I guess I'll have to settle for chef's samples of the oriental inspired pork. 🙂
Dang, that look's tasty.
jeff
Thank you. Quick fried to blacken and then slow roasted to heat through. Can't wait for tomorrow when it's actually ready. 🙂
Ever so humble -- took a dozen baking potatoes, peeled and run through the mandoline -- add a can of Campbell French Onion soup and a little milk, and cooked along with a pork roast @275F for a couple hours, when tender add gruyere and parmesan and zap under the broiler. Simplicity is good.
SW: don't eat the lettuce over there unless you brought Cipro.
SW: don't eat the lettuce over there unless you brought Cipro.
Jack, sounds great but no pictures? 
Scott that looks great but, but...is it DIY? Please say yes and tell us more about the snake.

Scott that looks great but, but...is it DIY? Please say yes and tell us more about the snake.
We got a great bundle this week from our CSA (that's a farm which delivers weekly food shares, whatever from the farm is ready that week). We had lots of cabbage, onion, and carrots, so I shredded the carrot and cabbage, heated up the pan extra hot, and tossed in ghee, dried chiles, cumin seeds, mustard seed, then after the smell came up, the onion. Got it singed, then added the cabbage and carrot. Lots of stir frying until there was plenty of singe and the cabbage softened, then finished with salt and lemon juice. Really simple. Unbelievably good. Indian, but with hints of wok hey.
This was our healthy dish to make up for lunch (a fried eggplant, ricotta, and tomato casserole-ish dish, a bit like eggplant parmesan, but with no breading).
This was our healthy dish to make up for lunch (a fried eggplant, ricotta, and tomato casserole-ish dish, a bit like eggplant parmesan, but with no breading).
Even Jumbo paper towels for the clean-up-- (anyone remember Mr. Creosote!?)The food judges strike me as more than qualified
Don
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