tjr wrote:Yeah, launching has been a hard skill for me to master. Are you flouring? cornmealing? farinaing? the bottom? Wood peel/metal?
ronnie_suburban wrote:A fairly faithful rendition of char kway teow . . .
...Sadly, fresh rice noodles are not available anywhere near me, so these are actually made with potato. One of these days, I'm going to make them myself . . . but today was not that day....
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JoelF wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:A fairly faithful rendition of char kway teow . . .
...Sadly, fresh rice noodles are not available anywhere near me, so these are actually made with potato. One of these days, I'm going to make them myself . . . but today was not that day....
=R=
The May/June 2025 Cook's Illustrated has a recipe for the noodles as part of a Beef Chow Fun recipe. It's on my short list of things to try to do.
budrichard wrote:I actually found that chow fun noodles were easy to make.
You need a big steamer and glass pan that fits in the steamer.
Rice/Tapioca flour and water.
Make a slurry of rice/Tapioca Flour from a recipe and pour the slurry into the glass pan and set in steamer. Check until the slurry is set, remove pan and cut noodles.
The problem part is getting enough heat into your WOK to sear the chow fun!
-Richard
The GP wrote:Forgive my ignorance but is fioretto different from cauliflower?
ronnie_suburban wrote:It is a variety cauliflower, which I first read about here, in this 2021 post by bw77 . . .
viewtopic.php?p=565540#p565540
I like that the florets are more elongated and looser than in the heads of cauliflower I usually see. They hold sauce and other ingredients better. They stir-fry better. I typically get it at Richwell Market in Morton Grove but I've also seen it at H-Mart.
ronnie_suburban wrote:The GP wrote:Forgive my ignorance but is fioretto different from cauliflower?
It is a variety cauliflower, which I first read about here, in this 2021 post by bw77 . . .
viewtopic.php?p=565540#p565540
I like that the florets are more elongated and looser than in the heads of cauliflower I usually see. They hold sauce and other ingredients better. They stir-fry better. I typically get it at Richwell Market in Morton Grove but I've also seen it at H-Mart.
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ronnie_suburban wrote:[
When I watched Jim's video I was like "Damn! Why didn't I think of that?" It really was a delicious and very simple take . . .
3 EASY Poverty Pastas That Also Taste Amazing
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zorkmead wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:When I watched Jim's video I was like "Damn! Why didn't I think of that?" It really was a delicious and very simple take . . .
3 EASY Poverty Pastas That Also Taste Amazing
We had this for dinner tonight - delicious and simple as promised - I was pleasantly surprised at how creamy it seemed . . . Thanks again for sharing
Northcenter Joe wrote:I have really enjoyed watching your various pizza efforts. Tangentially related, but the last episode of Top Chef challenged the chefs to make creative pizzas and it was surprising to me and my wife how much they struggled with it. Hats off to you as it really seems like a tricky thing to master.
budrichard wrote:I'm in Oak Brook and then Arlington Heights this Saturday morning and will stop at the Caputo's in Mount Prospect on my way home to pick up some Caputo's 00 flour.
I cannot find any KA Pizza Flour near me.
Hopefully I will get your results!
-Richard
budrichard wrote:Going to Costco today!
Thanks for the info!
Inside/outside can be a big difference in price along with grading.
Sometimes Fresh Farms has Choice outside on sale in a bag.
You do your own tramming.
Prime outside from Joseph's Meat is sublime.
Most Supermercado skirt is Select Grade and can be put through a tenderizer if you want but I have found the tastes of cleaning residue many times.
-Richard
ronnie_suburban wrote:If you are a Costco person, you can get 5-pound bags of the KA 00 flour there for about $8/bag. I've purchased it at the Mettawa store.
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With some new, 2025 crop jasmine rice.
Cathy2 wrote:With some new, 2025 crop jasmine rice.
How much water did you use with this rice? I always find it tricky at least the first few times.
Cathy2
budrichard wrote:Going to Costco today!
Thanks for the info!
Inside/outside can be a big difference in price along with grading.
Sometimes Fresh Farms has Choice outside on sale in a bag.
You do your own tramming.
Prime outside from Joseph's Meat is sublime.
Most Supermercado skirt is Select Grade and can be put through a tenderizer if you want but I have found the tastes of cleaning residue many times.
-Richard