OT: The Official Soup, Bread, and Cheese Thread | Page 9 | The Boneyard

OT: The Official Soup, Bread, and Cheese Thread

Waquoit

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I have been making about 2 loaves of Jim Lahey's no knead bread per week. Crazy easy, takes 2 active minutes and delicious.
It that the one you bake in a cast iron dutch oven?
 

Waquoit

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Yeah. Any dutch oven or large cast iron pan works.
Santa didn't bring me the dutch oven I wanted saying we didn't have the space for it. But I didn't realize it would work in a CI skillet. I'll have to investigate further.
 
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I know there are a few Atliens on here. Mitch's Meat and Fish on Crossville Rd in Roswell GA makes some ridiculous soups. Grabbed a large container of his cheesy steak soup today. The most tender cuts of meat in this stuff. It's super thick and is definitely enough for a meal.
 
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LOL sweet Troll.

That is actually the best bread. And better than the LOL sourdough mr Handsome is trying to pimp in the OP.
Poppy and Rye Bakery in the Taftville section of Norwich makes those 5lb. Russian ryes that you can never find anymore. Similar to the ones from the old Colchester Bakery. Nice.
 
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Santa didn't bring me the dutch oven I wanted saying we didn't have the space for it. But I didn't realize it would work in a CI skillet. I'll have to investigate further.

I began making this recipe with a nice, big Le Creuset dutch oven but the last ten times I have been using a 12" cast iron pan with aluminum foil as the "lid." Works great both ways.
 

temery

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You sound like my grandmother. We had garbage pickup once a week, and trash one day a week. Our garbage pail was always empty. Leftovers and scraps from one meal were used the next day. Wednesday was Sheppard's Pie - the best table scrap meal going.

Soup for me is a labor of love. I save the discards of vegetable prep, nothing rotten ever, but more like ends of broccoli, carrots, onions etc., garlic bottoms, anything I think will lend flavor and nutrients. Put it in a zip lock bag, keep it in your freezer and continue to add to it. I add to this all bones from the table and freeze these also. Once you have two bags worth, good size bags, maybe 2qt or so x two you are ready to make a good stock. Simmer/boil on low for a day or so, more like two, adding water when necessary in a 7.5qt pot. Move it around as much as you want with a big spoon. Take your time, when you think you're done, most things in this pot are unidentifiable, you've cooked it down.

Strain this a couple of times thru a wire screen strainer regular width, allow to get chilled overnight, then remove top layer of fat which has congealed. You are ready to proceed. If it is bitter at all maybe from chicken bones add some sugar to taste, not much.

At this point based on the flavor of your stock decide what kind of soup you want to make. Select a meat, select your veggies, lentils or beans, rice or barley, potatoes, etc. Flavor your meat by sauteing it first. Add your beans and harder vegetables first, then later your quartered mushrooms, noodles etc.

Know your timing. Actually making the soup, the cooking of it, really on depends your slowest cooking ingredient but there are no exacts. The longer it cooks without making mush out of your veggies the better. Better flavors, better broth. If using beef to cook take your time til it's tender. Add any spices you think you might need. Don't F it up, it won't need much at all.

The stock is so vitamin and nutrient rich it is a blessing. Very healthy, liquid gold. Very flavorful. Good stock is a culinary delight.

There are only 3 ways to create flavor in soup. The stock, the ingredients you add, spices. Stock is the backbone, hard to get a really great soup without it.

You have to have a natural feel for how much of each ingredient you add, I don't use recipes. When finishing broth/water level should be about one inch from top. Plenty of soup to go around, freeze some for other days.

Delicious! Make it a little different each time. For vegetable soup use no bones or meat. Same principles.
 

Hans Sprungfeld

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Kreplach. Likely made with a bottom feeding Jew chicken.
Time to disambiguate a bit:

Are you referring to a "bottom feeding Jew"-type of chicken or a "bottom feeding chicken" about whom your mother amusingly uses Jew rather than Jewish as an adjective?
 
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8893

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Any cottage cheese fans here? It's a staple for me and I've recently gotten hooked on a new brand, Muuna:

0085649100605_0_A1C1_0600.png
 

Hans Sprungfeld

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Give me a good old fashioned grilled cheese...one actually grilled in butter on a flat grill, cheddar on slices of white bread.

Screw all of those artisanal, three cheese sandwiches, on over thick Ukranian sourdough, with a touch of hubris and priced accordingly.
Screw hubris. Many sandwiches with better ingredients taste better.
 
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Any cottage cheese fans here? It's a staple for me and I've recently gotten hooked on a new brand, Muuna:

0085649100605_0_A1C1_0600.png
You should checkout cottage cheese and noodle recipes. Used to have that on occasion growing up. Another comfort food.
 
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You sound like my grandmother. We had garbage pickup once a week, and trash one day a week. Our garbage pail was always empty. Leftovers and scraps from one meal were used the next day. Wednesday was Sheppard's Pie - the best table scrap meal going.
My father was born in 1928 and grew up during the Great Depression and the years shortly after, the 30's really. I'm actually just seeking flavor, but for that older generation, kitchen frugality was a real thing.
 

Hans Sprungfeld

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My father was born in 1928 and grew up during the Great Depression and the years shortly after, the 30's really. I'm actually just seeking flavor, but for that older generation, kitchen frugality was a real thing.
In the making of good soup, frugality and flavor meet in the middle as allies.
 
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It’s a very divisive food. It either disgusts you or you love it.
I love it. Kind of the perfect food. Tastes great, fills me up, cheap, and great source of protein.
 

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