Collarspace Discussion Forums


Home  Login  Search 

RE: Learning to cook?


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Ask a Submissive >> RE: Learning to cook? Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/30/2007 4:24:17 PM   
gringuita


Posts: 41
Joined: 2/11/2007
Status: offline
thanks michael!

it was so sad waiting 2 hours for the yeast to rise and ending up with a flat pizza

(in reply to michaelOfGeorgia)
Profile   Post #: 41
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/30/2007 4:30:10 PM   
gothicdiva


Posts: 111
Joined: 2/16/2005
Status: offline
I use allrecipes.com as well. Also, cooks.com and foodnetwork.com are two others I frequent as well. I know alot of people don't like her in general, but marthastewart.com has great recipes as well. Bon Appetit!

(in reply to LuckyAlbatross)
Profile   Post #: 42
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 10:19:01 AM   
complaisant2u


Posts: 18
Joined: 3/28/2007
From: near Augusta, GA
Status: offline
I agree with MadRabbit's post.  It's good advice.  It also reminds me that a good tools are "tongs" found a restaurant supply stores.

The schnitzel is a great dish to try cooking. 

It's pretty easy to make.  Use pork tenderloin.  Cut into a 3 inch section.  Dampen the counter and put a layer of plastic wrap on the counter.  Put the cut tenderloin on top of iit.  Put an equally large layer of plastic wrap on top of the tenderloin.  Beat flat with a meat mallet/hammer.  The idea is the plastic wrap makes it easy to flatten the meat.  Also when yhou flatten the meat, use many light smacks to slowly flatten it otherwise it'll split. 

I use a fry daddy type devide to fry it, so I'll make it just big enough to fit in the fry daddy.  Also I want the meat thin, maybe 1/4 inch or thinner.  After you've flattened a couple, bread it.  It's four -> egg/milk mixture -> bread crumbs  -> fryer.

The toppings are wiener schnitzel.. a lemon butter sauce.  Lemon butter is pretty easy, but it's best to get the sciene right.  Butter will seperate when it gets too hot.  You don't really wan tthat.  Heat a pan to medium heat, cut a lemon in half and squeeze the halves through your fingers or strainer to keep the seeds out and get all the juice in the pan.  When the pan is just hot enough, add butter or good quality margerine cut into small cubes.  No fat or light butter won't work very well at all since it seprates into water very easily.  If the pan isn't too hot, then the butter wil melt and still be creamy.  Wisk and add some parsley.  Pour over the schnitzel.

For jaegershnitzel... cut an onion or two into strips and put in hot pan with oil.  You want to carmalize the onion.  Carmalizing the onion is just browning the oniion until it starts to look translucent.  It's best done at a medium high to medium temperature.  When they're about done crank up the heat to high, add a couple tablespoons of chopped garlic.  It shouldn't take very long to brown the garlic.  With the garlic browned and onions carmalized and pan hot, add some white wine.  I use "white cooking wine".  This adds flavor and liberates the tasty stuff that's stuck to the bottom of the pan.  It should boil vigoursly, boiling the alchohol off.  When it's reduced and pan is still hot, reduce the temperature and add the water and brown gravy mix.  Mushrooms are good too, but those should be added  a little before the garlic.  When the gravy is done according to the package instructions, you can add some fresh chopped parsely and spoon over ths schnitzel.

Another option to adding parsley to the sauce is just sprinkling it over the schnitzel after the sauce is added.  This dish is good with mashed potatoes and a frozen veggie, like green beans.  Say no to canned veggies (unless it's collard greens).

Cordon Bleu is made with the schnitzel meat too, just lay ham and swiss cheese on the flattened meat and roll up and bread.  You can tie with string after rolled, use toothpics or skewers.   Just make sure you pull the toothpics and skewers out when you're done.  It's possible to get by without securing the roll, but its a risk.

I think you could use shake and bake and avoid the frying.

(in reply to Calandra)
Profile   Post #: 43
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 5:29:35 PM   
MadRabbit


Posts: 3460
Joined: 8/9/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: gringuita

I've found a very simple recipe for pizza dough online, only... I can't get it to rise...

does anyone happen to know if the water for the yeast could be too hot and kill the little critters?

(not trying to hijack, just figure this is the place for food questions, ty!)


Scientifically, its roughly 65-70 degrees to 140 oF. Basically, I go with luke warm/room tempature water and I never have any issues.

Also add a pinch of sugar and some of the flour to the water. Yeast works by consuming sugars in the bread to produce carbon dioxide. This constantly stretches and rises the dough as opposed to baking soda and baking powder which only realease carbon dioxide once. The sugar helps get the yeast going.

NEVER LET SALT COME IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH YEAST!

If you buy fresh or compressed, there is a chance it might be dead. I hate both. Unless you produce bread every single day, dry active or instant yeast is the best way to go.

Also...cover the bowl with a towel and place it in sunlight. It helps speed up the process a bit.

You know its working when the water has a kind of frothy, brown bubbly foam on the top of it.

If you dont see it within 5-10 minutes, start over.



< Message edited by MadRabbit -- 5/31/2007 5:55:45 PM >


_____________________________

Advice for New Dominants
The Unpolitically Correct Lifestyle Definitions

Obama is NOT the Messiah! He's just a VERY NAUGHTY BOY

(in reply to gringuita)
Profile   Post #: 44
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 5:36:54 PM   
MadRabbit


Posts: 3460
Joined: 8/9/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: complaisant2u

The toppings are wiener schnitzel.. a lemon butter sauce.  Lemon butter is pretty easy, but it's best to get the sciene right.  Butter will seperate when it gets too hot.  You don't really wan tthat.  Heat a pan to medium heat, cut a lemon in half and squeeze the halves through your fingers or strainer to keep the seeds out and get all the juice in the pan.  When the pan is just hot enough, add butter or good quality margerine cut into small cubes.  No fat or light butter won't work very well at all since it seprates into water very easily.  If the pan isn't too hot, then the butter wil melt and still be creamy.  Wisk and add some parsley.  Pour over the schnitzel.



Emulitions! I hate em. Berblut based sauces arent too bad though.

One of the tricks I've learned is to cut one pound of butter into 16 1 ounce cubes and use 4 ounces at a time over low heat. Keeping it as cold as possible also helps perserve the texture.

A little touch of cream goes a long way too. It gives the butter something to cling to so you get a much smoother and creamy sauce.

Greated and finely chopped lemon zest also will go along way.


< Message edited by MadRabbit -- 5/31/2007 5:42:54 PM >


_____________________________

Advice for New Dominants
The Unpolitically Correct Lifestyle Definitions

Obama is NOT the Messiah! He's just a VERY NAUGHTY BOY

(in reply to complaisant2u)
Profile   Post #: 45
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 5:49:16 PM   
Wildfleurs


Posts: 1650
Joined: 9/24/2004
From: Connecticut
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: gringuita

I've found a very simple recipe for pizza dough online, only... I can't get it to rise...

does anyone happen to know if the water for the yeast could be too hot and kill the little critters?

(not trying to hijack, just figure this is the place for food questions, ty!)


It could be that the water is to hot - are you using an instant read thermometer to tell what the temp is for the water?  Also are you using some sugar (or honey) with the warm water and yeast?  It won't proof without some sugar.  Also I like to make sure the room is a little warm and not very airy or windy when I do breads.  As well as making sure that I put some saran wrap over the containers as they proof/rise or sometimes I'll put them in a plastic zip lock bag.

Hope that helps,
C~


_____________________________

"Just because you've always done it that way doesn't mean it's not incredibly stupid." -despair.com

~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
The heart of it all - http://www.wildfleurs.com
~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

(in reply to gringuita)
Profile   Post #: 46
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 5:50:44 PM   
Wildfleurs


Posts: 1650
Joined: 9/24/2004
From: Connecticut
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: MadRabbit

quote:

ORIGINAL: gringuita

I've found a very simple recipe for pizza dough online, only... I can't get it to rise...

does anyone happen to know if the water for the yeast could be too hot and kill the little critters?

(not trying to hijack, just figure this is the place for food questions, ty!)


Scientifically, its roughly 65-70 degrees to 140 oF. Basically, I go with luke warm/room tempature water and I never have any issues.

Also add a pinch of sugar and some of the flour to the water. Yeast works by consuming sugars in the bread to produce carbon dioxide. This constantly stretches and rises the dough as opposed to baking soda and baking powder which only realease carbon dioxide once. The sugar helps get the yeast going.

NEVER LET SALT COME IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH YEAST!

If you buy fresh or compressed, there is a chance it might be dead. I hate both. Unless you produce bread every single day, dry active or instant yeast is the best way to go.

Also...cover the bowl with a towel and place it in sunlight. It helps speed up the process a bit.

You know its working when the water has a kind of frothy, brown bubbly foam on the top of it.






 I probably should have read the entire thread - what MadRabbit said!

C~


_____________________________

"Just because you've always done it that way doesn't mean it's not incredibly stupid." -despair.com

~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
The heart of it all - http://www.wildfleurs.com
~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

(in reply to MadRabbit)
Profile   Post #: 47
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 5:51:25 PM   
MadRabbit


Posts: 3460
Joined: 8/9/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: complaisant2u

Drainage is something that gets me quite often.  That's the liquid that seems to settle on the plate below the noodles.  I plate up the noodles, ladle the sauce over the top, add all the fancy garnishements and mushrooms and there's this lightly pink watery liquid on the plate.  I think this happens when 1) I don't drain the noodles well enough and/or 2) I didn't cook off the water from the ragu.  Besides draining the noodles better, and cooking the sauce uncovered for 10 mins or so to reduce it, I could also... use more dishes I have to clean up later.  Grap another saute pan, get it hot, add the sauce, sizzle, add the noodles and toss.  Cook for a couple minutes and plate.  Add the pretty garnishments and mushrooms, wipe the plate, ring the bell for pickup. No drainage and baked penne, the flavor of the sauce gets cooked into the noodles.



Are you using oil in your water when you cook the pasta or mixing some in after its done?

This is the one downside to using oil in your pasta to keep it from sticking together. It stops the sauce from clinging to the noodles, absorbing that drainage, and too much oil will end up at the bottom of the plate when the pasta gets warm again.

Both of your theories are valid reasons though. All the chunky stuff stays on top while the thinner part of the sauce goes straight to the bottom or someone gets in a hurry and doesnt properly drain the noodles.

_____________________________

Advice for New Dominants
The Unpolitically Correct Lifestyle Definitions

Obama is NOT the Messiah! He's just a VERY NAUGHTY BOY

(in reply to complaisant2u)
Profile   Post #: 48
RE: Learning to cook? - 5/31/2007 7:39:54 PM   
MsSonnetMarwood


Posts: 1898
Joined: 2/10/2005
From: Eastern Shore, Maryland
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: gringuita

I've found a very simple recipe for pizza dough online, only... I can't get it to rise...

does anyone happen to know if the water for the yeast could be too hot and kill the little critters?

(not trying to hijack, just figure this is the place for food questions, ty!)


The water needs to be about 110 degrees F - it should be warm to the touch but definately not hot.   Your best bet is to get yourself a digital instant thermometer - they're about $10 at a Target or Walmart.

_____________________________

~Ms. Sonnet Marwood~

Deja Moo: The feeling you've heard this bull somewhere before.

(in reply to gringuita)
Profile   Post #: 49
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/5/2007 11:10:11 AM   
complaisant2u


Posts: 18
Joined: 3/28/2007
From: near Augusta, GA
Status: offline
Hi MadRabbit, no I don't use oil on the pastas.  Seems to just add fat for no good reason.  If I use immediately, then it's won't be sticky. If I'm concerned it'll get sticky I'll rinse with cool water.  It keeps them from sticking but yea I know it washes some flavor off.  It's an ok tradeoff with me.

Another easy dish that's pretty popular is grilled or pan seared salmon, mushroom rice and veggie. 

For salmon, get the salmon steaks.  You can get a whole side/fillet and cut them into the steaks.  You want about 6-8oz per peice.  You want to season these with Lawry's Seasoning Salt... or any of the knockoffs.  Avoid the cheap stuff since it will have more salt than the other ingredients that make up the mixture.  But sprinkle the salt on, and then spray the fish with a cooking spray like Pam.  I use the cheaper Wall Mart brand.

If you then grill the fish, the thing is about grilling... it's almost impossible to make those pretty grill marks like on the commercials or in the restuarants unless your grill has a cast iron grill on it.  Most grills are a stainless steel or ceramic grill and those just don't make the marks like a cast iron grill does.  They do sell grills with cast iron grills.  I got one from Lowes.  But when you grill the fish, make sure the meat portion of the fish is sprayed with oil, and place it down on the grill... that's skin side up.  Cook for a couple minutes... if you have a cast iron grill, rotate about 90 degrees (this makes a second grill line that create a diamond pattern)  if not just leave it for a couple more minutes.  Then flip the fish and cook the skin side.  Don't worry about rotating the fish since the skin doesn't mark well and you might remove it.  After a couple minutes the fish will have white stuff coming out of the side along the flakes.  This is normal and shows it's cooking.  Cook until the internal temp reaches 145 F.  You use a chef's thermometer for this... a thin pointy metal tube with a dial temperature guage on the top.  Note, the have fancydigital ones which work well, just don't use that big fat turkey/roast thermometer.  When it's cooked, the skin can peel off or keep it on for the good flavor.  A couple tricks... after you rotate the fish to make that second mark on a cast iron grill, then if you're timing is right you can rotate again for a thrid mark.  If you line it up right...you'll make triangles patterns.  A little off and you'll make Star of Davids.  Another trick is when the fish is cooked it won't stick to the grill.  If you try to rotate of flip early, the fish will stick.  Not having enough or good coverage of oil on the fish or grill will do this too.  For me, grilling is the way to go.  Getting all fancy == more pans to wash.  Commercial kithens are easy places to wash dishes.  A commercial Hobart dishwasher cycle lasts a minute.  Sinks are big and deep.  My kitchen smaller, the dishwasher cycle is about 30 minutes and not too pan friendly, so usually I say thumbs down to a big stack of sautee and baking pans to scrub.

If you pan seer, then you'll also have to bake the fish.  The thing with pan seering is you put just a very little oil on the pan and cook under medium temperature.  Seer the fish skin side down to release oils from the skin.  Cook for a few minutes and make sure you move the fish some to keep it from sticking.  Flip to skin side up and cook until there's a nice browning on the fish.  You may have to lightly press the fish down in parts so it contacts the pan to brown more evenly.  It's possible, but difficult without burning the fish to cook it entirely in the pan.  The oven is easier.  Just throw in a 400F oven until the fish temps to 145.  Note, ifyou save the stuff in the pan and any drippings from the oven, you may be able to make a sauce.  You'd get the pan hot, maybe throw in some garlic to brown, then liberate the brown stuff in the pan with white cooking whine, reduce, let cool off to medium, add butter or as MadRabbit suggested some cream, and a great spice to add to this is Dill Weed.  Fresh is always better than dried. 

For the mushroom rice, I just make a plain white rice and add cream of mushroom soup.  For white rice, it's about 1 cup of rice and two cups of water, put in pan, cover and boil.  Reduce heat to low, but keep covered.  If it boils over, remove from heat.  The trick is to keep that rice covered.  Cook for additional 12-15minutes.  If you did good, then you can stick a fork in, pull back and no rice sticks to the bottom and there's no water left.  If not enough time cooking, there will be some water... too much and it's stuck to the pan.  All foods, rice including continues to cook as long as the pan is hot.  Turning the eye off doesn't stop the cooking.  So it's best to go ahead and put it in a mixing bowl, add add a can of cream of mushroom soup and mix.  If you mix too much, the rice will start to mush and stick together (a food science thing), so try avoiding over mixing.  One way to jazz this up is to grap a saute pan, brown ujp some garlic, add some julienee sliced shitake mushrooms, cook till about done, add a splash of white wine to get the stuff off the pan, cook the alchohol out of the wine which should take about a minute (depending on how hot the pan is and how much wine was added) and add this stuff to the mixing bowl to stir in with the rice and soup.

And broccoli, I use frozen.  The cheap stuff at the store has a lot of stems in it, yuk.  It's much better to get the florets.  Sams has a great frozen bag of broccoli.  I zap mine in the microwave untill they are about halfway done.  Sprinkle some Kosher salt on them and throw in for another couple minutes.  When they come out they're aldente, soft, but still a bit crunchy.  If there is excess water, I'll drain.  I turn a peppermill over them a few times for the fresh ground black pepper.  I add a little butter/margerine/fat free margerine and toss for an even coating.  The butter stuff is the very last step.  Some parmesean cheese is good  too, especially if you just grated it from the block.

And if you want, you can make a dill butter to add to the fish.  Just get dill and mix together with margerine/butter.  Add some to the top of the fish before you serve.  It'll melt some, but still be there when served adding color, flavor and some pizazz.   If you want to do it a bit easier, add a little butter dollup and sprinkle dill on top.  All dry spices go stale.  If you have last year's dill in the cabinet, chances are it's stale.

< Message edited by complaisant2u -- 6/5/2007 11:11:52 AM >

(in reply to MadRabbit)
Profile   Post #: 50
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/6/2007 6:34:49 PM   
Celeste43


Posts: 3066
Joined: 2/4/2006
From: NYS
Status: offline
A favorite schnitzel dish of mine is a la Holstein, with capers and a fried egg on top. I know, I'm weird. Used to live in NYC in an area with a lot of old German restaurants and bakeries. Veal is more tender than pork IMO.

I prefer salmon in a pan, skin side down and don't flip it, just cover it for a little to let the top cook too. But I love salmon skin when it's crunchy.

(in reply to complaisant2u)
Profile   Post #: 51
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/7/2007 7:01:51 PM   
MercTech


Posts: 3706
Joined: 7/4/2006
Status: offline
For quick (< 30 min) dish using fish, go for a Newberg.  The sauce is the key.
Make a brown rue with olive oil and sherry.  Season with basil, cumin, and sage.
Add chopped onion and mushrooms.
Add your seafood... anything from surimi (imiation crab) to lobster chunks.  Small fillets, even works with catfish nuggets.
Cover and allow to steam and simmer for 15-20min.
Server over rice.  (microwave rice steamer is a godsend)

When you work 12 hour shifts and like decent cooking, you learn to go from fridge to plate in a short time.
_________________________________________________

Bisquick... I haven't touched that stuff in two decades.  It is just flour with cheap fat cut in with baking powder blended it and costs 4 times as much as the ingredients. 
Use the blender to cut good butter into the flour.  Then do your baking as you will.  Takes about 40 minutes to turn out good biscuits or soda bread.

_________________________________________________

Use the spice rack... don't be afraid to try seasonings.
Traditionally....
Sage for poultry
Cumin for a southwestern taste
Oregano and Anise for Italian.  (anise is natural licorice flavor, fresh anise on a salad is to die for.  Looks like mutant celery in the grocery)
Cayenne and Filet Powder for a cajun flavor (Filet powder is ground thyme and ground sassafras mixed... sassafras is the source of rootbeer flavor)
Most oriental dishes are flavored with a mix of ginger and garlic
Thai dishes .... try cooking with lime juice and coconut for a hint of Thailand.... along with the hot peppers.
_____________________________________________

Dinner tonight was a sage rubbed chicken breast.  Browned in olive oil then finished on low heat with sliced mushrooms.  Served with some Kalmati olives and pickled okra on a bed of jasmine rice.  Cooking time... 25min


No stranger to the kitchen,
Stefan


(in reply to Celeste43)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 6:43:15 PM   
jssubc


Posts: 46
Joined: 5/29/2006
Status: offline
Well here is a submissive male that loves to cook, i truly do.
Mistress loves my cooking, the problem is that Mistress says i cook better than we can eat out so of course the consequence is that we dont eat out much.
Of course i do the cooking, the dishes, the cleaning. *thinks* hey i like this!

(in reply to VeryMercurial)
Profile   Post #: 53
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 7:09:40 PM   
SimplyMichael


Posts: 7229
Joined: 1/7/2007
Status: offline
I miss having someone to cook for!  My first submissive was a gourmet chef but I always felt proud that I could do things with her leftovers that would amaze her.  My last partner was vegan and while a great gal somehow cooking for her didn't work well for us.  I live like a bachelor now and so I don't get to cook for anyone.

Someone I love is a good cook despite what people tell her and I can't wait to sit down at her table and enjoy her first dinner for me.

(in reply to jssubc)
Profile   Post #: 54
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 7:11:22 PM   
Sinergy


Posts: 9383
Joined: 4/26/2004
Status: offline
 
Dont forget to knead the dough.  This does things to promote the yeast activating and going to work.

10 minutes of kneading or so.

Sinergy

_____________________________

"There is a fine line between clever and stupid"
David St. Hubbins "This Is Spinal Tap"

"Every so often you let a word or phrase out and you want to catch it and bring it back. You cant do that, it is gone, gone forever." J. Danforth Quayle


(in reply to MadRabbit)
Profile   Post #: 55
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 7:49:29 PM   
CrazyC


Posts: 949
Joined: 9/28/2006
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: SDFemDom4cuck

Thanks C. I thought as much. Strawberries tend to get a bit..mushy..after thawing. I tried it with a low fat cream cheese and splenda and they were delicious. Made them for a dessert after dinner with 2 friends on Weight Watchers and they disappeared in 10 minutes. Both asked for the recipe to take to their meetings this weekend. Thanks for the idea!


oh wow. It's great to know i can make them more healthy. Tell your friends to add just a dash of vanilla...it will make it a little sweeter. But yea....bite sized cream cheese cakes...how can you resist?

_____________________________

"You never lose by loving. You always lose by holding back." Barbara De Angelis

(in reply to SDFemDom4cuck)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 7:55:27 PM   
Arastella


Posts: 262
Joined: 7/22/2006
Status: offline
*Raises hand up high*

I don't know how to cook and I wanna find some easy recipes I can follow so I can cook for Mistress.  All I've ever been able to prepare for her is steak on a George Forman grill.

(in reply to Calandra)
Profile   Post #: 57
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/10/2007 7:56:45 PM   
CrazyC


Posts: 949
Joined: 9/28/2006
Status: offline
Really hot tap water is all you need. Also cover the bowl with a hot damp wash cloth, and keep in a warm humid part of the kitchen.

I use to make bread every other day in Biloxi, MS where humidity is every where, and the bread would come out perfect. The only down fall of making that much bread was that i didn't want ot go to the french bakery right across the street near enough. lol

quote:

ORIGINAL: gringuita

thanks michael!

it was so sad waiting 2 hours for the yeast to rise and ending up with a flat pizza


_____________________________

"You never lose by loving. You always lose by holding back." Barbara De Angelis

(in reply to gringuita)
Profile   Post #: 58
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/11/2007 3:09:48 PM   
LiveToPamper


Posts: 9
Joined: 5/9/2007
Status: offline
:: nod ::

Hes juicy.

(in reply to slavejali)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: Learning to cook? - 6/13/2007 8:16:44 AM   
Kitte9


Posts: 411
Joined: 11/26/2006
Status: offline
My speciality is chicken parmesean. Unfortunately, my mistress is alergic to milk and soy.   I'd love an exchange for new recipies I can make for her.

_____________________________

I am stronger than yesterday

(in reply to santalia)
Profile   Post #: 60
Page:   <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4   next >   >>
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Ask a Submissive >> RE: Learning to cook? Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3] 4   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.093