* some white aged cheddar
* Denver sourdough
* Moutarde de Dijon dans le style
Labels: chicken broth, chicken tenders, Chimichurri, curry, mushrooms, pineapple, Spaghetti, Vindaloo, zucchini
Labels: chicken tenders, Chimichurri, curry, pineapple, spinach spaghetti, Vindaloo
Salmon fish sticks.
I love the bit in the Revenge of the Nerds movie where the nerd is asked, "Don't you know what this writing on my hat means?" The nerd responds, "Malcolm ten?"
Later, the nerds marvel at the dinner prepared at the home of their hero who is now a Bill Gates type character sold out to success and now a changed personality, no longer a genuine nerd. The nerd hero asks over dinner, "What's wrong?" The nerd answers, "It's just that I've never seen fish before that wasn't in stick form."
Just the idea of fish sticks cracks me up.
I recall my mom reheating frozen fish sticks when I was in the first grade. She also heated breaded scallops. I picked off the breading revealing white disks. I put my disks together forming a cylinder. I asked her if scallops were really a snake that was cut up. My mom laughed and answered, "Yes." Suspicion confirmed, I lived with this untruth for an additional 16 years.
Scene II: Cape Cod, oyster shack. The proprietor had a large poster behind the fish counter depicting various seafood items. I noted the scallops were pictured, as, well, scallops. I said to the owner, a rough looking fellow unshaven and with an unclean white apron and twice my weight, "Your fish poster is wrong," with all of the certainty of a twenty-one year old. The owner sneered, "Oh yeah? What's wrong with it?" He implied the word "punk." I go, "your poster shows scallop like a clam and it's really a snake that is chopped up." He looked at me hard and pathetically, then laughed like I was totally retarded. Then carefully explained the truth and the details behind their preparation. I blame my mother.
Labels: fish sticks, hand-mixed mayonnaise, salmon
Labels: apple, blue cheese, ham, snack, sourdough
Made with real cats! Catfish, that is.
Labels: catfish, hushpuppies, masa herena, Sriracha
Labels: apples, coconut oil, fruit, pie, trail mix
Labels: coconut oil, miso, salmon
Labels: breakfast, capers, onion, salmon, sourdough toast
Bread pudding made with sourdough bread with cubes of sole embedded. This was an experiment and I do believe it worked, although I wouldn't serve it to guests on account of it being a tad outre, unless I lived in Cincinnati where, from what I can see, apparently they'll eat anything. No offense intended. Just say'n.
Labels: bread pudding, habanero, horseradish, sole filets, sourdough bread, vanilla
Labels: fried eggs, trail-mix oatmeal, uncured ham
Labels: coconut oil, rigatoni, salmon
Eggs fried in unsalted butter. Sourdough toast spread with unsalted butter. Do you know what unsalted butter needs? Salt, that's what.
Labels: bacon, sea scallops
Labels: florentine, flounder
Labels: biscuit, flounder, spinach sauce
Labels: Denver sourdough, elk gravy
Labels: elk steak
It's actually a lime sauce, but it's heavily flavored with honey and ginger and mustard. The oil is unsalted butter in which the salmon was gently sautéd. The salmon was cut into strips and lightly dusted with seasoned floured. Flour that was seasoned with S/P and some kind of Spice Boys proprietary hot mixture of powders. At least it says HOT on the little can. The pan retains some of the seasoning from having fried the salmon. The butter never got hot enough to burn so it was still in good shape to serve as the basis for the dressing. The same seasoned flour mixture that dusted the salmon is used for thin roux to form a sauce, or a gravy if you prefer, which is sufficiently interesting to also serve as a dressing for salad. It has everything it needs and more: oil (butter), acid (lime), sweetener (honey), umami (ginger and mustard), seasonings (S/P some kind of mysterious hot combination powder), in this case, it also has thickener (flour) which could easily have been corn starch or some such.
I didn't pour the sauce over everything, I just kept dipping the vegetables and salmon sticks into it to varying degrees of thoroughness so each forkful was a little bit different in sweetness, mustardy heat, and KAPOW!, ginger.
Salad
* orange bell pepper
* cucumber
* tomato
* half a Romaine heart
* slice of purple onion.
Fish
* Pacific salmon sliced into stick shapes
* dusted with flour, S/P, hot powder
* fried in unsalted butter that doesn't burn on moderate heat
Dressing for both salmon and salad
* same seasoned flour that dusted the salmon
* grated fresh ginger
* teaspoon mustard
* 1 whole big juicy lime, or possibly two discouraging scrawny not so juicy limes.
Labels: chickpea patty, green salad
Labels: fruit salad, toasted oatmeal
Pangasius. Ha ha ha. That's a funny word. I learned it's another name for catfish, Iridescent Shark Catfish. That leaves me a little bit disappointed because given the Greek sounding name I was hoping for something a little more exotic. And you know what? That does it! This is not going in my ceviche because that last catfish was pure crap for ceviche. Too giggly. Although I confess it was excellent fried. I have a lot more of it in frozen form.