What Have You Cooked Recently?

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I’ve been playing around with salsa again. I got some of these peppers hoping to make a spicy red salsa, I ended up with a thick ass pepper paste that might’ve been good slathered on a low n slow crockpot pork roast. It tasted ok but not like salsa at all, so back to the drawing board on that one. I’m hoping to find some other uses for the peppers as well.
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I tried making green salsa again and actually got this one right. I boiled the tomatillos (I got regular size instead of the mini ones like last time) and peppers, then blended them with raw onion, garlic, and cilantro. I very much prefer the boiled vs the last roasted salsa I made, from now on this will be my go to. It kept its consistency overnight and wasn’t all jellyfied like the last one I made.
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I was excited bigly about nailing the green sauce. I think I’m going to try to make chilaquiles with it.
I like roasting the tomatillos and peppers when I make salsa verde - you can do it over a fire, with a torch or in the oven on a foil lined sheet pan to make cleanup easier and the roasting intensifies the flavors and makes everything a touch sweeter.
 
Roasting peppers makes everything better.

This is a pre emptive post but Sunday is dad's day and he's requesting bassomatic (tm) famous baby backs.

I actually don't do anything crazy I just focus on the prep. Ive found even in a pinch using meh bbq sauce or rub prepping the meat helps the most.
 
Finally got around to the Modernist sodium citrate mac and cheese, straight sharp cheddar was a little much but the method is the way to go for sure. Thinking next time of doing a blend with gruyere, maybe fontaine? Served with pulled pork and coleslaw for a fatass american dinner.
 
Grilled cheese but fancy for a change. I usually just do two the two slices of grilled toast, two slices of anything, even Kraft singles, and tomato soup.

Instead, this time I spread mayo (Kewpie) and basil pesto on both sides of large slices of sourdough, toasted one side, flipped, added Muenster and sliced tomatoes in that order to the toasted sides, finished with Roquefort cheese in the middle, and toasted the outside.

I'm always worried I'll end up with a "Gordon Ramsay special" fooling around with grilled cheese but it turned out great. Recommended.
 
Grilled cheese but fancy for a change. I usually just do two the two slices of grilled toast, two slices of anything, even Kraft singles, and tomato soup.

Instead, this time I spread mayo (Kewpie) and basil pesto on both sides of large slices of sourdough, toasted one side, flipped, added Muenster and sliced tomatoes in that order to the toasted sides, finished with Roquefort cheese in the middle, and toasted the outside.

I'm always worried I'll end up with a "Gordon Ramsay special" fooling around with grilled cheese but it turned out great. Recommended.
I love variations on grilled cheese sandwiches (and some people get very anal about the difference between a grilled cheese and a melt), so I approve. Sounds delicious.
 
Finally got around to the Modernist sodium citrate mac and cheese, straight sharp cheddar was a little much but the method is the way to go for sure. Thinking next time of doing a blend with gruyere, maybe fontaine? Served with pulled pork and coleslaw for a fatass american dinner.
If you really want to amp it up, you can add a teaspoon or so of Better Than Bouillon lobster base to the cheese sauce instead of adding any salt. The resulting faux lobster mac n cheese is the legit tits. Also, I really dig a 50/50 blend of sharp cheddar and gruyere or sharp cheddar and smoked Gouda.
 
If you really want to amp it up, you can add a teaspoon or so of Better Than Bouillon lobster base to the cheese sauce instead of adding any salt. The resulting faux lobster mac n cheese is the legit tits. Also, I really dig a 50/50 blend of sharp cheddar and gruyere or sharp cheddar and smoked Gouda.
There are a lot of those Better Than Bouillon that don't show up in normal stores, including the lobster and the shroom bases. My only problem is they're absurdly salty so remove ANY other salt from recipes where you use it.
 
Not sure what to call this.
Improvised scampi shrimp pasta, looks nice!

I made classic one pot tuna pasta today:
IMG_20250613_113701.webp

Edit: - side comment
I got a tube of condensed milk sitting in my fridge idk what to do with it, any recipe suggestions are welcomed.
 
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Roast beef tenderloin and pan fried mushrooms. Usually just shiitake, miitake, and oyster. I want to get lobster and some more regional ones, but I never can.
 
Made ribs for my dad on Father's Day. Then late last night made 2 cups of brown rice to last the week.

Ribs are always a huge hit and what he requested, makes me happy to do them even if fighting with silver skin can be a brat!
 
I made a really good corn chowder today. I use that frozen corn for ease and flavor, some white potatoes, beef broth, onions, and that salt-cured ham that slices like a piece of wood (which you need to cut into really small pieces.) And then finish it with a little half and half, it served four great with some quality bread.
 
Edit: - side comment
I got a tube of condensed milk sitting in my fridge idk what to do with it, any recipe suggestions are welcomed.
Sweetened condensed milk can be simmered overnight, in water, in a slow cooker, in its unopened can, and the heat slowly caramelizes the sugars into a rich sauce. This is called 'dolce de leche', you probably had it before in ice cream, and I am not sure if it's Italian or Spanish. But it tastes great on a lot of things! Bread, ice cream, yogurt, fruit, cake, idk, add it to your cereal. Glaze a city ham with it. I'm quite sure that would taste fine.

It's a key ingredient (no pun intended) in key lime pie, provided you have enough. You can make that pie with regular limes, btw.

Other uses: if you take your coffee light and sweet you can use sweetened condensed milk to achieve this if you don't have fresh milk on hand. I did that a lot during the pandemic. The shelf stability is probably why it's heavily associated with Vietnamese coffee drinks.
One of the leches in tres leches cake is sweetened condensed milk, this is likely more trouble than it's worth for you.
In Latin America I think it's often served with fresh fruit as a kind of berries n cream quick dessert. Worthy of consideration.

Checking the web I see it's often used in puddings and trifles (layered desserts that are usually cake and a type of pudding, optionally fruit/jam)
APPARENTLY its in coconut macaroons, who knew. (Not me I ain't eaten those for ten years - which is when I gave up Judaism and having to eat these macaroons as a kosher-for-Passover dessert. No regrets, at least not with regards to the macaroons.)
 
Sweetened condensed milk can be simmered overnight, in water, in a slow cooker, in its unopened can, and the heat slowly caramelizes the sugars into a rich sauce. This is called 'dolce de leche', you probably had it before in ice cream, and I am not sure if it's Italian or Spanish.
Sous vide, 185F, 12 hours. I did it in a vacuum bag, not worth the loss since you can't get it all out. The can method does fine. Just remove the label entirely, including glue, make sure it's covered by at least half an inch throughout cooking, and don't jostle it while it cools down naturally. Presumably it can explode, but I've never had that happen.
 
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