What do your meals look like (show me pictures)....

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Replies

  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    This weekend’s batch of air fryer focaccia. I forgot to add some brown flour this time. I’ve simplified the method for high hydration doughs. Instead of stretching with a wet hand periodically use a small stiff spatula to stretch and stir without dirtying your hands.

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  • SafariGalNYC
    SafariGalNYC Posts: 2,436 Member
  • KillaBee6217
    KillaBee6217 Posts: 3 Member
  • KillaBee6217
    KillaBee6217 Posts: 3 Member
  • KillaBee6217
    KillaBee6217 Posts: 3 Member

    Quick one here, 500kcal for 60g of proteins

  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    Cappelletti made from blitzed leftover chicken stew and store bought gyoza skins I parked in the freezer last month. Store bought tomato sauce. Ready washed salad with cheddar shavings, a sprinkle of candied nuts I keep in the pantry and vinaigrette I keep in a squeeze bottle in the fridge. This was a 5 minute weeknight dinner.

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    @mjbnj0001

    Those corn ribs look great.

  • yakkystuff
    yakkystuff Posts: 2,108 Member

    Will have to try corn ribs - novel idea.

    Recently braved cut rounds of mini corn in stir fry vegs and enjoyed.

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  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    Cooked simply tonight because I need to do a big cook tomorrow. An ex colleague who's leaving London is throwing his farewell dinner at my place. A stir fried chicken breast with green pepper, black bean and some of the stir fry sauce I prepped for tomorrow's main of beef lok lak. Cucumber salad with asian black sesame dressing. Brown rice.

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  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    I forgot to take pictures of the dinner party, except dessert. We had Vietnamese summer rolls, Cambodian street corn, Cambodian beef lok lak. Dessert was chocolate tartlets with berries.

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  • mjbnj0001
    mjbnj0001 Posts: 1,389 Member
    edited September 11

    Segue into Autumn - Wednesday evening dinner entree (09/10): not exactly chicken parm, but maybe an improv cousin. Seasoned chicken thighs covered in tomato pasta sauce and cheese, sitting on a bed of chopped carrots. A throw-together meal made out of on-hand items. I had two major decision points: dry roast the prepared chicken and carrots, then sauce them as a finish (with cheese) versus just cover with sauce and bake, effectively braising or stewing the chicken, and, should this be served with pasta? So, I simply stewed the chicken and carrots in the sauce, adding freshly grated cheese near the end to melt for serving. I thought the carrots would be sufficiently carby to skip pasta, but wound up serving the chicken on wheat toast to sop up the saucy goodness. Not shown: chopped veg salad on the side, y'all have seen about 20 dozen versions of that.

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  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    Leftover summer rolls from the dinner party last night for lunch.

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  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    Found a tub of puttanesca sauce in the freezer. Had that with cappellini and salad.

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  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 8,422 Member

    The second dinner party I threw this week. A Chinese ex colleague came over with her rather young step mom. I cooked western because I was too intimidated to make Asian for them. Salad with smoked chicken, candied nuts, blueberries and croutons. Duck confit with roast potatoes, sauteed spinach and glazed carrots. Chocolate and raspberry tarts.

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  • CarolGaGal
    CarolGaGal Posts: 155 Member

    That looks like a great dinner acpgee!

  • mjbnj0001
    mjbnj0001 Posts: 1,389 Member

    Tuesday, 09/16 … busy day throw-together dinner from pantry items: roast chicken thighs (garlicky herb rub), ertsaz Bombay Aloo (potato flakes with Indian spices in the manner [almost] of Bombay potatoes), peas (from frozen).

    Potato flakes are convenient for certain cases, but really, really need some help not being cardboard. I have been hankering to make Bombay Aloo, so this seemed like a good experiment. Missing from the classic recipe in this version are mustard seeds. I used coconut milk rather than dairy for the mash, and incorporated commercial Madras curry powder and garam masala. I was also sparing on the cayenne in deference to my wife. This was very aromatic, and tasty, but I think next time I might amp up the quantity of spices. I added the spices to the boiling potato water to heat up and ensure equal distribution in the resultant potatoes.

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