Those are lovely! 💐1 -
I have way too many peonies at my house. I used to dig them up from time to time and think them out and move the tubers to more places. Now there's just too many. There's one in a place I don't want. I have dug it up three years in a row (and given the tubers away) and it keeps coming back.
I bring them in for a while, but at some point they just don't hold their petals long enough to bring them in. Just a mess a day after they're cut. But they are gorgeous.
I've got some iris blooming now too. Soon a bunch more things. I'll probably miss the first blossoms on the Scarlet Bee Balm while I'm rafting the Rogue.
I actually cut some of my artichokes and use them as decorative cut flowers. Yeah. I'm weird.3 -
@mtaratoot
I am jealous of your apparent artichoke glut. I love them and must look for them at the green grocer now that they are in season.
Speaking of vegetables, I find onion blooms very pretty but never see them for sale. Do they not last as cut flowers?0 -
I am several weeks away from having artichokes to harvest. They survived the weeding and are doing well though. There are some bare areas in the patch; some must have succumbed to the harsh winter this year. I think the ants kill some too. The patch had become too thick, so I don't mind. I might dig some up and rearrange this fall.
I have seen Allium flowers for sale in flower shops. Not technically onions per se, although onions are in the genus Allium. Onions are harvested after they form bulbs. If you don't harvest the onions, they will flower the following year. There are several ways to grow onions, but if you grow onions to eat, you won't see them flower unless you neglect to harvest some.2 -
Day 2 for the bunch of supermarket peonies and a couple are starting to open. They are going to be glorious.
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Dinner was a bit of a fail due to my poor labelling of freezer contents. I thought I pulled out a pork loin but it was a loin shape chunk of pork mince. I marinated and cooked it like char sui including 8 hours in the sous vide before realizing my mistake. I went to town producing a variety of Korean banshan. The batch will serve as vegetable sides for another two nights this week.
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Made a great salad for lunch the other day. Chicken with chipotle/adobo sauce, cucumbers, Greek yogurt, cilantro, pickled onions and other bits. So good!4 -
Dinner was a bit of a fail due to my poor labelling of freezer contents. I thought I pulled out a pork loin but it was a loin shape chunk of pork mince. I marinated and cooked it like char sui including 8 hours in the sous vide before realizing my mistake. I went to town producing a variety of Korean banshan. The batch will serve as vegetable sides for another two nights this week.
@acpgee ~ how did you prepare the sprouts?
--everything always looks delish! Thank you for the shares
our grocery has sweet onion and bell peppers on good sale this week. Will cook some stovetop (think mire poix and sofrito), bag up and freeze for future cooking. Will cut some in strips to marinate and smoke/grill to use as topping next week. Some just onion/peppers. Some cremini/button mushrooms, and a batch of onion/pepper/mushrooms. I use an Italian oil style home marinade, blackening seasoning and torn cilantro to spice. We will also smoke a turkey for an hour and finish in the oven, then use bones for stock. I have saved other bones to use as well, and altogether, it makes at least a gallon+ that I will freeze to use for stoups/sauces.
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@Adventurista
I did this for spinach, beansprouts, daikon, potatoes and cucumber
https://www.koreanbapsang.com/15-korean-vegetable-side-dishes/
I used a Japanese recipe for the green beans
https://www.justonecookbook.com/green-bean-gomaae/
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ty @acpgee
-- my next door neighbor is SK, and temporarily living away while a replacement home is built. Will explore the recipes for a welcome home meal1 -
@Adventurista
Some roasted meat and a bunch of Korean banchan/namul in tupperware boxes is a good gift meal for someone who might want to pull out leftovers later in the week because the Korean sides are meant to be served at room temperature, and leftover roasts are good at room temperature too.
My tips for producing a large selection of banchan:
1. Prep all the grated/pressed/minced garlic and finely chopped scallion in one go. These are the common ingredients called for in several recipes.
2. Use the food processor and spiralizer. I used the food processor both for making thin disks of cucumber, and for daikon where I later sliced stacked disks into julienne. Consider using a spiralizer or grater instead of julienne, depending on how much hassle it is to clean the spiralizer/grater versus cutting stacked thin disks into julienne by hand.
3. Use a salad spinner. I blanched veg by pouring hot water from the kettle over vegetables in the salad spinner, draining, and then cooling by running with cold water. The salad spinner spared me from having to squeeze out excess water by hand.
4. Buy some ready made kimchi. There are some other store bought asian pickles you can use to stretch a selection of banchan/namul. I am fond of Chinese pickled mustard greens. Japanese pickled daikon is nice too and can be bought ready sliced.
5. If a recipe calls for crushing sesame seeds into a paste with a pestle and mortar, consider using Chinese sesame paste (made from roasted seeds), tahini (made from unroasted) or even a teaspoon of peanut butter instead.
Another gift meal I regularly do is my standard offering for new parents. I will cook a huge batch of something braised such as bolognaise sauce or coq au vin to fill up the freezer with small portioned boxes.
What does SK mean?1 -
Friday nights we usually eat out because the hubby is convinced it makes the weekend feel longer. The Sicilian near us recently changed chefs and were soft launching at 50% off.
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Wow, ty for the tips @acpgee
-- SK is South Korean. She tends a large variety of vegetables, and prepared us a number of dishes when we were moving into our home, so appreciated. Unfortunately, the construction has displaced much of her planting this year, so i thought to reciprocate and appreciated the links1 -
The supermarket peonies on day 4. I think I will wait until next weekend before visiting the flower market.
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I cut off most of my peonies today. Some were already falling apart. The rest will be before I get back from the river. I also chopped off a whole lot of roses.
I took a bunch of these out to a local establishment and made a nice flower arrangement. The rest went into the green waste cart. There will be more roses when I get back; the peonies will all be gone. They are so lovely but short-lived.3 -
I made the dinner I planned for on Thursday when I mistook a hunk of frozen pork mince for a pork tenderloin. There is leftover banchan for at least one more night.
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Dinner by the sea 🌊
Sea Bream, calamari, octopus, shrimp, green beans..
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In London a lot of new restaurants offer soft launch deals. These are try out nights prior to the official opening where they want to test if the staff can handle a full restaurant and engineer a full restaurant by offering discounts, usually 50% off food. We make a hobby of seeking out these deals which can be hit or miss. We went to a terrific one tonight.
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Breakfast : Straggisto with fruit
🍽️ Dinner Squid w purèed greens, herbed rice
Halloumi with tomato and balsamic
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Meal prep for this week.
Tumeric, Brown rice, bone broth, carrots, leeks, thin chicken breast, organic chicken apple sausage & KALE
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Blue cheese souffle and watermelon/feta/mint salad. Some toast on the side with olive oil.
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🍽️ Lobster, eggplant, fava bean purée, seafood salad and tzatziki.
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Not exactly low calorie, but I made a focaccia.
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Our Friday night dinner out because Hubby is convinced it makes the weekend feel longer. We went to a soft launch that was pretty good.
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Sous vide char sui pulled out of the freezer and finished in the air fryer. Cold bean sprout namul and overcooked stir fried choi sum with brown rice. Tried a new brand of rice and struggled with the timing.
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Mini blueberry pie. All homemade. I rolled the crust really thin and near as I can figure 130 calories per pie
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