There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

cooking

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

dolessrem , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?

I love cookmate. There’s an ad free version that I happily pay something nominal annually ($20?)

The import from website works the vast majority of the time (sometimes you gotta fiddle the steps getting condensed to one or something), the screen stays on while the app is up and it has a lot of custom tags/categories that’s helpful when meal prepping. Been using for at least the last five years and I’m a pretty active cook/baker - I use it just about every time I’m referencing a recipe

turkalino , in [QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

I got tricked into trying stinky tofu in Taiwan before the smell was able to hit me and I admit I liked it, but not enough to make up for the smell once it did hit me.

Also tried horse nigiri in Japan. Definitely the gamiest thing I’ve ever tasted

negativeyoda ,

Stinky tofu is delicious. Lives up to its name tho

turkalino , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

Haven’t tried it myself but I saw this on awesome-selfhosted and it looks pretty nice: docs.tandoor.dev

jemikwa ,

Tandoor is good. A friend set up an instance with Authelia attached so my group of friends each gets a login. We add our fav recipes and can share them with each other.
It’s a little finicky with the ingredients entry, but it does make scaling recipes a lot better since it’ll do the calculations for you. You don’t need to know markdown to make the recipe pretty, it just works

rompe ,

I’m hosting my own instance and I love it. Import from several recipe-sharing sites works very well. Import from Instagram would be great, but Meta tries to make this as hard as possible.

sbv , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?

I use ones from recipe books. I like that the recipe is in a book because

  1. The screen doesn’t turn off when I’m cooking.
  2. The recipe usually fits on a page, so I don’t need to touch it after I start.
  3. I can scribble my modifications on it with a pencil.
  4. I mark the good ones with torn up bits of paper sticking out.
  5. I like having a bunch of recipe books around. Most of them were gifts, so cooking from them reminds me of who I got them from.

I’ve tried bookmarks to websites, copying recipes to Google Docs/Keep. It feels like work. Worse, when I’m cooking, I need a way to keep my phone/tablet screen on. I’m usually listening to a podcast or using a timer on my phone, so then I need to switch apps, etc.

ShaneIsGames , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?
@ShaneIsGames@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I’m currently using AnyList, a combined grocery list and recipe app, to store everything.

Should that ever shut down, I’d probably move everything over to Notion.

NovaPrime ,
@NovaPrime@lemmy.ml avatar

Same here. Recently started using the meal planning option as well to track everything and its been great

xtr0n , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?

I’ve been using One Note. I had the same issues you had with paper and recipe cards and I happened to be using MS office a lot in general. It’s handy since I can use it from my phone or laptop and can share with family. I copy internet recipes to One Note since they can be available offline and since sometimes recipes on random sites disappear.

Converting to something I can self host would be cool.

I don’t think I’d ever use meal planning and shopping list features. It would be nice to have an easy way to generate nutrition info for my invented or modified recipes.

xtr0n ,

Oh, and I do like flipping through cookbooks for ideas. When I see something I like in a cookbook, I use my phone to scan it into One Note.

It can be a little awkward flipping between recipes when I’m making multiple things from recipes at the same time. My setup is good enough but not great

Lauchs , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?

I’m lazy and use the paprika app. It’s imperfect but does have a grocery list, downloads recipes and automatically removes the fluff and allows adding tags (so I have tags like slow cooker, vegetarian, chicken thighs etc.)

TheBananaKing , in [Discussion] How do you store/organize your recipes?

These days, just google docs.

If I see an interesting recipe online, I’ll rewrite it without all the fluff and discussion, in a standalone document I can have up on my phone while I cook.

If it’s deemed worthy, I stick it into the master document, called ‘how to make food’ - a document I have shared with my 17yo.

Hobart_the_GoKart ,

Same. I copy and paste the recipe from the website and cut out any fluff.

I have a recipe folder on drive that’s further decided by meal type (dinner, breakfast, sides & snacks, desserts, etc.). The dinner folder (biggest) also has subfolders for meat types (chicken, pork, veg, etc.).

I usually have everything sorted by when I last opened it, to try and keep a fresh rotation. The recipe folder has a permanent link on our tablet that lives in the kitchen.

This works great, because I can share a recipe pretty quickly if I’m talking about it with someone. Also other family members can open the folder on the tablet and start or help with meal prep.

spittingimage , in [QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?
@spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

Chocolate covered crickets. What made them interesting is they tasted nothing like chocolate and I kinda suspect the person who gave them to me of having sucked the coating off them first.

And the legs were scratchy on the way down.

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

Scratchy 😖

evasive_chimpanzee , in [QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?

Haggis is delicious, and when I first had it, I assumed I wouldn’t like it, but had to try, only to really love it.

A lot of stinky cheeses taste really good, but if you’ve never given then a chance, it’s hard to make yourself eat. Humboldt Fog is a favorite of mine, but basically none of my peers will try it.

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

I had that cheese a long time ago and remember enjoying it. Strong but delicious.

Alexc , in [QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?

Chapulines (Crickets/small grashopper type things) in Mexico - Grilled as street food with a little lime just and chili - Very tasty indeed.

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

Ooo, yes! Been wanting to try these in a taco, or just by themselves.

evasive_chimpanzee ,

I had them recently ground up on something, and I thought it was just tajin. With chili and zime zest, it basically ends up just a more savory tajin. Not sure I would have given them the chance if I knew what I was eating, lol

Redje , in [QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?

I have no idea where it comes from but here I go : A long time ago, we were invited at some German friends place (I am french) for dinner and they served us a weird unidentifiable “mud” that we did not thought much of.

Well I like to try new food so I dug in and wouldn’t you know it I still eat it today and everyone I made some for told me that it was amazingly good for what it is.

The recipe is simple : For a can of tune, you add a box of creamy cheese (I don’t know if there is a word in English, if you look for “Philadelphia” on the internet, you will find it) and some finely cut dried tomatoes. Be careful to strain everything (remove the water from the tuna, from the cheese and remove most of the oil of the tomatoes) and mix everything together. Salt, pepper and you are good to go. I recommend eating it with plain crackers as the preparation is already salty.

Unfortunately I don’t have the name as we did not understood what our friends told us and simply named it “carabistouille”

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

That actually sounds quite tasty! One of those foods that tastes the opposite of how it looks. (Balut is very much like that)

evasive_chimpanzee ,

That box of creamy cheese is literally called “cream cheese”, at least in American English. Philadelphia is the most popular brand name.

thorbot ,

Tuna, cream cheese, and chopped tomatoes. That sounds like tuna spread. I like to make mine with tuna, cream cheese, freshly chopped chives and chopped pickles. Great thing to spread on crackers.

wfh ,

I call mine “rillettes de thon” or “rillettes de sardines” depending on which canned fish I put in them. Also, I love to twist them with chopped cilantro, chopped shallots and lime juice or smoked paprika (pimientón de la Vera).

FuglyDuck , in It's getting to be soup season. What are your favorite soups?
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

For some inexplicable reason, all my soups turn into stews. It’s a mystery, really.

In any case I’ve been experimenting with chili- cooking off andouille sausage for its fond, starting with a sofrito sort of thing using fine chopped onion and celery, garlic towards the end, ginger. deglaze with booze- I’ve been settling to burbon, but white wine was fairly neutral. Enough water for the sofrito to cook down into almost nothingness, followed by the pepper purée.

That’s been a mix of sweet peppers, serano and smoked red chili’s that I’ve grown fresh, mostly aiming for a more mild heat.

Once that’s hot and simmering and cohesive, it’s the beef, I use rump cut into smallish pieces, that I first marinate with fish sauce and some extra booze. (Don’t worry the fish sauce only smells awful until you cook it.) some lime and orange zest, and lime juice. simmer until heavenly.

Other stews are chicken stew (lemon and white wine stock cooks down wonderfully. Add what ever vegetables you’d like- carrots, celery, onion, maybe green beans.). This finds its way into pot pie as often as not;

the GF’s go to is mushrooms soup. I’ll also go to town with a creamy pea soup if I can get my hands on a ham hock.

PetDinosaurs OP ,

Soups/stews exist on a spectrum. Most of reality is that way.

For soups: On one end it’s plain water. On the other end it’s a boiled potato or hamburger.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

I mean, yeah, that’s kinda the joke?

Though I personally- and without any real authority- divide the line based on how it behaves on a plate (well, hypothetically,)- if the stock/broth would stay clinging on the topping/filling/whateveritscalled rather than just spilling out and making a hypothetical mess…. It’s a stew

dirthawker0 , in [QUESTION] Ceramic coated nonstick pans

I’ve had this pan for about a year and really like it. I do tend to turn up the heat pretty high (though never the max) and so far so good. I also run stuff through the dishwasher which is often a no-no with nonstick and there are a few spots on the underside but the inside is fine.

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

Nice! Thank you! That sounds fairly durable.

jordanlund , in [QUESTION] Ceramic coated nonstick pans
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

Ceramic non-stick works well from my experience, but my go to non-stick (besides enameled cast iron) is the Impact series from Bialetti:

a.co/d/9fc7Ttu

About the same price as a good ceramic set, the only drawback is you need an adapter plate to use them on an induction stovetop. Gas or electric is golden.

youtu.be/30CdnBWuOpc

Plus, Bialetti is a known brand:

www.bialetti.com/it_en/la-storia

TheGiantKorean OP ,
@TheGiantKorean@lemmy.world avatar

These look nice, thanks for the links! Some reviews say the coating comes off after a bit, but I guess that’ll happen with anything. These don’t look like teflon - any idea what the coating is made of?

jordanlund ,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

It’s not a coating per se, it’s an aluminum pan that’s been sandblasted to form micro-divots all over like a golfball. The texture keeps things from sticking.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines