kaberett: a watercolour of a pale gold/salmon honeysuckle blossom against a background of green leaves (honeysuckle)
[personal profile] kaberett
1. I got to the end of this Graun article on how to make meringue before I clocked the title. (I am having an Erudite Discussion about Meringue on the book of faces, you see, or at least a discussion about whether or not they ought be chewy and how one goes about achieving effects various. It is a source of some frustration to me that Molecular Gastronomy, a copy of which [personal profile] deborah_c gave me for... a birthday Some Time Ago, mentions meringues only in the context of putting them in a bell jar you then PUMP ALL THE AIR OUT OF, because it is fascinating on a great many topics -- how to make pastry with chocolate! the physics of boiling dumplings until they rise to the surface! -- and mysteriously lacking in tedious detail on this one.)

2. I have decided that macaroni cheese is much improved by steaming a head of cauliflower over the top of the pasta water (chopped into florets & the stalk into chunks) and mixing it in. This is perhaps obvious but it had not previously occurred to me, and I am a Fan.

3. Smitten Kitchen posted a recipe for roasted sweet potatoes and chickpeas, and linked onward to an article about the perplexing USois use of "yam" and "sweet potato". I am enlightened. (I will promptly forget it again, no doubt, and discover it once more In The Future and be delightened again, but I can't quite see this as a downside.)

4. ... and a bonus, edited in post-facto because my mum just put it on facebook: Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's potato peel soup. YOU'RE WELCOME.

(no subject)

Date: 2016-03-02 08:34 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ewt
2. To each their own; I am definitely Not A Fan. My reaction goes roughly "Oh hell, another perfectly good macaroni cheese ruined by adding evil brassicas to it." (Along with hops and coffee, brassicas are in the category of things that are too bitter for me to eat comfortably, though they're the mildest in that category. Rapeseed oil is okay but it's so heavily processed it hardly counts; and I can manage wasabi and other sufficiently spicy horseradishes, and very small amounts of mustard powder, and very occasionally bits of very fresh raw salad radish/rocket/watercress/hedge garlic or cauliflower or broccoli, but not cooked cabbage, "spring greens", "Chinese leaves", kale, broccoli, cauliflower and so on. The way the latter two keep turning up unannounced in otherwise perfectly good macaroni cheese essentially turns it from one of my favourite foods to one of penance, i.e. I'll eat it if it's put in front of me and it would be rude not to, but I will probably spend the rest of the evening tasting nothing but cabbage.) I hope that you enjoy it, though.

Now, peas in macaroni cheese are another matter. Or sauteed mushrooms or leeks, though they aren't anywhere near as convenient.

(no subject)

Date: 2016-03-02 08:41 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ewt
The weird thing is that I like gin, tonic water (as long as it doesn't have aspartame in it), and dark chocolate, all of which are bitter. It clearly isn't that I don't tolerate bitter tastes, so much as that some bitter things taste extraordinarily bitter to me.

(no subject)

Date: 2016-03-02 11:42 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ewt
I've come across it, but tend to avoid using the term when explaining my dietary preferences as I have had responses along the lines of "oh stop being such a snowflake" in the past.

(no subject)

Date: 2016-03-03 08:44 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ewt
Thank you. :-)

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