Doughnuts. I made doughnuts by hand recently, and kneading the dough. For. 30. Minutes. By. Hand. Fuck, never again. I usually don’t mind kneading dough by hand, but this was the first time I wish I had a mashine for it
Do you like that? I had it once and, meh, I don’t think I would spend any amount of energy into doing that. It’s not that it was disgusting or anything like it, but it just, yeah, well… maybe it’s not for me.
I have the Ladurée macaron cookbook and I look at it frequently, and then go buy a lesser version of the cookie and pretend I’m happy.
I recently tried my hand at a porc tenderloin Wellington, as a lower budget try out to see if I could make it.
It went surprisingly well and was really more delicious than I thought. So I think I’m ready to make a proper beef Wellington coming Xmas.
Mianjin (seitan) or vegan ramen. Both super time consuming and hard but awesome!
I too am afraid to attempt seitan. I got all the ingredients and now they sit doing nothing.
I made it three times and 2/3 were awesome
Here’s the video I followed: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yY2YN6krVtk&t=44s&pp=ygUTUG90IHRoaWNrZW5zIHNlaXRhbg%3D%3D
All food is like that to me. I only cook because otherwise I’d die of starvation. I eat to live - food has always just been fuel for me. I don’t want to put any more effort into cooking than what is absolutely necessary. If money was not an issue, then personal chef would be the first person I’d hire. Hell, if it was possible I’d hire someone to eat it for me too.
I feel this so hard. If I could just have a pill that would properly supply my body with all the nutrients and sustenance it needs I would 100% do it and then just eat one or two actual meals a week for the flavours.
Lasagne. And I hate Mondays.
Skillet lasagna is the answer you seek! Maybe.
And if you’re really feeling lazy, cook up some ravioli, put it in the skillet with the meat sauce, cover it with mozzarella, and throw it in the oven for a few minutes. Voila! Psuedo-lasagna
I just soak the sheets in water whilst making the other elements then construct otherwise I’ve found sometimes you get crunchy lasagne.
Maybe I need more wetness ;p
I don’t really lack for motivation, I’ll take on some pretty wild culinary adventures, but occasionally I run into things that I just can’t logistically make happen.
For example, nowhere in my house has the right sort of temperature/humidity to cure my own salami and such (I’ve checked,) and I just don’t have the space to squeeze in another fridge with humidity controls and such to make a curing chamber.
I’ve made my own bacon, various kinds of sausages (including smoking my own kielbasa, andouille, and hot dogs) I’ve helped butcher chickens, I’ve made beef Wellington, sushi, I’ve baked bread and cakes in a Dutch oven in a fire pit, I’ve made ice cream, homemade pierogies.
Chicken Biryani. I keep getting the ingredients and making simpler things.
Are you me? I keep doing that too
The only reason i do any cooking at all is because it’s too expensive to buy food.
I hate cooking. It takes so much effort.mainly foods that have a key ingredient that I would only use for that dish and not very often. an example being something that needs a cup of flour. can’t buy a cup of flour, gotta buy the whole goddamn 3 pounds.
Get in the habit of making bread. It’s not tough, especially when you get a system that works for you and your kitchen. There are few things in life as satisfying and wholesome as a fresh baked loaf!
https://www.kitchentreaty.com/40-cloves-of-garlic-soup/
I made it once for Thanksgiving years ago. Everyone loved it. It was a pain. Especially since I didn’t have an immersion blender.
Looks pretty easy, assuming you have the blender. I’m not even sure how you’d make this without a blender of some sort. How did you do it?
So I have this problem… I enjoy cooking and when my grandmother passed away, I inherited her recipe book and her Le Creuset dutch oven.
THEN I discovered I lived a short drive from a Le Creuset outlet store AND they have a mailing list that regularly delivers 30% to 70% off coupon deals.
So I’ll find a pan that makes me go “Oooh!” then I look for excuses to use it.
So it’s not really a lack of motivation, but rather I want people to cook for. Cooking just for me? Incredibly lazy. “More time to make and clean up than eat? I’m not making it.” Cooking for OTHER people?
Chuck roast:
Shakshuka:
Chocolate hazelnut chocolate chip cheesecake:
Beef roast:
Pork loin w/ scalloped potatoes:
Ableskievers:
Hello it’s me ur friend I’m coming over for dinner
Cooking at scale is a much, much bigger deal. Hard to maintain quality, both in terms of ingredients and end product.
There’s a good reason why school lunches are garbage. :(
Doing grilling lately so just follow the smoke. :)
Ableskievers
Where are you from? I didn’t realize anyone outside Denmark or maybe some nordic countries made these. :)
They’re definitely a thing in the US
From Oregon, but we have a large Scandinavian population here.
Holy fuck that chuck roast looks good
It was really good, with bacon, veggies, braised in Malbec wine and Grand Marnier.
I found 2 recipes I couldn’t decide between so I just combined them. ;)
1 pack of bacon, diced and cooked in olive oil on medium high until the edges were brown, then removed.
In the same pan, 2 diced carrots, 2 diced celery stalks, 2 diced Walla Walla sweet onions. Cooked on medium high until carmaelized, then removed.
3.37 pound boneless chuck roast. Patted dry, heavily salted and peppered, seared on one side for 5 minutes, flipped and then seared on the other side for 5 minutes and removed.
Added back 1/2 cup Grand Marnier and 2 cups of Malbec Wine. Deglazed the pan scraping up all the brown bits.
Put the bacon back in, put the veggies back in, stirred until well distributed. Added bay leaves, thyme and rosemary, several cloves of minced garlic, topped with the meat.
Brought to a boil then placed in a pre-heated 325° oven for 3 hours.
After 3 hours, beef was to temp and easily shreddable. (Finally! A reason to use the meat claws!) Resting on stove top while I cook some pasta to go with it.
Pasta was super simple. Boiled water and salt, cooked a bag of egg noodles for 8 or 9 minutes. Drained, removed, then melted a stick of butter in the pot, added a small container of heavy cream, added rosemary and thyme, brought it to a simmer then popped the pasta back in and cooked a couple of minutes.
protip : you can cook anything. maybe you don’t cook it well the first time. but if you’re not completely freeballin it, and are following an established well reviewed recipe, once you cook it poorly or not to your taste, you can always make notes, and adjust the next time. be fearless in your experiments, there’s a lot of freedom (and cost savings) in learning how to cook what you like to eat, the way you like to eat it, at home.
Cubanos. I want to really, really bad. But I know I will never go through that.