This is a static copy of In the Rose Garden, which existed as the center of the western Utena fandom for years. Enjoy. :)
Yesterday, the posts of Deep Blue make me hungry!
When I finaly gone to my apartment, I has cooked to dinner a delicious "capeletti in brodo".
Itīs a genuine act of vendeta!
This is a link to a useful description of brodo "theory":
http://www.albanesi.it/Alimentazione/cibi/brodo.htm
Now the recipe:
Ingredients:
1 Remaining of "some" meat [chicken and ox are more commum]
2 A portion of capeletti [filling with the same meat in 1]
3 A portion of Leek sliced
4 If you donīt have calory restrictions, a lot of powdered provolonne chease!
Prepare:
Put a pan with wather and the meat to boil.
Ten minutes after it was boiled, add the capeletti and the leek.
More ten minutes, itīs finished!
Add the provolone at your wish!
Itīs very easy to do, it allows you to do exactly the number of portions that desire, and is very healthful!
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Tamago wrote:
KissingT.Kiryuu # Thanks for explaining what Tootsie Rolls are.
you should totally try them some day if you can ship them over there. there tasty!
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KissingT.Kiryuu wrote:
Tamago wrote:
KissingT.Kiryuu # Thanks for explaining what Tootsie Rolls are.
you should totally try them some day if you can ship them over there. there tasty!
Who knows, I might try them when they become availible in the supermarket, Oreos wern't available here until the last few years either and we are getting more american type junk-food all the time.
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I've been meaning to post a little something about Estonian food, but I completely forgot about it. So I'm sorry.
To make it up, here are some samples of food that I think are typical or unique for Estonians.
Cheese curd (Estonian: kohuke)
These are the best sweet stuff I know! There's quite a wide variety of them, they often have a filling of chocolate/jam etc and are very yummy. The only downside I can bring out is that they're so damn small!
For more info, go here: http://www.tere.eu/?structure=005&l … ;rnd=12812
Sült (sorry, there's no word for it in English)
This a traditional Estonian dish, basically it's a meat jelly. Most foreigners dare not eat it 'cause it doesn't look so good. I can tell you though that it's very good! I wish my parents would make it again this year. I couldn't find a recipe in English, but if someone's interested I could translate it for you, otherwise I won't bother (I'm a lazy person).
Blood sausages/blood pudding
This is another traditional Estonian dish, usually made for Christmas (as is sült). They're like normal sausages but more...bloody. We eat these every year so I think they're nothing special. As for the taste, they're fine by me. I'm certainly not put off because it's made of blood among other things. *insert vampire smiley here* Oh, and they're especially good with whortleberry jam!
Here's a Wiki link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_pudding
I just looked it up and found out that Estonians have quite a few dishes made of blood. I had no idea! I've probably eaten most of them but right now I can't think what they're called in Estonian (probably nothing special, though it still scares the foreigners). Here's a link: http://www.kokaraamat.ee/rahvustoidud.php?cat=18
I can't think of anything else right now.
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I likes me some gnocchi.
I am oh so very lazy though.
How can I have faster gnocchi?
is the vaccuum packed stuff edible? I've always been TERRIFIED of it...
And what's a good way to mix it other than my hands? I've heard food processors, but they turn it into paste which I do not want.
My crappy recipie-ish thing and disclaimers:
I have no scale. Thus I have NO idea how many potaotes I have and guess on everything else. I just mix until its dough-like.
It is also kinda plain, but I like it that way.
I might also warn I'm sick and haven't been able to sleep in days, so this might make NO sense. I reccomend finding a better recipie elsewhere.
(no, this isn't also what made me sick. I haven't made it in at least a month due to laziness.)
I'm really Chinese. You probably shouldn't trust me gnoochi-wise.
Stuff you should have with you:
potatoes
flour
eggs
olive oil
basil leaves
what to do with that stuff:
Boil potaotes.
peel potatoes, and remember its for deliciousness as your burn yourself.
mash up peeled cooked potates
add flour and egg until doughy and manageable (see not sticking to everything)
form into their cute little shapes. (think textured footbals)
boil until slightly more cooked. (I might be horribly wrong, but I beleive they float when they're done.)
cook more in pan with olive oil and basil (I say 15- 30 seconds)
top with parmigiano reggiano to your heart's content
???
profit
I want cheesecake nowwww... thankyou thread X___x *afraid to have milky things when sick >_<*
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Have a little thread necromancy. Once I get my compy back up, I'll get you detailed recipes for some family recipes, lamb and barley stew, homemade tomoato sauce, whatever else I can dig up. Wonder if I can find that recipe for Scotch eggs? I adore Scotch eggs. Yum!
For now, though, would you like a little remoulade?
For a single serving, take one and a half tablespoons mayonnaise and mix in one quarter teaspoon minced garlic (I like to use the stuff in the oil, and get a bit of the oil), dash of dried basil, oregano, and thyme (dried rosemary is good as well, but it does overpower stuff), some ground pepper and maybe three or four little miced parsley branches. Mix well, and apply to sandwiches. When made in larger qualities, mix some crushed olives, capers, and an anchovy filet in there and you have a very good pseudo tapenade. Mayo isn't really a tapenade thing, but I find it to be quite tasty. Excellent on a muffuletta.
Edit: Oh, I knew I forgot something! Grind or chop up about three or four pignoli to go in the remoulade! Makes it eeeeeeeeeven better.
Last edited by morosemocha (01-28-2007 11:38:05 PM)
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Oooh, I'd meant to post my review of the bolognese sauce that deep blue posted. I have to say, HELL YES. That's lovely stuff!
And here's a sauce of my own. It goes well with chicken and pasta (especially lobster and shrimp ravioli), but I wouldn't try it with a red meat.
I don't have very good quantities, I just play this by ear as far as amounts go.
small pat of butter
4-5 shallots
fresh tarragon, probably 3-4 tbsp
1/3 - 1/2 cup white wine (preferably dry, as a sweet wine makes the sauce overly sweet)
1/3 cup or less chicken broth (you don't need this if you're cooking chicken in the sauce)
1 cup green grapes, or more if you want
cream as needed
salt/pepper if you want, I only use salt and only if it really needs it
Throw a smallish pat of butter into a large, flat-bottomed saucepan/frying pan on medium-high heat. Slice the shallots thinly, and toss them in to caramelize. While they are doing so, slice the tarragon as thin as you can get it, and toss it in while the onions finish caramelizing. Leave the shallots and tarragon in the pot, reduce the heat to medium-low, and add the white wine to deglaze and reduce until it's about 1/3 of what it was. Slice the grapes in half and put them in to cook, with the chicken broth if you are using it. Once the grapes have lightly cooked, add the cream to make up the body of the sauce. Salt and pepper if needed.
You'll end up with a slightly sweet, rich sauce that's perfect for lightly flavored ravioli (ricotta filled, for instance) or tortellini. If you want to cook chicken in this sauce, you brown the chicken in butter first, take it out while you cook the shallots, and then add it in again after deglazing and reducing the wine.
Edit: because my spelling is less than impeccable. Gods, no!
Last edited by Yasha (01-29-2007 02:46:27 AM)
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You had me at shallot.
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Seriously, try it if you have the chance. I made dinner for a few friends of mine this week and they just raved about the sauce. I have pictures of cooking an entire dinner built around chicken with this sauce, but I've never managed to post them and it's been months now.
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