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#526 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I have a weak spot for the surreal!
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#527 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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![]() ![]() ![]() My favorite surrealist is Tanguy: Mama Papa is Wounded http://www.google.com/images?q=tangu...w=1186&bih=735 |
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#528 |
Wizard
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*Very* odd - will have to think about it. But it's Christian, isn't it?
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#529 |
Grand Sorcerer
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That is at the MOM. Magritte is not really a painter, but more a designer, a graphist, but I prefer his levity, typical of so many Belgian artists, and of the Belgian character. You love comics, Ea do you know TinTin? That is what I mean. Maybe Kenny who is an artist himself ,has a more tormented and deep soul. how about our Italian DeChirico, or the greatest of them all, the precursor, the great russian Chagall. Wikipedia has a good page on this. Ah, the lightness of the spirit.
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#530 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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I'm tormented....so tormented......
Honestly I think many artists are on the fringes or certainly see things from a different perspective. But that's really true of almost any any highly creative outstanding person in their field. (well except for Warren Buffet)..... |
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#531 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#532 |
Wizard
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I liked this so much I made it twice last week. The sauce is ambrosia and quite easy to put together. The second time I added 1½ teaspoon fresh grated ginger - not bad.
Indian-style chicken stew 4 portions 1 1300-1400 g chicken - skinned and cut in pieces (on the bone) 1 tablespoon olive oil 2 onions, finely diced 3-4 garlic cloves, finely diced 2 ts (teaspoon) garam masala ¼-½ ts ground chili (adjust to your own taste, but I think it's a shame to make it too hot) 2 ts turmeric 4 ts ground cumin 3 ts ground coriander 1 ts coarse salt (or ½ ts fine salt) ½ l water 1 can tomato puree (I blended a 400 g can of skinned tomatoes) 1 ts of lemon juice and 1 ts of sugar to taste Brown the chicken pieces in a frying pot/casserole pan/dutch oven and put aside. Discard the fat for frying and add olive oil to the pot. Brown onions at medium-low heat for 8 min. Add garlic and fry for 3-4 min more. Add spices and fry gently for 2-3 min. Add chicken, water, tomato puree and water. Mix well. If you want fall-off-the-bone-tender chicken, let it simmer at low heat for 3-3½ hours (a slow cooker would be good for this) - but an hour is enough. When the chicken is tender, take it up (carefully) and put aside, and reduce the sauce to about half, until it's thick and "creamy". Adjust taste with lemon juice, sugar and salt. Put the chicken back in to heat through before serving. Because the sauce is so great it's best served with bread (e.g. naan or turkish flatbread) to mop up the sauce - and steamed vegetables. I think it would be nice with other kinds of meat as well, for example lamb or pork tenderloin. Any excuse to make more of this sauce. Did I say it was a great sauce? ![]() Recipe is from this book (slightly adapted by me) Last edited by Ea; 08-05-2010 at 02:03 PM. |
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#533 |
Chocolate Grasshopper ...
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#534 |
lost my wits...
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mmmMMm that sounds good, reading the ingredient list alone makes my mouth water!
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#535 |
Grand Sorcerer
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This looks so good that I will do it this week (without ginger). And the second time over, without any disrespect, I will put in a clove or two of star anise (it is already in the garam masala), to be able to sell it as a Provençal dish, with whole corianders that crack under the bite.
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#536 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
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#537 |
lost my wits...
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Texas, USA
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#538 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
Quote:
Spoiler:
That said let us come to the matter in hand. In mouth rather. Funnier than others. I must limit myself to mouth effects. Spoiler:
Cracking coriander acorns is a recent discovery, of about 10 years. Since I discovered coriander in my holidays in the South of France where it is traditional. Pistacchios are also very funny. For LittleDaughter (3) it is yet the best food toy ever. Chery tomatoes and wild Blackberries picked on site runners up. A bag of fresh tiny shrimps bought and consumed in the downtown fishing port of Stavanger (Norway) is very funny to eat while admiring the sights and ogglying the she inhabitants and observing how their silvery blond manes bounce and wave while they go on their business (canter is probably the right word) on those incredibly long legs. Olives stuffed with anchovies. Bread fried olives stuffed with meat (Ascolana) Gazpacho Figs bread with deer raw sausage. (In a small and classy lesbian(?) eatery in Bever, Engadin, Switzerland). I had it with a glass of blauburgunder. Others were drinking tea in russian glasses. Everybody with dream like eyes. Thousand yards stare. Or it is the thousands years eggs. Delicious treat that one also. It tastes of oysters. Smørrebrød, possibly near Tivoli Gardens unless corrected by a local expert. Frikadeller meat balls and in general all Dane food.Babette's Feast? Medium lean smoked meat open sandwich at Schwartz on main street in Montreal. Bagel and lox. ... I have to stop. I am on a diet. piloBo's diet. mixed textures. She is absolutely right, that can bring the surprise by contrast element that makes it funny. Just a personal question. Lady glowhappy, do you know her? I mean the one that wrote that in your post. bring her with you more often so that we can enjoy her company. dulcis in fundo whole fish in my modest opinion the best use of it is frozen, a large pike or sea bass.Deep frozen. To be banged on the head of sombody that I know until some sense can creep in that pretty but empty head. Double curtsy and I'm on my way. Last edited by beppe; 08-03-2010 at 05:44 AM. Reason: correction kindly provided by kk |
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#539 |
Wizard
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Well, I don't know quite what to say. First you start by telling me not to be angry - which naturally raises my defenses and makes me look out for possible insults
![]() ![]() And the rest? You are talking about pleasurable or fun eating experiences, not food with innate "funniness" ![]() |
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#540 |
Professional Adventuress
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Location: The Olympic Peninsula on the OTHER Washington! (the big green clean one on the west coast!)
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