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Philippines
Star and flag =)
Thanks for this recipe from scratch with measurements and no "3rd party" ingredients
I'll make this for me and the wife in the next couple of days on the other side of the globe. What varieties of herbs are you growing now? (I saw your reference to rosemary)
I have been cooking for years but I have made a lot more "from scratch" meals in the last few years than I did before. I agree "time" is a factor and that is all it really takes. If you manage your time right you can make anything.
I used to not cook for myself 3+ years ago, except basics like eggs and whatever processed stuff. Over the years and with coaching from a chef friend and other excellent cooks I've learned a lot about making things from scratch. The key is time, and in today's world, what do I know, Is not much since I haven't lived in "civilized" world for many years. However with a little practice in 1-2 hours you can have an awesome meal (and no 3rd party chemicals).edit on 27-1-2014 by Philippines because: clarification
woodsmom
It turned out excellent! Thank you again! I now have about a case worth of cream soups in my freezer. It is a good base ingredient for so many things and something that I had to give up when I found out I have celiacs. I only had to make one minor modification, and that was to substitute millet flour for the whole wheat flour for the roux to make it gluten free. Thanks again, this is going to be a life saver at my house!
Philippines
One thing I meant to add about the dish: carrots
Mirepoix is a good basic understanding for cooking with base flavors. 50% onion, 25% celery, 25% carrot. Something like that to experiment with, sauteed/browned for the maillard reaction, and then add water or oil to deglaze a roast and use that broth for etc.
If you can get into a rotation, all veggie scraps and meat scraps/bones can go into a general boiling pot to make/keep a broth for home soups during meals too =)
DontTreadOnMe
reply to post by mblahnikluver
Can you give specifics on how you're doing the mushrooms? The mushroom prep as it were
I would like to try that soon....maybe once with regular white mushrooms....and another with portobello or crimini.
DontTreadOnMe
reply to post by mblahnikluver
Thanks for the info.
I'm a rather lazy cook, so forgive me this question:
What is the advantage of sautéing a vegetable first before adding to a recipe?
DontTreadOnMe
reply to post by mblahnikluver
Thanks for the info.
I'm a rather lazy cook, so forgive me this question:
What is the advantage of sautéing a vegetable first before adding to a recipe?
Philippines
DontTreadOnMe
reply to post by mblahnikluver
Thanks for the info.
I'm a rather lazy cook, so forgive me this question:
What is the advantage of sautéing a vegetable first before adding to a recipe?
The concept is to brown (not burn) the veggies/meat when sauteing. The process is known as the Maillard Reaction - which is the term for caramelizing the sugars in the food, which brings out the flavor in the final dish
Hope that's a good enough answer =)
graceunderpressure
Thanks for another excellent recipe, Mblahnik! I have been looking for just such a homemade Cream of Chicken recipe for exactly the same reasons. It's a shame they've ruined all our childhood staple foods by putting all the gunk in them.
It's funny -- the dissonance between your creepy alien avatar and the warm, yummy recipes you serve up. Have you ever considered something more Betty Crockerish?