OnkelC said:
Do you eat it like the Muncheners, and suck the sausage out of the skin?
OnkelC said:
NAAAH, I am a civilized person and cut the skin open.8bit said:Do you eat it like the Muncheners, and suck the sausage out of the skin?
OnkelC said:Hi Thriller and welcome to the thread.
A good base for one pan dishes are pasta of choice, potatoes and rice. You can use the good Austrian smoked ham, some eggs and some grated cheese to make a good and filling dish from these for less than 2 Euros per person. Rough amounts per person would be: 250 grams of raw noodles, 200 grams of rice or 350-400 grams of potatoes. The pancakes I posted earlier on are a good and fast to make, too.
What are your preferred ingredients? If you could post them, It would make it easier to give some more in-depth advice.
OnkelC said:Advance-to-next-page-post![]()
Ooooh yeah, I prepare the stew only with windows open and constant draft. It also does not help that our flat is a one-room appartement, so we are technically cooking in the bedroom:lol :lol :lol .ChryZ said:OnkelC, that's a very good looking "Rindsgulasch".
Isn't it great how the whole house/flat/apt is smelling like browned beef for days? :lol
Hi Giard,Giard said:Hello all,
OnkelC, I tried out your mac and cheese recipe. It tasted kind of grainy, but good. Is the grainy part normal? I used a mix of shredded mozarella, emmental and parmesan I think.
Thanks a lot for all of your posts, this thread should be a monthly/weekly sticky like the sports threads.
ronito said:So Onkel are you going to update the index? I'm looking for some new recipes.
Also are there some basic rules? I was thinking of posting my arepas, but they're rediculously simple to make.
Thank you for your post, Indigo.Indigo said:OnkelC, I have a couple of humble requests.![]()
I'd love to see your take on Sauerbraten sometime, and if you have a recipe for that specialty of Idar-Oberstein, Speissbraten, please share it! I'd really like to know what goes into the marinade.
Thanks and happy eating!
:lol Steak tartare is actually supposed to have its main emphasis on the taste of the raw fillet.Thriller said:these things are all so easy to make and not even that expencive really nice.
Just a Question about the raw meat thing, doesnt it just taste like cold meat?
Hi buhmachine, and welcome to the thread.buhmachine said:How often is it in your household that a night goes by with an easy, fast food/frozen pizza/etc. for dinner, OnkelC? I'm curious.
xBigDanx said:Another question about the raw meat....
Is ground beef safer over there than it is in the States? Over here, it is normal (and expected at some places) to get your steak cooked medium rare or even rare, and it is wonderful. But if you get a hamburger, they will say it needs to be cooked all the way through with no red in the middle in order to ensure safety.
So basically our ground meat over here is apparently of a lesser quality than a full steak (unless you have taken a steak and ground it up).
I have had steak tartare made from whole steak that was chopped up into very small pieces, but could never imagine eating it with ground beef.
I know its all the same thing really, but quality wise, at least over here it is different.
Is it that way over there or is all the meat of fairly good quality?
DaCocoBrova said:^^
Did you just prepare/eat raw red meat? Woah!
Couldn't pay me to do that.
:lolDaCocoBrova said:Wow. Seems dangerous. Sushi I like.
You have to get ground beef for tartare from someplace that grinds meat in house. prepackaged is where you will run into trouble.DaCocoBrova said:Wow. Seems dangerous. Sushi I like.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toast_HawaiiWikipedia said:Toast Hawaii is an open sandwich consisting of a slice of toast with ham, pineapple and cheese, grilled from above, so that the cheese starts to melt. It was invented, or at least made popular, by the German TV cook Clemens Wilmenrod and is considered typical for Germany in the 1950s. Pizza Hawaii is a pizza topped with ham, pineapple and cheese.
There is also a music label named Toast Hawaii, founded by Depeche Mode's Andrew Fletcher and named after his reported fondness for the sandwich. The first signed artist on this label is Client. According to Side-Line Magazine the label is now close to stop activities as its only band left.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clemens_WilmenrodWikipedia said:Clemens Wilmenrod (24 July 1906-12 April 1967) was the first German television cook. His pseudonym was derived from the municipality Willmenrod in the Westerwald region, where he was born as Karl Clemens Hahn. Wilmenrod is considered the inventor of Toast Hawaii, "Arabian riders' meat" and "filled strawberry". He is also credited with making Rumtopf popular in Southern and Western Germany, and with introducing turkey as a typical Christmas dinner.
The dishes presented were characterized by the general scarcity of the post-war period, and Wilmenrod was not ashamed to use canned vegetables, instant sauces, and even ketchup. While this may not measure up to the current state of the culinary art, his influence on the post-war generation in Germany should not be underrated: his programmes and cookbooks were blockbusters, and when he presented a cod recipe, for instance, cod would be sold out for weeks.
When a viewer accused him of not having invented the "filled strawberry" himself, he put a long cook's knife against his chest and swore to kill himself if but a single viewer who had already eaten "filled strawberry" before were to call.
Wilmenrod committed suicide in 1967 after a terminal disease had been diagnosed.
OnkelC said:holliberry:
thank you for your contribution, that sounds like a nice and easy casserole. Do you have a link to that "stovetop stuffing mix"? sounds interesting, I never heard about that.
http://www.cookingcache.com/poultry/chickenandbroccolibraid.shtml
That's actually a well-balanced dish (nutritional and flavour wise). Carbs (noodles), protein (tofu, egg, etc), a little fat/oil (?) and some veg (bellpepper). Good job! Oh and most important, it's looking appetizing toobovo said:I forgot to take any preparation pictures, but there's nothing surprising about the preparation.
It's some kind of stir fried noodles, with random ingredients based on what the local shop had. In fact from now on this recipe is known as "Some Kind of Stir Fried Noodles, with Random Ingredients".
Main ingredient is some tofu, that was bought pre-mariniated (in soy sauce, ginger and garlic I would guess). Thats cut up and fried with an onion, sliced water chestnuts, and a green pepper with plenty of soy sauce added while cooking. Cooked egg noodles were added at end (noodles were boiled and rinsed in cold water before being added)