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#481 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() Oh, incidentally to the topic, I am currently waiting on some low-cooking Beetroot Relish. No-one really needs to know this, but I just thought I'd mention it. ![]() Cheers, Marc |
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#482 |
Opsimath
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Beets are far more popular in Oz, I think, than anywhere else. Don't you folks put them on hamburgers too? I guess they were a food staple in eastern Europe too, but for some reason, other than as Borscht, they didn't catch on in North America.
I didn't care for them as a kid, and I haven't tasted any in probably 40-50 years. I really should give them another try. Stitchawl |
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#483 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() The recipe for beetroot relish I am using is somewhat based on a recipe link I came across somewhere for a "chili Aussie beef burger with homemade tomato ketchup, balsamic beetroot relish, swiss cheese and egg". It has recipes for the relish, the ketchup and the burger separate, and looks pretty good (and I've made the relish before as per the instructions, and it was good, but I changed it slightly this time). Next up I'll try the ketchup, which looks real nice too. If you want have a look at the recipes, the image-heavy link is here: http://whatkatieate.blogspot.com/201...wnies-and.html Cheers, Marc |
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#484 | ||
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#485 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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I don't know if I have any of Mum's curry recipes (she learnt a lot of them in Malaysia, and they tend to the Indian style more), but I think they might be more what you're looking for. While condiments you might serve include some sweet (sultanas, sliced banana, chutney, roasted coconut), I don't know if you'd find the sweet more acceptable, able to control how much you add at the table. I might have to ask her about them though. Do you have any preferences (eg. meat, known dishes)? Quote:
![]() But it does taste quite nice. If you're okay with the sweet acidity of ketchup, you'd probably find a couple of slices of tinned beetroot okay too, if you can get past expectations (I put this last in because I could not get past "pumpkin pie" as a dessert - I tried it, I could see its appeal, but IT WAS PUMPKIN, IN A PIE, AS A DESSERT! Craziness. ![]() Cheers, Marc |
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#486 | |
ZCD BombShel
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#487 | ||||
Opsimath
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![]() Stitchawl |
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#488 | |||
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Another high-end chef that has done this is Damien Pignolet who has a book called, simply, French, which is filled with quite detailed, and sometimes complicated, restaurant-style recipes. But he also has Salades which (obviously) concentrates on salads in many forms and far more approachable. We make from the book "a simple salad" that has main ingredients of roast capsicum, avocado and asparagus, and turn it into a meal with a couple of slices of toasted sourdough on the side and a softly poached egg or two on top of it to break over. Yum. Quote:
Cheers, Marc |
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#489 |
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Oh, and to the beet-lovers, a bridge too far?
http://www.channel4.com/food/recipes...ecipe_p_1.html Cheers, Marc (who intends to try this) |
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#490 | |
Opsimath
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The fried fish cakes certainly are a very popular street food, and you can always find vendors day or night around the bus depots and train stations selling bags full of them. Would you please post the recipe you use for it?
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Stitchawl |
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#491 | |
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I'm up for trying most anything. I figure that I can probably adapt recipes and leave out some of the sweeter appearing ingredients. I seem to recall a small place back in Boulder that had curries that weren't particularly sweet. I'd love to replicate that! I'm up for pretty much any meats except organ meat, and some of the squishier fish, ie; squid, octopus, etc. and I have not seen eel in the market here. I can't handle pumpkin pie, either (although a good pumpkin bread can be yummy!) I usually keep some beets in the fridge that I chop up for a salad with walnuts, gorgonzola, ranch dressing, and a mix of lettuces. those are always fresh beets though that I bake, peel and slice. I'll have to think about it next time I have a burger. hold the egg though! eggs are yummy, but not on a burger! that's where chilies go! ![]() |
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#492 |
ZCD BombShel
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Pumpkin in the US seems to have the "expectations" of it being sweet and used in sweet things, like pumpkin pie, pumpkin bread, cookies, ooey gooey bars... what do you use it for in Oz that you weren't expecting dessert, Marc?
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#493 | |
Opsimath
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Stitchawl |
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#494 |
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savory recipes is what I would like to have. like I said in the never ever thread, I wish I liked more squash. the sweetness and oftentimes even the texture set me off
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#495 | ||||
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Ingreditients:
It is from this recipe we'd like to seek a grilling/broiling recipe. We have made another grilled/broiled tuna-cakes recipe (non-SE Asian), and might look into making a hybrid. Quote:
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None of it is (generally) associated with sweets here. Pumpkin bread is still a savoury bread here (for instance I've just been eating a pumpkin and pipita sourdough for the last few lunches, with cottage cheese, tomato and bread and butter cucumbers). We might make soup, especially in winter with some sourcream and some crusty bread. We'd particularly use it as one of the roast vegetables (eg. along with spuds and parsnips) alongside a roast meat like beef or lamb. Sometimes they're used on pizza (usually "fancy" ones ![]() Even when being made into pumpkin scones then, unlike normal scones, in my experience they're usually not served with strawberry jam and cream, but usually with just butter. In Oz, generally, "dessert" is not a meal that comes to mind when talking about pumpkin. It'd be a toss-up between soup and a Sunday Roast taking that spot, and certainly "savoury" in broad terms. Cheers, Marc |
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