Don’t forget we moved!
https://brandmu.day/
Recipes!
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man, so many good new recipes here. I have a lot of cooking to do. But luckily I am here for two months, so now I have a bunch of recipes for that time!
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I made KB’s potato lasagna. Here’s an imgur gallery of process for those who want to see!
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@Meg I can dig the soyrizo. That stuff makes really good chorizo and eggs 'cause it’s not so greasy.
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today has been kind of a shitty day. I took my adult kids to target (the two who were home from work came with me to get the 3rd, and then we did a Target run). By this time I am pretty exhausted and worn down. They all asked like 2 times what dinner plans were and I was really crabby and was like “I don’t freaking know yet, how about nacho hot dogs”. They actually liked that idea so much when they came back to the car they’d gotten tortilla chips and all the nacho toppings they could think of (they knew we had hotdogs and buns at home). And so that’s what we did. It ended up being pretty good and fed a crowd of hungry young men plus a bottomless pit 8 year old.
We grilled the hotdogs, toasted the buns, and then the following toppings were available:
Nacho cheese (like the cheese food type), salsa, pickled jalapenos, crushed tortilla chips, green onions, shredded pepper jack cheese, green and red hot sauces, bacon bits, olives, avocado slices, sour cream.
Now they are teasing me and calling it Frickin’ Nacho Hotdogs and have gotten the 8 year old to call it that now. I’m still a little crabby, but think I have pretty awesome kids.
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@dvoraen oh EXCUSE ME, i am just dying from a COLD but here’s your PICS https://imgur.com/a/VYfaM9l
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@Meg ilu
It looks fantastic. At least you have the sense to like mushrooms, unlike someone else we could name. More to the point, I’ve been very curious what Impossible meat tastes like. I’ve watched videos about it, but I’ve never tried it.
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@dvoraen It’s a 1:1 for replacement in almost all recipes, ad totally worth investigating, UNLESS YOU ARE A MONSTER WHO LIKES MUSHROOMS.
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@dvoraen I had an Impossible Whopper once out of curiosity. I couldn’t tell the difference.
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@dvoraen out of all the “meat” replacements, I think it is the best, personally. I really like the taste/texture for its own sake. The people in my family who aren’t vegan and hate “fake meat” actually like it as well, they’d rather have chili or taco meat from that than say ground turkey. It has great mouth feel if you’re looking for a very meaty texture, unlike most replacements.
There are certain dishes where it might be a little flat, especially next day stuff like cottage pie. I think adding just a smitge of marmite fixes that (depending on one’s taste, you do not need to add a lot)
Plus it is fun to cook because it browns up and sizzles and all that. IMO.
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Pear cake!
3 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp baking soda
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 cups vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
3 eggs
2 tsp vanilla
4-5 ripe pears depending on size of the pears, peeled and chopped into large chunks.Preheat oven to 325. Spray/Grease and flour a bunt cake pan (or 9x11 baking pan
In a large bowl sift flour, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt.
In another large bowl mix together sugars and oil, mix until well blended. Incorporate eggs one at a time and well. Add vanilla and mix well. Add the dry ingredients a cup at a time and mix well. Spoon batter into prepared cake pan.
Bake for about an hour and a half or until it passes the toothpick/knife test. Allow to cool for 20 minutes and then turn over on cake plate, and allow to cool thoroughly.
This is our favorite way to use up pears when a ton ripen at the same time. Nice crust on the outside, very moist and tender on the inside!
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Does anyone have a vegetarian (or meat is fine if it is kosher i guess) split pea soup that’s like… really good? I want to avoid ham or bacon but I really want to make split pea soup that has that good saltiness in it somewhere and I’m a little stumped.
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@sao -
Depending on effort levels, if you marinate some tempeh up overnight in a mix of soy sauce, maple syrup, salt, pepper and liquid smoke (I mean can replace liquid smoke with smoked paprika tbh) you can get the bacon-taste.
Marinade for at least 15 mins, bake at 200 Celcius (400 f) for 10 mins both sides. Done.
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I have also made vegan bacon chips with large flake coconut soaked in liquid smoke, soy, etc.
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This is less of a recipe and more of a recommendation: try spices in your coffee! I don’t mean just the good ol’ cinnamon (though that’s nice too), but things like cardamom, nutmeg, ginger, cloves, and my favorite allspice. Especially now that the weather’s getting colder, the pumpkin/christmas spices are really nice in brew. They also work in black tea (see: various types of chai), hot apple cider and hot cocoa. They also work really well if you sweeten with brown sugar or maple syrup.
I don’t like chewing on spice, so I usually add it to the coffee grinds/tea leaves, but a sprinkle on top ain’t too bad.
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An actual recipe this time! For all of you I have unearthed my slightly customized Guinness Chocolate Cake recipe.
For the cake: butter for pan, 0.5 cup Guinness stout, 10 tbs (1 stick + 2 tablespoons) butter, 1 cup unsweetened cocoa, 2 cups superfine sugar, 1/2 cup sour cream, 2 large eggs, 1 tablespoon vanilla extract, 1 cup all-purpose flour, 2 1/2 tablespoons baking soda.
For the topping: 1 1/4 cups powdered sugar, 2 packages (or 16 ounces) cream cheese at room temperature, 1/2 cup vanilla or maple yogurt, preferably whole milk. Optional: make it a 1/4 cup whole milk yogurt and 1/4 cup heavy cream, or otherwise alter the balance as you prefer.
1: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 9-inch springform pan and line with parchment paper. In a large saucepan, combine Guinness and butter. Heat on medium until butter melts, then remove from heat. Add cocoa and superfine sugar, whisk to blend.
2. In one bowl, combine sour cream, eggs and vanilla, mix well. Add to Guinness-butter mixture. Add flour and baking soda, whisk again until smooth. Pour into buttered pan, bake until risen and firm: roughly 45 minutes to 1 hour. Place pan on a wire rack, leave cake in pan until completely cooled.
3. For topping: using food processor or the raw power of your own mighty muscles, blend cream cheese with powdered sugar until smooth. Add the yogurt/heavy cream, mix until smooth and thick enough to be spreadable but not runny. Make sure to take taste samples, some like it sweeter and some less.
4. Remove cake from pan and place on platter/whatsit. Ice top of cake so that it resembles a frothy pint of Guinness. Devour.This is my modified version of Nigella Lawson’s OG one, which you can find here on her site https://www.nigella.com/recipes/chocolate-guinness-cake - the original version is also in milliliters and such, for my fellow non-americans.
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Autumn is apple season and I ended up with a lot of them since I can’t resist a sale. What else to do other than to make an apple pie? Except for the calories. And carbs. So I experimented. And a very successful experiment it was too. It comes out sort of like an apple bread pudding.
4-6 apples depending on size sliced into half wedges
4 eggs, beaten
1 stick butter, melted
1/4 cup water
pinch of salt
1/4 cup flour
cinnamon
sugar (or Splenda)So I mostly eyeball it. Put the cut apples (I left the skin on since it has lots of nutrients) in a large bowl. In another bowl, combine everything else and mix well. As far as the sugar and cinnamon go, adjust to your taste. I sprinkled, mix, sprinkle, mix, till it seems right.
Pour the liquid over the apples and mix it all up till the apples are coated. Pour it all into a greased pie plate. Bake at 350 for 50-60 min.
It’s a crust-less apple quiche pudding something or other.
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@TNP Looks pretty similar to Norwegian/Swedish apple pie (or eplepai), with more eggs.
Another lower-carb use is apple curd, e.g.:
2.2 lbs apples
2 T lemon juice
2 T water
3/4 c brown sugar (or as preferred)
2 eggs, beaten
3/4 stick butter, cubed
1 t cinnamonSimmer apples, lemon juice, and water until soft enough to mash/blend. Then mash/blend.
Whisk together sugar & eggs; whisk mixture into the apples; follow with the butter & cinnamon. Cook on medium-low until thickened, stirring frequently.
Chill before serving. Store in fridge. Can be frozen.