?! why ?!
Why? ag, where is the diy part?
Breakfast - Beer
Lunch - beer
snack - beer
apriteef - beer
dinner - beer
desert - beer
After dinner snack - beer
This is what the homeless guy Roberto told me was his diet.
He also said that his liver could not afford to process a single molecule of malt
anymore, so he sais he quitted. That was yesterday at 3:00 PM
Making your own food is like designing and fabricating your own DAC chip from scratch -- completely unnecessary when we have experts ready to do that for us, whether 7-11 or a fine restaurant from grubhub.
Yeah ! Digital ! Digital ! Digital !!
( use the knife consciously ! )
Analog ?
My sister is currently on one of those "tour France /Spain" & tweak your gourmet cooking holidays
Haven't seen the wine list yet
With the end of El Bullie these folks are probably at the top of the tall food chain. 585 euros for lunch for 2 and one bottle of wine (ouch!).
Arzak
Our mexican is limited. Mostly 20-30 seat places, very little English, which you would think is a good thing but every time I point at the picture on the menu, I seem to get something else, or it certainly appears that way.
Everybody knows if you want Mexican you have to go to Maine: El El Frijoles in Sargentville / Sedgwick, Maine: A Mexican food restaurant on the Blue Hill Peninsula
With the end of El Bullie these folks are probably at the top of the tall food chain. 585 euros for lunch for 2 and one bottle of wine (ouch!).
Arzak
Walnut Grove Cookery Class in Loire Valley - where foodies go to brush up on their trade-craft
French holiday cookery courses, Gourmet vacations in France
- I'm not sure I want to know the total cost including travel etc - but hey, I've been on a total of 2 or 3 Caribbean cruises that cost of couple of grand each and were memorably forgettable
Jules was a gourmet cook before this - I'm not so sure my mostly vegetarian alimentary tract can handle this coming Thanksgiving or X-Mas dinner - but I'll give it a shot just to get to the deserts.
Not food I cooked but delicious all the same: Natal Plums. They taste like a combination of a cranberry, raspberry and a plum. When ripe they take on a deep red color abd the more ripe the fruit the more pronounced the cranberry raspberry flavors.
The plant itself is basically the who's who list of traits indicating a poisonous plant. Milky sap, thorns, bright red fruit, related to other toxic plants (oleander, dogbane, etc). In reality the fruit is non-toxic and the plant is only mildly toxic at best. The flowers smell very similar to jasmine. While the thorns have a characteristic double thorn. The fruit is rather fragile and when cut will have a red or milky juice. The milkyness is a natural edible latex, similar to what is found in figs, and the amount varies from plant to plant. It's actually a commonly used decorative plant in many areas as the thorns provide a degree of intrusion protection while the flowers smell wonderful. Most people don't realize the fruit is edible.
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
The plant itself is basically the who's who list of traits indicating a poisonous plant. Milky sap, thorns, bright red fruit, related to other toxic plants (oleander, dogbane, etc). In reality the fruit is non-toxic and the plant is only mildly toxic at best. The flowers smell very similar to jasmine. While the thorns have a characteristic double thorn. The fruit is rather fragile and when cut will have a red or milky juice. The milkyness is a natural edible latex, similar to what is found in figs, and the amount varies from plant to plant. It's actually a commonly used decorative plant in many areas as the thorns provide a degree of intrusion protection while the flowers smell wonderful. Most people don't realize the fruit is edible.
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
Most people don't realize the fruit is edible.
Google Karonda (ki) Launji (= pickle/chutney, India)
Google Karonda (ki) Launji (= pickle/chutney, India)
Interesting it appears Karonda is a related species, both in the Carissa family. I guess you could change that sentence then to most Americans don't know they are edible. Another thing I like about the natal plum, it's name outside of English speaking countries is the Large Num Num.
They look like Creminis. What did you stuff with?Mushrooms weren't bad for a first try.
Num Num
Rockbiter, Neverending Story
(cameo reference in Night at the Museum : You dumb dumb gimme gum gum - YouTube
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