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Aus Social favourite recipe thread

samadhi said:
Tiramisu:

.....

I'm having a little dinner party tomorrow night and am making this for dessert.

mmm :D
*Checks date* ... Woohoo!
In your face people who dont get tiramisu!

Ive posted a few recipes in here, but cant remember which ones (crap searching options are too much pain)

My most recent favorite is a cross breed between my (in)famous johnny cash chili con-carne and my old skool bolognaise.

In essence a bolognaise (mince, onion, capsicum, mushroom, garlic, basil, misc herbs, salt, pepper, some chili, tomatoes, tomato paste + water, red wine) but also throw in a handful of milk cooking chocolate and a strong dose of pepper + chili
You normally use sugar to offset the bitterness of tomatoes .. just use chocolate instead and ramp up the hotness (you love the hotness!)

Gets me sweetly hot n sweaty just thinking about it
 
m4dd0g said:
*Checks date* ... Woohoo!
In your face people who dont get tiramisu!

Ive posted a few recipes in here, but cant remember which ones (crap searching options are too much pain)

My most recent favorite is a cross breed between my (in)famous johnny cash chili con-carne and my old skool bolognaise.

In essence a bolognaise (mince, onion, capsicum, mushroom, garlic, basil, misc herbs, salt, pepper, some chili, tomatoes, tomato paste + water, red wine) but also throw in a handful of milk cooking chocolate and a strong dose of pepper + chili
You normally use sugar to offset the bitterness of tomatoes .. just use chocolate instead and ramp up the hotness (you love the hotness!)

Gets me sweetly hot n sweaty just thinking about it

That's right... they're ready and made, and will have settled nicely by tomorrow night. I made single serve tiramisu, because my friend has my large square dish. I've used cute little creme brulee dishes though.

RE M4ddog's bolognaise: People, i can attest to its absolute tastiness...i had the pleasure of sampling it a couple of weeks ago and it is truly awesome. :D
 
joannie_mhm said:
ew ick vomit.

i despise apricot chicken

did someone feed you a bad apricot chicken as a young squat? i'd fathom a guess that's the reason for your dislike, same goes for those who hate fish.
 
^ pfft no it's probably because it's disgusting!!!!

apricot chicken is the food of satan!!!!!! :p

(fish is good though! :))
 
Mean Girl said:
did someone feed you a bad apricot chicken as a young squat? i'd fathom a guess that's the reason for your dislike, same goes for those who hate fish.

My mother made it regularly, and the rest of the family liked it, so I suppose it can't have been too bad, I just hated it and would (very imaginatively) call it "Spewpricot Chicken"

And also I don't particularly like fish, despite being fed fresh reef fish my father/brothers had caught out fishing, so that one's a bust too :p :D
 
I dislike most foods I was force-fed as a child.
Not bad food, just excesses of food I didn't want to eat.
 
There's not really that much of a recipe to it, but the boy and I had a bloody nice dinner last night.

Chicken breast chopped into chunks, stir fried with onion and garlic, then udon noodles added in and a honey and soy sauce combination mixed through, with steamed bok choy and broccoli.

So yummy, so easy, took 20 minutes all up from preparation to plating up.
 
Been a while, but did my chocolate bolognaise again, cept i went nuts on extra chili and pepper, then doubled the quantity of chocolate ....

mmm, gods! i should be posting this in trip reports!
 
hehe, i'm getting images of M4ddog, after eating his Johnny Cash inspired sauce:

homerinsanitypepper.jpg


then running into the desert and playing with the sun:

"Sunrise...sunset. Sunrise...sunset. Sunrise...sunset..."

;)=D
 
Here's a nice one from the Russia.


RussianFederation.jpg



Having never tried borsh, I cant really give any reviews, but the name made me laugh.

Simple Borsch (As opposed to the more complicated cousin - Uncle Borsh)

400g beef
2 average red beets
200g cabbage
4 little potatoes
1 carrot
2 tomatoes
1 tsp. vinegar
salt and pepper, to taste
parsley
dill
spring onions



Borsch is of soup, but it is 'Borsch', no one calls it soup in Russia. History says that Borsch was and is one of the most popular dishes in Russia. It appeared at the end of the 18th and 19th centuries. The main ingredients are red beets and broths made from meat or fish, mushrooms, or smoked sausages. Plus, people used to and do use cabbage, onions, carrots, potatoes, tomatoes, spinach, and sorrel. The sour taste it can have is because of the vinegar. Our ancestry ate borsch with pancakes, different porridges, and pies. Poor people made borsch without any meat, only with vegetables.

Preparing meat broth-
Put beef into a large saucepan and cover with 3 liters cold water. Bring to a boil and reduce heat. Remove the grease froth from the broth surface with a spoon. Add one onion. Cook at low heat for 1-2 hours.

Simmering Red Beets-
Melt 1 Tbls. margarine in a saucepan. Cut red beets into thin sticks and add them into the cooking pot. Add tomato paste or sliced tomatoes. Simmer at low heat for 1 hour. If there is not enough liquid, add some broth. Add vinegar.

Pan-frying Vegetables-
Melt 1 Tbls. margarine in a frying pan. Add chopped onions and carrots that are cut into thin sticks. Cover and saute for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Heat broth to boiling. Add chopped cabbage and potatoes that are cut into bars. Cook for 5 minutes. Add saute and cook another 10 minutes. Add simmered red beets. Cook another 5 minutes. Add salt and black pepper. If you like garlic, you can add about 5g grated garlic. It is supposed to be in borsch. I don't like it and never add it here. Borsch is served with sour cream.
 
Last edited:
Recipe for Quiche

Ingredients
Pie dough for one 9-inch crust
1-1/2 cups grated cheeses (use cheddar, Gruyere, Swiss, or mozzarella in any proportion)
1/2 cup ricotta, feta, cottage, or goat cheese
5 eggs
1 cup light cream (half & half)
1 teaspoon dried dill (or 1 Tablespoon fresh)
1 teaspoon dried parsley (or 1 Tablespoon fresh)
1 teaspoon dried minced onion
1 teaspoon dried herb of your choice

Heat oven to 400 degrees.
Line quiche pan or pie pan with pie dough.
Place grated cheeses in pie shell.
In blender, measure cream; add eggs, soft cheese, and herbs.
Mix on high speed for 2 minutes.
Pour over grated cheese.
Bake for 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.
Cool for 5 minutes before serving.

Then throw the entire thing in the bin and cook a fucking steak you faggot.
 
<3

endlesseulogy - mmm, any recpe including meat broth is a recipe for me... /hurls quietly in a corner.

And preacha, where the hell is the garlic in your quiche? For shame. :|
 
samadhi said:
hehe, i'm getting images of M4ddog, after eating his Johnny Cash inspired sauce:

homerinsanitypepper.jpg


then running into the desert and playing with the sun:

"Sunrise...sunset. Sunrise...sunset. Sunrise...sunset..."

;)=D


Ahhhh... The numerous drug connotations in the Simpsons. Gotta love it!
 
Beef Lasagne with Semi-dried tomatoes & Ricotta

What you put in it!

500g beef mince
2 cans of diced tomatoes - I use the ones with added flavours - basil and oregano is good
1 medium sized onion
1 glove garlic
2-3 medium sized mushrooms
100g semi-dried tomatoes
2 handfuls of sliced capsicum
200g ricotta cheese
Sliced or grated mozzarella
Parmesan
Herbs/pepper/salt/tabasco sauce to taste
1 packet of lasagne sheets (I use oven ready ones that don't have to be boiled)


How to make it!

Sauce:
1. Finely slice the onion and garlic - brown in an oiled frypan.
2. Gradually add meat and brown this too.
3. Add tinned tomato and other vegies.
4. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 45 min, stirring every few minutes, add preferred herbs as you go.

Then what?
5. Place a layer of lasagne sheets in suitable dish and cover with a layer of ricotta.
6. Cover this with a layer of sauce.
7. Cover this with the mozzarella cheese.
8. Make another 2 layers like this, but don't put last layer of mozzarella on yet.
9. Sprinkle parmesan on top.
10. Bake for 30 minutes at 180.
11. Add last layer of mozzarella and bake for another 5-10 minutes

EAT!
 
^ there was a woman at work today who asked if we put ham in our lasagne. after the filthy look i gave her and the emphatic no, it did spawn the question - who the fuck uses ham as cheap lasagne filler?
 
I'm sure that I have come across ham in a few places and I must say, whilst I will defend the right of ham to appear in conjuction with pineapple on pizza, it has no place in lasagne!
 
^ Ham in lasagne has spread like some kinda ham-lasagne plague through Adelaide. I couldn't find anywhere where it wasnt used :p
 
You mashed potato purists are just unadventurous! One of my favourite ways to do mash is to fry a little garlic in butter, add cracked blac pepper, salt, "herb salt" and paprika. Add cooked potatos, stir and mash, add creamy evaporated milk (mmmmm) and a sprinke of good parmesan cheese. Mmm, cheesy garlic mash. *dribbles*

I'm a nay on apricot chicken though. It was what my mum would make when she couldn't be bothered with really cooking. Blech. (Chicken, mango and cambembert filo parcels on the other hand, deeelish!)
 
I'm hugely adventurous with food actually :) i just don't like cheese/ham/other stuff in my mashed potatoes. Everything in your mash sounds great, except the parmesan cheese and herb salt... then again, i'm not a huge fan of melted cheese on other veges either.
 
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