What is your favorite dish ?

Old Sep 7th, 2017 | 03:36 PM
  #41  
 
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St. Cirq, would you please share your waterzooi recipe?
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Old Sep 7th, 2017 | 05:37 PM
  #42  
 
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My mother learned her jambalaya recipe from a cookbook. She was born in Old Windsor, Berks.

Her mother was a cook at Eton College, but left when she married my grandfather. Later, after the war (II) she got a job as a cook in a well-known pub in Windsor. She said she wasn't going to ask my grandfather for money for shoes or a new dress. She wanted her own money.

My grandfather was educated (Cambridge) and posh, so he let her do what she wanted.

Thin
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Old Sep 8th, 2017 | 04:19 AM
  #43  
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Thin you really need to write a book.....
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Old Sep 8th, 2017 | 06:21 AM
  #44  
 
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1) My favorite dish I make myself is a good cheeseburger. My "best" dish is harder to know.

2) My mother makes a mean gumbo.

3) The dish I order more than any other is a cheeseburger. The best dish I've ever had is probably razor clam and parsley at noma.

<I>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).</I>

Not exactly true. For starters, gumbo need not have okra, it depends upon the region and the cook. Indeed, there is debate whether the word is African in origin at all. The alternate theory is it comes from a Native American word (kombo) for sassafras leaves, which is called filé. The presence of meat vs seafood (and what kinds) is, as with okra, dependent upon the region and the cook (and what is available) - chicken and shrimp would be a somewhat uncommon pairing. Sausage or Tasso would be the more common meats to mix with a seafood or poultry-based gumbo.

Gumbo and jambalaya are quite different dishes. Gumbo is a stew/soup served over rice or (more rarely) potato salad. There are some historical versions (and probably a contemporary household or two) served over grits. Jambalaya is a rice dish where everything is cooked together, like paella or risotto.
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Old Sep 8th, 2017 | 06:56 AM
  #45  
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Here you go, Julie. Hard to go wrong with Julia Child, though she makes it sound simple, and that hasn't been my experience. I do love waterzooi, though, a very comforting food:

http://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/17/di...0517child.html
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Old Sep 8th, 2017 | 08:39 AM
  #46  
 
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Gumbo *over* potato salad???
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Old Sep 8th, 2017 | 08:59 AM
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<i>Gumbo *over* potato salad?</i>

Yep. It isn't terribly common, but it is most definitely a thing.

Adding boiled eggs to gumbo is also not unheard of, likely a way to add protein if you are poor - much of Cajun cuisine derives from trying to feed many people with cheap ingredients.
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Old Sep 9th, 2017 | 05:25 AM
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1. My mother made a wonderful Shepherd's Pie made with leftover roast lamb and it's gravy.
2. Tow of my top dinners that I prepare are Linguine with Clam Sauce and Blanquette de Veau.
3.If I see this on a menu, I order it. Dreaming of Greece and Spain as I enjoy Grilled Octopus.
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Old Sep 9th, 2017 | 05:55 AM
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Eks

Thin has gotten mad at me in the past, by suggesting that he hone his writitng skills.
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Old Sep 9th, 2017 | 06:10 AM
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1. Stoofvlees (Flemish stew) with home-made french fries, of course
2. Coq au vin (my mother in law's - my own mother was a terrible cook)
3. fish, any fish except eel.
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Old Sep 9th, 2017 | 07:09 AM
  #51  
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Stoofvlees ou carbonnades flamandes en français.
Absolutely fantastic when well done. Had a good one recently in Flanders but best ever was at NCO mess of 17RA.
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 12:42 AM
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@Whathello
Adding a bottle of Leffe brun (or Sint Bernardus abt 12, even better) and some sirop de Liège makes for excellent stoofvlees!
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 02:52 AM
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St. Cirq, Thanks for the waterzooi recipe. Unfortunately hunkered down with our kids in Orlando right now trying to escape Irma, so won't be able to try it right away but can't wait to make it.
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 02:53 AM
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Stuffed Shrimp (stuffed with lobster, ritz crackers, melted butter, sour cream and parmesan)
Mom's Swedish meatballs
Pasta and shellfish
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 03:07 AM
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Oooooh, Julie, take care! The waterzooi can wait!
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 06:07 AM
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<much of Cajun cuisine derives from trying to feed many people with cheap ingredients>

Much of many cuisines derive from that goal.
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 06:10 AM
  #57  
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Gwendolyn we ought to get together sometime over Vietnamese. The new-ish New Yorker mentioned 2 places in the East Village....not so out of the way for us both by bus.....
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 06:55 AM
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MyriamC, is sirop de Liège the equivalent of the molasses or the gingerbread?

I really want to make this recipe as soon as it gets cold!
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 12:05 PM
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@StCirq
Sirop de Liège is made from apples, pears and dates.
http://www.sirop-de-liege.com/FR/sirop.php
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Old Sep 10th, 2017 | 12:39 PM
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Thank you, MyriamC!
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