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I used to cook a lot, but don't have the time these days. When Mrs S worked, I used to do all the family cooking.
My signature dishes were Lasagne, Chicken and Leek Pie, Lamb rogan josh or Pork in onion and apple sauce with saute potatoes.
Pork in onion and apple sauce! Tell me more, I've always stayed away from pork as I've been told its tricky to get right.
If you like pork buy "the whole beast" it's good . Like Larousse gastronomic . Get old copy from amazon £8.
Love charizo, cube it few red onions and fry it smash it into some fluffy mash !!!!
Like salads at moment.
Classic French dressing - olive oil w.w vin and seasoning emulsified - whisk. Slice baguette thinly lightly oil bake till golden and crispy. When cool rub with garlic and crumble. Snap a few bits of crispy pancetta , crumble a small lump of Stilton hand full of endive, radicchio few sundried toms few bits of garlic croutons and splash on some dressing and ummmmm.
Pasta:-
Three red onions three cloves of garlic, dice and brown. Add mushrooms and peppers season and add bit of fresh origano. Turn down to almost off. Fry 4 beautiful sausages in pan on low heat to all juices caramelise. Once almost fully cooked slice into nice chunks add to main pan. Heat sausage pan up a lot just before it smokes swill it out with 1/2 cup if red wine and pour liquor into main pan. Simmer till almost dry. Add few cartons of passatta and grate a good lump of paramo in. Boil penne with some peas or beans ..... Nom nom
Listen to you lot. Bunch of old women!
So who eats better Adam? Us or you?
Buy bagels.
Slice, toast and butter the bagel.
Serve one half with egg mayonnaise and the other half with chopped herring.
Only merchants eat chopped herring. The rest of us have marmite.
Slice a large mild onion and fry in olive oil until its translucent and soft. Put the cooked onion and some of the oil it cooked in into a food processor and whizz it until its an off-white paste. Put on one side.
Slice a medium pork tenderloin into medallions about between 5mm and 1cm thick. Dip them in oil, then in a flour herb mix, coating them thoroughly.
Fry them in a little very hot olive oil for a couple of minutes each side. Hot enough and fast enough that the herby flour absorbs all the oil and goes brown and crispy. The turn the heat down just a little and add a smear more oil and half a jar of colmans apple sauce (or any other smooth apple sauce - avoid the asda one, as it has lumps in) and the onion paste you made earlier. If it feels a little thick, add either some water, or a little white wine to loosen the sauce. Cook until the sauce is heated through, and serve with saute potatoes.
Nice meat free one I picked up from somewhere.
Jungle Curry
200g rice
2 crushed garlic cloves
2cm fresh ginger chopped finely
1 lemongrass stem chopped finely
½ tsp chilli flakes
1 tsp curry paste
1 large red onion
125g sugar snap peas
2 red peppers deseeded and chopped
100g baby corn, halved
2 courgettes, sliced
125g chestnut mushrooms
125g green beans, trimmed
100ml veg stock
1 tbsn soy sauce
150g fresh spinach, washed
Coriander
Cook the rice
Heat the oil in a large pan, stir fry ginger, garlic and lemongrass for 2-3 mins before stirring in curry paste and chilli flakes.
Add the red onion, sugar snap peas, red peppers and baby corn and cook for 3-4 minutes. Stirring constantly
Add the courgettes, chestnut mushrooms and green beans and then pour in the stock and soy sauce. Bring to the boil and continue to stir fry for a further 4-5 minutes.
Finally add the spinach and coriander and stir fry for another 4-5 minutes until the spinach has wilted and the other vegetables are softening slightly.
Serve with the rice and coriander garnish.
Marmite is the scrapings of the devils arrse.
Reply to the thread, titled "Who cooks?" which is posted in UK Plumbers Forums on Electricians Forums.
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