RE: What can you knock up cheap? (Full Version)

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Iamsemisweet -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 12:39:42 PM)

One comment on feeding portions of Salmon to dogs.  Do not do this with Pacific Salmon.  It sometimes contains a fluke that contains another parasite that is deadly poison to dogs.  Salmon poisoning is a horrible thing.  My dogs have gotten it a couple of times, from eating fish carcasses in the creek.  Fortunately, I was able to catch it in time.
quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyConstanze

quote:

ORIGINAL: gungadin09

quote:

ORIGINAL: stellauk

A salmon collar is the bony ring (collarbone) of salmon, directly beneath the head, which usually gets thrown away when they cut fillets off the fish. There's still plenty of meat on it, but it's not a posh cut since you have to sort of suck the meat off, like you would from ribs. You will have to specifically ask your fishmonger for them, since they're not normally sold. But if you can convince somebody to save them for you, you should get a good price. You can stew them, grill them, whatever. The same applies to collars of other fish although a halibut collar, for example, would obviously be much bigger.


pam


They literally cost Pennies, it's the staple diet for my cats and dogs and I have to admit that when I steamed it for them, I often smelled tempting enough to wonder if it would be fit for human consumption, though it doesn't look very appetizing. Our fish monger throws in all sorts of offcuts like heads and such, not very pretty but the pets get a lot of fish for relatively little money.

The beasts get fish twice a week because it's really really good for them, especially for the joint problems of the girl and I have to admit really balk at the prices for fresh fish (the spoiled buggers refuse to eat cheap sardines), especially when it comes to feeding Dobies who tend to eat A LOT.

Come to think about it, the collar of the fish might make good stock for fish soup.




agirl -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 2:06:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

Any idea how to translate grams into cups/teaspoons, etc.?  My measuring cups use "cups" and "liters."


I'm used to weighing stuff so no, but I see others have helped out.

Just a note......When I wrote half a mug of coffee, I was thinking of how I measure it.

Today my children and I made our rumballs and we used a measuring jug so that we could give people a more accurate idea. It works out at  roughly 1/4 pint or 150ml. I'm not sure whether you use metric or UK imperial as a norm.

Even we have to do a bit of adjusting once we've added the rum...few more oats if a little wet, a bit more coffee if a little too dry.

And make the coffee VERY strong.

Good luck! I've spent all evening yelling at the boys and their friends to stop eating the ruddy things! I can see me making another lot next week which would totally negate us getting them made early!...lol

agirl





agirl -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 2:16:57 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam


quote:

ORIGINAL: agirl

Drool.....I eat trout twice a week. Hot one day, cold with mung dahl the next. I adore it. I've never had grayling, is it similar to trout?

agirl


Almost identical.


Thanks Hilly,

It's not something you can easily get hold of in a shop here,( I've never seen it) so I shall have to tackle my rainbow trout *source* when he comes back from his stint of muso-ing in Thailand. I'll be interested to try it out.

agirl




LafayetteLady -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 3:28:21 PM)

Yes, Greedy it does.

I actually have a cookbook somewhere (probably in storage), that has those conversions in the back.




LafayetteLady -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 3:29:30 PM)

Thanks Ron!




LafayetteLady -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 3:31:48 PM)

Thank agirl.

In the US, I think current culinary students are learning both measuring systems.  Me?  I have some general ideas on metric measurements, but they are VERY general, lol.   As in a centimeter is very small, and KPH means kilometers per hour, and a kilometer is a little longer than a mile.  That about covers it.




agirl -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 3:57:54 PM)

Welcome.

I still think in lbs and ounces, inches, feet, yards and miles, pints and gallons but I can *do* the metric too as it's been around in the UK for many years.

agirl




LafayetteLady -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 6:09:33 PM)

It's been here and is now taught in schools, but it hasn't actively been used, so a lot of us "old folks" don't know it or use it.




Hippiekinkster -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/5/2011 10:27:04 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: LafayetteLady

Thank agirl.

In the US, I think current culinary students are learning both measuring systems.  Me?  I have some general ideas on metric measurements, but they are VERY general, lol.   As in a centimeter is very small, and KPH means kilometers per hour, and a kilometer is a little longer than a mile.  That about covers it.
A mile is 1.6 Km. A cm is about 0.2 inches. A meter is about a yard + 3 inches.

A liter is a quart + 1/4 cup. A gallon is ~ 3-3/4 liters.

28 grams per oz. 454 grams per pound. A kilo is 2.2 pounds.

A calorie is the amount of energy required to raise 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius. (archaic; replaced by the Joule)
1000 calories = 1 Kilocalorie = 1 Calorie (large C), the measure of food energy.

Carbs = 4 Cal/gram
protein = 4 Cal/gram
fats = 9 Cal/gram
alcohol = ~7Cal/gram (IIRC) (I seem to recall calculating about 7.4Cal/gram once.)

Those are your basic conversions, except for temperature.

Now bring me the apples and the switch. [8D]






xxblushesxx -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (12/13/2011 1:15:36 PM)

I'm making the chicken caccitore on page 2 of this thread. It's delicious and good for you and not much more difficult than the chicken caccitore someone posted the other day using jarred spaghetti sauce. Once you try it made from scratch, you'll never want to use jars again.




Fornica -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/16/2012 6:39:15 PM)

Done!
http://www.collarchat.com/m_3999143/mpage_1/key_/tm.htm#3999143




kalikshama -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/16/2012 7:50:24 PM)

quote:

So, I don't find it as fun or joyful as a lot of people find it, in fact I find it stressful and I find unless the time on my feet is very very minimal the time spent cooking sets off pain flare ups, as I have a slipped disk pressing on a nerve that causes leg pain and weakness.


If I'm going to spend a lot of time in the kitchen I make sure I am wearing good shoes. I also have mats where I stand most - one at the stove and one at the sink.

$10 each at Wal Mart

http://www.walmart.com/ip/Better-Homes-and-Gardens-Tuscan-Wine-Comfort-Chef-Mat-18-x-30/15129373

[image]http://i.walmartimages.com/i/p/00/08/63/64/03/0008636403129_500X500.jpg[/image]




Soyokaze -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/16/2012 8:24:57 PM)

I make chicken breasts by throwing it into a pan with just enough olive oil to leave a little bit of a puddle after spreading it. I put the chicken in spice it one side with tarragon, oregano, and thyme. Leave it for 3-4 minutes (just barely not half way cooking it), flip it throw in diced vegetables (tomato onions and peppers) (this is where that little extra olive oil comes in handy, and spice this side. Leave for about a 30-60 seconds before it's done cooking then I put some garlic (I used minced, but I'm going to try fresh next) on it, flip it for 30ish seconds garlic on upside and flip again for another 30. Eat delicious chicken and vegetables (eventually I'm going to add rice to this (this is just what I came up with mucking around in the kitchen without looking junk up)).




DaNewAgeViking -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/16/2012 9:13:21 PM)

How about some hot cocoa on a chilly winter night?

Whole chocolate milk
a couple spoons of Hershey's chocolate syrup per large mug
a couple spoons of honey
cinnamon

What'ja tink?

[sm=chug.gif]




FrostedFlake -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 2:03:28 AM)

Thanks Fornica.

Here is mine. Not for Feeding Dragons, just to knock up cheap.

In a covered glass baking thing put :

1 frozen skinless/boneless breast of chicken or 1 LEAN & TRIMMED pork sirloin steak. (I buy the 'family pack' then ziplock & freeze separably)

2 medium size potatoes, scrubbed, not peeled and diced.

Frozen vegetables (what is in the freezer?) to fill out the dish.

1/2 cup Alfredo sauce. (It comes in a jar for $1.50. A half cup is one third of a jar.) Stir sauce in a bit.

Bake covered at 325 -350 for however long it take for the potatoes to start to break down. 90 minutes? Do not allow the top edge to burn.

Salt & pepper to taste.

Serves, me. Or, with soup, salad & bread, serves two.

Cost : Less that $2.50, extras extra.

Hat tip, Stella.





Fornica -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 4:43:12 AM)

May I add it, FF?




FrostedFlake -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 5:33:13 AM)

quote:

Fornica
May I add it, FF?


If you think it is good enough. It is your project. I didn't want to put you on the spot with so simple a dish it should not even be called a recipie.

Thanks for doing me the honor of asking.

Probably could check the spelling, though.

That = than. Take = takes




xssve -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 6:04:18 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Cherylmazana

Anyone here make their own pasta?

It’s so much tastier and much more filling, before I splashed out and bought a pasta maker I used to roll the pasta flat and then cut into small strips. I still prefer it that way however my husband and kids prefer it all nice and thin.
You can add chillies, garlic or tomato puree or any other flavouring to the pasta you like or leave it plain which I like.

I hate using store bought pasta now.


And pasta is so easy to make

And making any tomato based pasta recipe from scratch is so simple. Just a tin of tomatoes, passata if you want and whatever herbs you have dried and left around, I usually add a tin of baked beans instead of kidney beans in bolognaise as I prefer the taste and it’s extremely healthy and tastes so much better than the store bought stuff. Add your mince and voila a very filling meal.

Also I love my crock pot, it does chillies, curries, stews and slow cooks cheap joints of meat in a gravy that ends up tasting great. You can even cook your bolognaise filling for the pasta in it. And with the stews curries and chillies it always tastes even better the next day, so we always cook enough for 2 days and leave it cooking away slowly eating it the next day as well.

I buy big jars of herbs as they are cheaper than the small pretty ones, and I admit I am too lazy to grow my own food even though it always tastes much better so instead I look for local produce when it's in season as then its cheaper than stuff shipped in from thousands of miles away.

Cheryl

I'm gonna try this, been looking for a roller with interchangeable heads. You can add things like sun dried tomatoes - I want to recreate Barilla Plus high protein pasta, I love that stuff, more expensive but it has more body, and it's hard to overcook - I think it has chickpea flour in it among other things, but you can use Brown rice flour, etc., probably damn near anything that can be made into flour.




xssve -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 6:07:06 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Toppingfrmbottom

I am also sure that the alcohol cooks off in cooking with alcohol and just the flavor is left, but I am not supposed to drink on the meds I am on, And Daddy does not drink either, and when he can afford a dr and get his depression medication, he will not be supposed to drink on those meds either.


so we do not have a lot these things around the house , the stuff that is there, is my parents, and my dad probably would not look kindly on me wating to take his best whiskey to cook with lol.


and I will not go out and buy a bottle of port, or whiskey or rum, just to cook with, because it's a waste of money.
It doesn't cook off as much as you might think, saw something about it on the food network the other day.




Fornica -> RE: What can you knock up cheap? (1/17/2012 6:10:08 AM)

Easy recipes are my (personal) fave :)
Thanks :)
quote:

ORIGINAL: FrostedFlake

quote:

Fornica
May I add it, FF?


If you think it is good enough. It is your project. I didn't want to put you on the spot with so simple a dish it should not even be called a recipie.

Thanks for doing me the honor of asking.

Probably could check the spelling, though.

That = than. Take = takes





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