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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
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.
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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)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)(no subject)
Date: 2016-03-02 11:39 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-03-02 11:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-03-02 11:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-03-03 08:44 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2016-03-02 11:42 pm (UTC)I enjoyed it greatly, but shall remember that you are not a fan, should I end up cooking for you :-)
(Mushrooms hadn't really ever occurred to me at least in part because the parner who is Fondest of macaroni cheese is also the partner who will very quietly and politely leave a small pile of mushroom on the side of his plate if it is anything other than Very Smol and Very Not Dominant Flavour, except now we all know he does that so the small polite pile of mushroom tends to vanish as quickly as it is generated and, er, sometimes more quickly.)