Pizza
Deep fried.
also, i made mathmagic's shake, and it was scrumptious.
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Pizza
Deep fried.
aldimond wrote:Al's favoritest dessert wrote:Ingredient:
Brown sugar, one bag
Instruction:
Eat the brown sugar with a spoon. If you don't have a spoon just use your hands.
German Sausage wrote:Pizza
Deep fried.
also, i made mathmagic's shake, and it was scrumptious.
mathmagic wrote:mathmagic's Scrumptious Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Shake wrote:1 Package of chocolate Carnation instant breakfast/meal replacement powder
1-2 tablespoons of peanut butter
1 banana
1/4 cup of quick oats
1 cup of milk (or until desired viscosity is reached)
1/2 cup of crushed ice
1 "lid" of vanilla (real vanilla FTW!)
Throw everything into blender.
Blend.
Pour into glass.
Enjoy.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
warriorness wrote:mathmagic wrote:mathmagic's Scrumptious Breakfast/Lunch/Dinner Shake wrote:1 Package of chocolate Carnation instant breakfast/meal replacement powder
1-2 tablespoons of peanut butter
1 banana
1/4 cup of quick oats
1 cup of milk (or until desired viscosity is reached)
1/2 cup of crushed ice
1 "lid" of vanilla (real vanilla FTW!)
Throw everything into blender.
Blend.
Pour into glass.
Enjoy.
Couple of questions: Firstly, this seems like an awful lot for a single shake. How many does this serve?
Also, one could substitute sweetened cocoa powder for the Carnation stuff, yes? Approximately how much is one of these Carnation packages?
Warriomez's Super Bagel wrote:Ingredients:
1 bagel (I used a cheese one)
1 egg
1 slice ham
1 slice turkey
Some cheese (anything really... cheddar, havarti, gouda, you might even be able to pull off brie)
Tabasco
Mustard
You need a toaster oven for this one (a conventional oven may suffice).
Directions:
1) Cut the bagel in half, and toast it halfway.
2) Scramble the egg. While the egg is cooking, add some tabasco sauce to it.
3) Put the cheese on one half of the bagel, and the mustard, ham, and turkey on the other.
4) As soon as the egg is done, lay it, still hot, on the cheese, which should partially melt.
5) Finish toasting the two halves of the bagel with the stuff now on them.
6) Put the two halves together and eat.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
LilyoftheShadow's Tomato Snack wrote:Ingredients:
1 wheat hotdog bun (any other type tastes strange with this)
3 tbsp petite diced tomatoes (out of a can--drained as best as you can manage)
3 tbsp finely shredded cheese (I used a "fiesta" or four cheese blend)
The Pampered Chef All Purpose Dill Mix (or similar. it has "dill, onion, garlic, herbs and spices")
Pro-de-cure:
Open hotdog bun so that it lays flat. Toast in toaster/oven. I use a toaster and very lightly toast one end (because they are usually too tall) and then very lightly on the toher end--it generally gets a good even toast.
Immediately after you take it from the toaster, put the cheese on evenly and put it in the microwave for 9 seconds (time may vary, nuke just until the chese is all droopy. Don't worry about it getting bubbly)
Take it out and spread tomatoes on top.
Sprinkle with dill as desired. Fold and eat.
Delicious chocolate balls (in metrics, screw you!)
1 dl sugar
100 grams of Margarin (or butter, but not preferable)
1 Table spoon of vanilla suger
3 Table spoons of cold, strong coffee(STRONG okey? if you are american your coffee is too weak, much too weak. The same for brittons. Italans, you might have it right)
3dl of Rolled Oatmeals
3 table spoons of Cocoa
Alternatively, add some chili for awesomeness
for coating, either Coconut flakes, or chrystalized sugar (or chili, i dun tried that though)
Mix the sugar, vanilla sugar and Margarine thoroughly, get it a bit fluffy, then add the coffee, the cocoa and the oatmeals. Mix properly, taste a bit for proper consistany
Pour out whatever coating you choose, roll the dough/batter/thingy into small balls (if unrollable then add some suitable ingedients mkey?) and roll em around in the coating
Then put it in the fridge untull cool
Liza wrote:Fjafjan, your hair is so lovely that I want to go to Sweden, collect the bit you cut off in your latest haircut and keep it in my room, and smell it. And eventually use it to complete my shrine dedicated to you.
Liza wrote:Fjafjan, your hair is so lovely that I want to go to Sweden, collect the bit you cut off in your latest haircut and keep it in my room, and smell it. And eventually use it to complete my shrine dedicated to you.
fjafjan wrote:dl = Deci litre = one tenth of a litre = 0.1l = 10cl = 1000ml
Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
bbctol wrote:warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
Quoted for absolute truth. I eat tzatziki raw, if anyone knows what that is.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
Ingredients
1) 532.35 cm3 gluten
2) 4.9 cm3 NaHCO3
3) 4.9 cm3 refined halite
4) 236.6 cm3 partially hydrogenated tallow triglyceride
5) 177.45 cm3 crystalline C12H22O11
6) 177.45 cm3 unrefined C12H22O11
7) 4.9 cm3 methyl ether of protocatechuic aldehyde
8) Two calcium carbonate-encapsulated avian albumen-coated protein
9) 473.2 cm3 theobroma cacao
10) 236.6 cm3 de-encapsulated legume meats (sieve size #10)
To a 2-L jacketed round reactor vessel (reactor #1) with an overall heat
transfer coefficient of about 100 Btu/øF/ft2/hr, add ingredients one, two and
three with constant agitation.
In a second 2-L reactor vessel (reactor #2) with a radial flow impeller
operating at 100 rpm, add ingredients four, five six and seven until the
mixture is homogenous.
To reactor #2, add ingredient eight, followed by three equal volumes of the
homogenous mixture in reactor #1. Additionally, add ingredient nine and ten
slowly, with constant agitation.
Care must be taken at this point in the reaction to control any temperature
rise that may be the result of an exothermic reaction.
Using a screw extrude attached to a #4 nodulizer, place the mixture
piece-meal on a 316SS sheet (300 x 600 mm).
Heat in a 460øK oven for a period of time that is in agreement with Frank &
Johnston's first order rate expression (see JACOS, 21, 55), or until golden
brown.
Once the reaction is complete, place the sheet on a 25øC heat-transfer table,
allowing the product to come to equilibrium.LE4dGOLEM wrote:fjafjan wrote:dl = Deci litre = one tenth of a litre = 0.1l = 10cl = 1000ml
noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
one tenth of a litre = 1000ml ?
Liza wrote:Fjafjan, your hair is so lovely that I want to go to Sweden, collect the bit you cut off in your latest haircut and keep it in my room, and smell it. And eventually use it to complete my shrine dedicated to you.
Seared Spicy Ahi Salad
Ahi Poke (Spicy Seasoned Tuna, like Sashimi)
Mixed Greens/ Vegetables of Choice
Handful Maebo "One Ton" Chips or Equivalent
Oriental Salad Dressing of Choice
Canola/Soybean Oil or Non-stick Cooking Spray
Prepare salad:
Wash/Cut Vegetables, or take ready made from bag if lazy.
Place small amount of oil/non-stick spray in pan, heat to high. Sear ahi poke on lightly. If want extra texture, try coating in panko (Japanese breadcrumbs) before cooking.
Toss ingredients together.
Ahi Poke (A-he Po-k???)
Local Style Ahi Poke
INGREDIENTS
* 8 ounces tuna sashimi block, small dice (yellowfin tuna)
* 1/8 teaspoon Hawaiian salt (sea salt)
* 1/8 teaspoon kukui nut
* 1/2 teaspoon brown sugar
* Pinch chili flakes
* 1 teaspoon soy sauce
* 1 teaspoon oyster sauce
* 1 teaspoon green onion, chopped
* 1 tablespoon onion, chopped
* 1 teaspoon garlic, chopped
* 1 tablespoon Furukake spice
* 1 tablespoon sesame oil
PREPARATION
Combine all ingredients in a stainless steel bowl and gently mix.
Make this on the day of use.
(Recipe from http://gohawaii.about.com/od/luaurecipes/r/ahi_poke.htm )
fjafjan wrote:Imperial units suck though
Drostie wrote:Actually, I think metric is a bit more naive, when you think about it. Where did base-10 come from? Our counting system. Where did our counting system come from? The number of fingers we have on our hands. Gee, how much a Neandertal is man, then?
Warriorness's Homemade (Hot) Fudge wrote:Ingredients:
12 oz semisweet chocolate chips (typically 1 bag)
14 oz sweetened condensed milk (equal proportions should be okay... 14 oz is just how big condensed milk cans are at my supermarket)
Approx. 1/3 cup regular milk (Hot fudge only) (modify to attain desired consistency)
Directions:
1) Combine all ingredients in mixing bowl. Microwave (or otherwise heat) in short bursts stirring in between, until the chocolate melts. Be careful - chocolate retains its shape even while melted. If you keep heating it, expecting to see completely fluid chocolate, you'll be disappointed when you end up with a bowl of burnt crap.
2) Mix well.
3) Pour into a fudge tray (jars if you made hot fudge) and chill in the refrigerator.
4) Eat.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
Nomic wrote:Ok, but why is 1 yard 3.333333333.... feet?
Taejo wrote:Nomic wrote:Ok, but why is 1 yard 3.333333333.... feet?
There ain't. 3 ft = 1 yd.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
drostie wrote:Ounces aren't base-12. They're base frickin' 8.
mrputter's saffron risotto wrote:\recipe{Saffron Risotto}
\subsection*{Ingredients}
\begin{itemize}
\item 8C vegetable stock
\item 8 Tbsp butter
\item 1 medium onion, finely chopped
\item 2C long grain white rice
\item $\frac{1}{2}$C dry white wine
\item $\frac{1}{8}$ tsp ground saffron
\item $\frac{1}{2}$C parmesan cheese
\end{itemize}
\subsection*{Procedure}
\begin{enumerate}
\step Bring stock to a simmer in a 3qt. saucepan.
\step Melt 4 Tbsp butter in large (e.g.: 8qt.) casserole. Cook onions in butter, stirring frequently, for 7 - 8 minutes.
\step Add rice and cook, stirring, until grains almost opaque.
\step Pour in wine and boil until almost absorbed.
\step Add 2C stock to rice and cook until almost absorbed.
\step Add 2C stock and cook, stirring occasionally.
\step Add saffron to 2C stock and let steep for 2 minutes. Pour over rice and stir until absorbed.
\step Add remaining stock $\frac{1}{2}$C at a time until done.
\step Remove from heat and stir in remaining butter and parmesan cheese with a fork.
\end{enumerate}
warriorness wrote:One of the best steaks I've ever eaten was at a restaurant in California called The Stinking Rose. Their goal is to incorporate garlic into every dish - they even make garlic ice cream.
Warriorness's Bleu Cheese Filet wrote:Ingredients:
1 Filet Mignon (NY Strip works well if you're not a billionaire)
Some bleu cheese
Pepper
Fresh garlic (1 or 2 cloves)
Some other steak seasonings if you so desire, and/or Worcestershire sauce
Directions:
1) Chop/mince the garlic, and slice the bleu cheese as you would for a sandwich or a burger.
2) Take the raw steak, and rub the garlic into it (a popular technique is to cut small slits in the steak and insert the garlic inside). Add some other spices if you like, but don't go overboard. The bleu cheese is the important flavor here.
3) Put it on a grill or skillet on medium-high heat and season with pepper (and steak sauce - again, very lightly).
4) At about 7 minutes (depending on the thickness of the steak and how you want it cooked) turn the steak over. Immediately lay some sliced bleu cheese over the top (think cheeseburger) and cover the steak so the cheese melts faster.
5) When it's done, eat it.
Warriorness's Guide for Cooking Steak wrote:Poke the steak with your finger. If it feels like...
...your cheek, then it's rare.
...your chin, then it's medium.
...your nose, then it's well done.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
Nomic wrote:Hm...I wonder what would happen I would make pizza with macaroni topping (cooked macaroni obviously, and onyl put on the pizza after it's been in the oven). I'd quess something very AWESOMETROID. Must go and try!
EvanED wrote:Nomic wrote:Hm...I wonder what would happen I would make pizza with macaroni topping (cooked macaroni obviously, and onyl put on the pizza after it's been in the oven). I'd quess something very AWESOMETROID. Must go and try!
There is a pizza joint in Madison called Ian's that sells macaroni and cheese pizza.
Now, I love mac&cheese (especially baked), and I love pizza, but putting them together just seemed, well, wrong. But it was actually really amazingly good.
Anmorata wrote:Warriorness, that filet recipe sounds incredible. Thanks for sharing it (and all the others)!
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
warriorness wrote:EvanED wrote:Nomic wrote:Hm...I wonder what would happen I would make pizza with macaroni topping (cooked macaroni obviously, and onyl put on the pizza after it's been in the oven). I'd quess something very AWESOMETROID. Must go and try!
There is a pizza joint in Madison called Ian's that sells macaroni and cheese pizza.
Now, I love mac&cheese (especially baked), and I love pizza, but putting them together just seemed, well, wrong. But it was actually really amazingly good.
Hmmm...
Next time I have a bit of free time on my hands (and also some mac and cheese and frozen pizza) I'll see if I can't whip up something worth posting.
Roffle's "Good eatin' times":
Put 4 tablespoons of whey protein powder in a shaker.
Add one teaspoon of creatine.
Add 5 Dcl of water (tap).
Shake (not stir).
Grab an apple from the fridge.
Enjoy a full and hearty meal. Join us next time for the secret of carrot sticks; How do they do it? Remember, don't count your calories, count your proteins!
warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
SexyTalon wrote:A pile of shit can call itself a delicious pie, but that doesn't make it true.
william wrote:warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
Lies.
Iluvatar wrote:Love: Gimme the frickin' API.
yy2bggggs, on Fischer Random chess wrote:Hmmm.... I wonder how how a hypermodern approach would work
warriorness wrote:william wrote:warriorness wrote:Warriorness's Cooking FAQ wrote:Q: Do I have enough garlic in my dish?
A: No.
Lies.
Get out of my topic, heretic.
SexyTalon wrote:A pile of shit can call itself a delicious pie, but that doesn't make it true.
6 Twinkies
Popsicle sticks
4 cups vegetable oil
Flour for dusting
For batter:
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons vinegar
1 tablespoon oil
1 cup flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
Chill or freeze Twinkies for several hours or overnight.
Heat 4 cups vegetable oil in deep fryer to about 375 degrees.
To make batter: Mix together milk, vinegar and oil. In another bowl, blend flour, baking powder and salt. Whisk wet ingredients into dry and continue mixing until smooth. Refrigerate while oil heats.
Push stick into Twinkie lengthwise, leaving about 2 inches to use as a handle, dust with flour and dip into the batter. Rotate Twinkie until batter covers entire cake. Place carefully in hot oil. The Twinkie will float, so hold it under with a utensil to ensure even browing. It should turn golden in 3 to 4 minutes. Depending on the size of your deep fryer, you might be able to fry only one at a time, two at the most.
Remove Twinkie to paper towel and let drain. Remove stick and allow Twinkie to sit for about 5 minutes before serving.
Owijad wrote:So, deep fried twinkies. They are really delicious, but it's hard to get over how much they'll kill me.
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