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Author Message
25 new of 253 responses total.
mary
response 103 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 14:55 UTC 2011

Dinner last night was Peruvian Chicken - the recipe from Whole Foods.  I 
served it with Ina's Couscous with Pine Nuts.  Delicious, both.

http://tinyurl.com/4jh6uf5

http://tinyurl.com/mq5mzx

slynne
response 104 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 20:34 UTC 2011

I am such a bad cook that I am not even sure I should mention this here
but for me this was a cooking accomplishment. 

Recently, I tried a drink at Sweetwaters called a 'Vietnamese tea latte'
and I *loved* it. Since it is just hot tea with sweetened condensed
milk, it is pretty easy to make at home. I mean, I can boil water and
open a can with the best of them. But I am trying to avoid sugar so I
went on a crusade looking for unsweetened condensed milk. It doesn't
exist. But I found that that evaporated milk is similar enough to work
with my tea lattes. The upside. I can have my tea with milk even if I
run out of regular milk. I don't know why I like that taste that is
unique to condensed/evaporated milk so much though. But I do :) 
keesan
response 105 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 20:44 UTC 2011

Why not try powdered milk, or make the tea in very little water and add it
to liquid milk and heat that up?
slynne
response 106 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 20:51 UTC 2011

resp:105 I've already tried powdered milk many times in my backpacking
days. It doesn't taste as good. 
mary
response 107 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 21:48 UTC 2011

Sweetened condensed milk is amazing stuff.  If you simmer the can for 4-6 
hours you get something called dulce de leche which is caramel-like and  
wicked good.  

I like to use condensed milk in soups that need a smooth, creamy 
consistency.  I've never tried it in drinks but it sounds delicious.
slynne
response 108 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 21:56 UTC 2011

It is 65% sugar so it probably is delicious in everything ;) I've heard
about dulce de leche and would like to try it sometime but am worried
about making a whole can because I would probably then proceed to eat
the whole can :) 
edina
response 109 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 19 22:45 UTC 2011

I LOVE dulce de leche....I use it as a topping on my tres leches pie, 
and it's integral to my banoffee pie.  
mary
response 110 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 00:25 UTC 2011

Have you ever had a can blow-up while simmering?  Or maybe you make it 
another way.
edina
response 111 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 16:04 UTC 2011

No, but I tend to be overly cautious when making it (ie, not going too 
far, checking water levels every half hour or so).  You can buy it, 
but when I can get condensed sweetened milk on sale and with a coupon, 
I'll just make a bunch of dulce de leche all at once.  
slynne
response 112 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 17:28 UTC 2011

I have to admit I was all thinking that maybe I could try to make some
until I heard the part about it exploding. ;) 
mary
response 113 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 18:25 UTC 2011

Chick-En! ;-)
omni
response 114 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 20:01 UTC 2011

why not take the milk out of the can then simmer it? Or does it have to 
remain in the can? Could you vent the can somehow?
edina
response 115 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 20 20:09 UTC 2011

I think the whole point is to use pressure.

But if that's the case, you can just make caramel....
omni
response 116 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 21 21:55 UTC 2011

It was cold today so I decided to make soup.

The recipe:

Hardware:
1 giant sized pot 20 qts.

Software:
10 or so medium sized potatoes
2 medium onions 
water
a few cubes of boullian chicken flavor (for salt)
1 cup or so of milk.

method

fill pot 3/4 of the way full of water. add potatoes, leaving the skins 
on. The skins have all the nutrients. bring to a boil and cook for about 
an hour. Remove potatoes and cut into pieces. Return the potatoes to the 
water and crush with a masher. Dont overdo it. Add the onion and milk 
and boullian cubes. Cook for about 30 minutes, Salt and pepper to taste 
and enjoy.
The skins can be picked out or eaten. your call. I like potato skins, 
but if you don't pick em out.

It comes out wonderful. Give some to your doggie if you have one. It 
will make him happy. 
keesan
response 117 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 04:16 UTC 2011

Add carrots, celery, parsley, turnips, mushrooms (dried are good), more
onions, more garlic, cauliflower, tomatoes...
omni
response 118 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 04:32 UTC 2011

ok
slynne
response 119 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 14:26 UTC 2011

It sounds delicious.
omni
response 120 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 19:54 UTC 2011

It is. Potato soup is one of my favorites and the nice thing is that it is 
good cold, too.

It's even better the next day. I think I'll go have a bowl. ;)
mary
response 121 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 13:34 UTC 2011

So, I haven't actually made anything from this site, but I'm charmed by 
the content.  The author shares both recipes and relationship advice and 
both are wicked good.

Check it out:

http://tinyurl.com/4l75mz3
edina
response 122 of 253: Mark Unseen   Jan 24 03:01 UTC 2011

Oh man....I LOVE that website!!  I can't wait to make her slow cooked 
chicken with beer for tacos!
slynne
response 123 of 253: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 17:27 UTC 2011

I am thinking of modifying the recipe below. I love hot cocoa but have
found that at the regular grocery store, it is kind of expensive and
Costco doesn't have the sugar free kind. 

    * 4 cups instant nonfat dry milk powder
    * 1-1/2 to 2 cups sugar
    * 1 cup powdered non-dairy creamer (coffee lightener like Creamora)
    * 2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa
    * 1 package of instant store-bought chocolate or a vanilla pudding
mix (optional, but very good)


I recently found some regular powdered milk at a small grocery store
that caters to Mexican people. I am thinking that I could probably
substitute that for the 4 cups of instant nonfat dry milk power and 1
cup of powdered non-dairy creamer (which I think is gross). I guess I'll
try five cups of the regular powered milk. And I'll substitute the sugar
for Splenda. Not sure if I'll add the pudding mix but might if I can
find some sugar-free pudding. 

So all you cooks out there. Do you think that five cups of powdered
whole milk might equal 4 cups of fat free powdered milk + 1 cup of non
dairy creamer?
keesan
response 124 of 253: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 18:16 UTC 2011

Why not just make cocoa from real milk and cocoa powder?  We microwave a small
amount of milk or water with a spoonful of cocoa (or grated baking chocolate)
for 20-30 sec until it dissolves (stir) then fill it up with milk and heat
it and stir again, add sugar to taste (or not).  Cocoa made with powdered milk
does not taste nearly as good.  The powdered creamer may be added to
commercial mixes to save costs.  You can also add vanilla or cinnamon.
slynne
response 125 of 253: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 18:42 UTC 2011

resp:124 It is just easier for me to put the tea kettle on and then add
hot water to a powdered mix. Plus, sometimes I am out of milk. A few
years ago, I bought a hot cocoa mix that needs to be added to milk and
then never bothered to make it. 
keesan
response 126 of 253: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 19:06 UTC 2011

So mix cocoa and powdered milk and a small bit of water, stir thoroughly,
microwave 20 sec, add more water.  Jim suggests do not add sugar.
mary
response 127 of 253: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 02:42 UTC 2011

Your mix sounds doable, Lynne, but I'm not sure if it would end up 
tasting too much of the chemicals in the pudding and Creamora.  I think 
I'd instead play around with fat-free or 2% condensed milk, rich cocoa 
powder and maybe a mixture of sugar sub and agave syrup as sweetener.  
Solves the problem of having to have fresh milk on hand and you've 
minimized the fake stuff. 

One other thing I've found makes a big difference in hot chocolate is 
whipping it with one of these thingies.  

ttp://tinyurl.com/4hjysap


It gives even non-fat Nestle hot chocolate packets a smooth consistency 
and with a small hit of whipped cream it's decadent enough for my needs.
The whole mug comes in at 85 calories.
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