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-   -   What is your favorite dish ? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/what-is-your-favorite-dish-1470349/)

Whathello Sep 4th, 2017 09:11 PM

What is your favorite dish ?
 
Saw a thread about where to spend 10 days for best food.

So my question would be threefold :

1. Your best dish that YOU make yourself.
2. Best dish that your wife /husband/mother dies or did.
3. Best dish you have at a restaurant (the one you order the most).

Whathello Sep 4th, 2017 09:15 PM

A tout seigneur tout honneur I'll answer my own question.

1. Magret de canard aux pommes flambe au calvados (or cognac)
With a gratin dauphinois.

2. My wife makes the best Ossobucco in town - better than my mother's (sorry Mum - your Waterzooi is still the greatest).

3. À côte de bœuf is probably the one I order the most ( in Europe)
Bleu (rare) of course.

Your turn ?

cafegoddess Sep 4th, 2017 09:22 PM

1. Steak, braised veal cheek in port wine reduction and omelets
2. My mom's stuffed milkfish
3. Seafood pasta or some kid of fish dish
Mashed potatoes

Whathello Sep 4th, 2017 09:26 PM

Stuffed milkfish looks great. Never came across it or not even heard about it til today.
On my to eat list.

peter242403 Sep 4th, 2017 09:51 PM

1. Four Cheese Pasta
2. My mom's cheese cakes
3. Pad Thai from spice (http://www.spicethainyc.com/#!menu)

bilboburgler Sep 4th, 2017 10:03 PM

Chilli con carne with garlic bread (with or without beef/vegetarian sub)


Steak and Kidney suet pudding (really)


Mussels and Chips with a light pale beer, but I have to admit the beef/horse fat of Belgium puts me off a bit but I can force it down, I prefer the mussels of Barfleur and St Vaast.

Sassafrass Sep 4th, 2017 11:07 PM

Curried Tilapia with panko breading, quiche

Chicken and dumplings, cornbread stuffing, southern style biscuits

Creme brûlée, calamari, anything spicy and stew-like (tajines, jambalaya, etc), crab cakes.

fourfortravel Sep 5th, 2017 01:18 AM

1. Chicken Piccata, Pierogi
2. Pierogi (Mother); Rotisserie Chicken on the grill (DH)
3. Carpaccio di Polpo, Steak Tartare

Traviata Sep 5th, 2017 04:20 AM

1. Anything pasta

2. Anything pasta

3. Anything pasta

StCirq Sep 5th, 2017 04:24 AM

1.Funny you should mention it. Waterzooi is one of my favorite things to make. That and a seafood bourride that has 100 ingredients and takes 3 days to make.

2. My mother was a horrible cook. My husband makes an exceptional tomkatsu.

3. Confit de canard with pommes de terre sarladaises. Or cassoulet.

tuscanlifeedit Sep 5th, 2017 10:45 AM

1. Pie is probably my very best dish. Pumpkin and/or pecan.

2. My mother, in her day, could make anything and make it fabulous.

3. tom kha gai; if it's on a menu, I order it.

nini Sep 5th, 2017 11:09 AM

1. Chicken Kiev

2. Seafood Gumbo

3. Langoustine Ravioli

IMDonehere Sep 5th, 2017 11:25 AM

1. Either a noodle or potato pudding (they are called kugel)

2. Nothing. I used to tease my mother that I looked forward to airline flight for good food. My maternal grandmother made sensational latkes. (fried potato pancakes.)

3. I love tapas and dim sum, a little of everything.

Gwendolynn Sep 5th, 2017 12:27 PM

1 and 2.... husband and I used to make wonderful Indian food from Madhur Jaffrey's
(sp?) cookbook.

Some of my best meals have been at Corte Sconta in Venice (fish.) Also, loved frito misto almost anywhere in Italy.. Right now in NYC am into Vietnamese. But I'd share duck and cassoulet with St. Cirq any day!

massimop Sep 5th, 2017 01:26 PM

1. i live in a village and don't know what I can cook until I go to the store or market & see what's available. Then I cook what's available the way it needs to be cooked to be its best.

2. N/A

3. I only eat in restaurants when I travel, and then I eat local cuisine. I ask the staff wherever I am eating what's the best dish they are serving that day & then I eat that.

sundriedtopepo Sep 5th, 2017 01:51 PM

1. I like to cook therefore try to make everything my best. It's my gift to my family and now my husband and our visitors. Not Michelin star though ;)

2. My mom was also a great cook but was famous for pies, any kind you could imagine. And classic turkey dinner.

3. Neapolitan pizza for a quick meal out, but once a year our fave restaurant does a truffle tasting menu dinner with paired wine. Heaven!!

Pepper_von_snoot Sep 5th, 2017 03:30 PM

1. Lean Cuisine. 6 minutes in Microwave.

2. Meatball Stew. Like beef stew but with meatballs. It was really tasty. My mother made a horrid jambalaya, which made all of her children cry at the dinner table.

3. Roast beef with Yorkshire pudding and horseradish@ the Connaught Hotel in London.

Thin

sugarmaple Sep 5th, 2017 05:33 PM

1. Pies, blueberry, peach, sour cherry, rhubarb strawberry. And a meringue, whipped cream and Skor torte that's sinful.

2. DH makes the worlds best burgers, all beef or beef/pork combo, and he does a wonderful steamed lobster that I can't get enough of.

3. Pasta or salmon.

NewbE Sep 5th, 2017 06:15 PM

Thin (and no wonder you are), your list made my day.

1. Crabcakes

2. My grandmother's pelmeni

3. Fish and chips

Scootoir Sep 5th, 2017 08:21 PM

1. Simple but beautifully roasted chicken. DH loves it.

2. Mom's Lasagna

3. Salmon

cafegoddess Sep 5th, 2017 08:24 PM

How can I forget frito misto, calamari and shrimp with marinara sauce, heaven!

nukesafe Sep 5th, 2017 10:26 PM

1. I do a wonderful popcorn.
2. My Grandmother made a marvelous Hasenpfeffer.
3. Salade de gésiers or Cassoulet

marvelousmouse Sep 5th, 2017 11:16 PM

1. Anything involving a skillet turns out great. It's when I involve the oven that things go sideways.

2. Mom makes really good homemade pies and old fashioned turkey stuffing. I can't get crust or stuffing right. Ovens are evil. Dad can't operate the microwave and we've no proof that he knows how to open the fridge and make a sandwich, yet his BBQ chicken always turns out perfect.

3. Hm. I don't know if I order anything consistently. Maybe fresh seafood. But otherwise I like the above response: "anything pasta":)

Aramis Sep 6th, 2017 03:29 AM

1 Barbecue pork ribs.

2 Banana muffins

3 Bratwurst in Thuringen

I'm a very simple eater

JulieVikmanis Sep 7th, 2017 08:39 AM

My best dish--short ribs

Husband's best dish--meatloaf

Mother's best dish--milk chicken

best restaurant dish--oysters or ceviche

ekscrunchy Sep 7th, 2017 09:02 AM

Gwendolyn: Vietnamese where? The ones I've tried have all seemed kind of mediocre but I know there are some reportedly good ones that have opened in the past year..


Do love duck confit myself but do not make it. But this year have had great luck with magret on the grill outside.

suze Sep 7th, 2017 09:04 AM

1. I don't cook much
2. My Mom cooks nutritious wholesome balanced meals nothing fancy
3. When I'm out I prefer to order something complicated that I couldn't fix for myself (Thai, Mexican, Indian not broiled salmon, for example)

Whathello Sep 7th, 2017 10:16 AM

Lots of dishes I had never heard of - very glad of all ther answers !
I should make a list and test when I travel in these strange countries where they eat these strange things ;-)

Micheline Sep 7th, 2017 10:45 AM

French cdn ragout, it's made with onions, potatoes, porc hocks, porc meatballs and chicken. The flour for the sauce is browned in the oven.

Mom's Apple pie

Pasta

bvlenci Sep 7th, 2017 10:48 AM

1. I make a better ossobuco than Whathello's wife does. (Just kidding, what! We'll have to have a contest.) I also make a damn good vincisgrassi, the marchigiano (better) version of lasagne. Not to mention my coniglio in potacchio.

2. My mother was Irish; she made great boiled potatoes, when she remembered to turn them off before the water boiled away. My husband is an Italian man. He can fry an egg, if absolutely necessary. He can also boil pasta, which he dresses with butter and parmigiano reggiano. It's amazing how many pots he can dirty doing this.

3. In a <b>good</b> restaurant, I often order a crème brûlée, just to see if it's better than mine. Occasionally it is, so I keep trying to improve.

cafegoddess Sep 7th, 2017 10:53 AM

bvlenci, I think you need to share your ossobucu recipe.

Gwendolynn Sep 7th, 2017 11:01 AM

ekscrunchy....probably nothing special , but it's the local neighborhood place.
Vietnaam on 2nd and 88th. My cooking days are basically over and I find Vietnamese more palatable than most other neighborhood offerings. They have a duck confit salad that isn't all that bad. I used to buy duck confit at Eli's Vinegar Factory... good, but, of course, being Eli astronomically priced. I've been tempted to order D'Artagnan's..... maybe if I win the lottery.

sundriedtopepo Sep 7th, 2017 11:24 AM

Whathello I'm curious about what you haven't heard of before, many of the dishes mentioned are European in origin...maybe pies??

Whathello Sep 7th, 2017 11:39 AM

Sundrie... here is my list to test ...
Maybe there are some things lost in translation...
For example Hasepfeffer is easy to translate but I've never had one I think.
But here it is, I have to google it all !

stuffed milkfish
sensational latkes.
Chicken Piccata
tomkatsu.
tom kha gai
Seafood Gumbo
jambalaya
grandmother's pelmeni
Hasenpfeffer.
vincisgrassi,

And my wife had cooked an ossobucco whilst I was in Paris... Hmmm I opened a Montecucco. 2008. $hitty year. .

suze Sep 7th, 2017 12:05 PM

You never heard of seafood gumbo or chicken piccata?

bvlenci Sep 7th, 2017 12:14 PM

Jambalaya is a specialty of New Orleans, which derives from the Spanish paella, brought to Louisiana when the Spanish were the colonizers. (later came the French.) It usually has both chicken and shrimp, and rice is added near the end of the cooking.

It's funny, just the other day I was thinking of making jambalaya. I promised a priest in our town that I would prepare him a traditional "American" meal that was both authentic and delicious. He was under the impression that it was all hamburgers.

Gumbo is similar, but the word "gumbo" means there's okra in it. It's an African name for okra, in fact. I suppose seafood gumbo wouldn't have chicken in it. Usually gumbo, like jambalaya, has both chicken and shrimp (or crayfish).

Latkes are Jewish potato pancakes. My daughter once came home from elementary school and told me she had promised her teacher I would make latkes for the class. I had no idea how to make latkes and asked my daughter why she had volunteered me. She said, "The teacher said Passover is coming soon, and asked for someone whose mother was Jewish." I replied, "But I'm not Jewish!" "What are you, then?" "Irish!". "Isn't that the same as Jewish?" So I called the teacher and said that St. Patrick's day was also coming soon, and I would be happy to make Irish soda bread, but she'd have to find someone else for the latkes.

Vincisgrassi is like lasagne. The pasta is rolled very fine. I learned it from our housekeeper, who told me you had to be able to read a newspaper through the pasta after it was rolled out (before cooking). The pasta is layered with a marchigiano-style ragù and a beschiamella (béchamel) sauce, with each layer sprinkled with grated cheese. The marchigiano ragù is made with a stewing hen, meaty beef bones, tomatoes, and tomato sauce, cooked for a long time with an onion, a carrot and a stalk of celery. When done, the meat is removed from the bones and cut into small pieces, but not ground.

Whathello Sep 7th, 2017 12:17 PM

I loved your story about Irish/Jewish !

Yhanks for the explanations. less to google ;-)

bvlenci Sep 7th, 2017 12:27 PM

I don't really have a recipe for ossobuco. I may have had one long ago. The key is in good quality marrow bones, and in slow cooking. You lightly flour the marrow bones, and slowly cook them in a little olive oil, with some onion. When they're browned, you add white wine and let it cook off. Then you add a good meat broth, cover it, and cook it slowly, adding more broth as necessary. (You should always make your own meat broth; it's a great thing to have in the freezer.) You garnish the dish with grated lemon peel and chopped parsley. In Milan, it's usually served with Milanese risotto. My husband went to university in Milan, and acquired a taste for ossobuco. But I used to make it when I lived in the US, too, before I met my husband. (That's not why he married me!)

sundriedtopepo Sep 7th, 2017 01:28 PM

lol Irish...Jewish they both end in ish. Vincisgrassi sounds delish!

NewbE Sep 7th, 2017 01:37 PM

<grandmother's pelmeni>

Pelmeni are Russian dumplings, made with a thin dough (thinner than ravioli) and filled with a little meatball. They're small, smaller than a ravioli, and sort of round and irregular in shape. They're usually served in chicken broth, with a dollop of sour cream and some black pepper. Because my grandmother lived in China for many years, she liked hers with soy sauce and hot mustard; all the Russians we knew who had lived in China did, too.

Making them was an assembly line affair that took up the whole kitchen--I guess all dumpling making is like that, and just about every culture has a dumpling, doesn't it? So she didn't do it often, and made enough to freeze bags and bags of pelmeni.

I no longer eat meat or chicken, but if my grandmother were to rise from the dead and make me some pelmeni, I would make an exception.


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