What Have You Cooked Recently?

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
I used to make a filling for burritos like that

The secret to mine is i add some of the brine from the jalapenos jar. I use the plastic cheese slices when i make it but used a block of cheddar for the lasagne. Thought id be safe if i kept it at a low heat but it couldnt handle too much brine lol

I hate the jars of doritos nacho cheese, they taste like cheese flavoured mayonaise.
La Preferida makes a not terrible canned nacho cheese sauce. There's also Rico's but it's definitely second-best. You can (and should) use actual cheese in your lasagna cheese sauce, but I'd recommend adding sodium citrate/American cheese to the sauce to keep it from breaking if you're going to be integrating a lot of liquid like pickled jalapeno brine.
 
I made some amazing microwave nachos recently.

I layered seasoned ground beef and shredded cheese on yellow corn tortilla chips and nuked the plate until the cheese melted. A generous drizzle of taco sauce on top finished it off perfectly.
Put the cheese in a cup with a splash of whole milk and microwave that. It makes a nice liquid cheese more akin to nacho cheese.

Also, most canned nacho cheese is absolutely fucking trash. Canned queso Blanco is typically way better quality and taste imo.
 
I made some amazing microwave nachos recently.
I layered seasoned ground beef and shredded cheese on yellow corn tortilla chips and nuked the plate until the cheese melted. A generous drizzle of taco sauce on top finished it off perfectly.
I used to do this, but microwaving the corn chips always made the kitchen smell like popcorn (and often left them a bit soft). So I nuked just the meat/cheese/sauce, and flipped onto a bed of chips.

Since that liked to glue itself to the plate, I tried nuking meat/cheese/sauce til nearly done, inverting it onto another plate of chips, and nuking that for 10 seconds or so to release without overdoing the chips.

That worked pretty well, but obviously the correct way is to not be lazy and just do it on a cookie sheet in the oven.
 
How do you store it? I do always have some teriyaki and worchester sauce in my fridge, but I only use them maybe bi-monthly.
Rule of thumb is that keeping it in the fridge is best to preserve the flavor if you don't use it very often, but if you (like me) use it frequently and go through a bottle quickly, the pantry is fine. The salt content is a great preservative

I made more tuna things, half with jalapeño, half without. I really wanted some radish slices, but the store near me didn't have any and I didn't want to drive anywhere.
20251119_163703.jpg
 
Two fried eggs sunny sided

Not because i was hungry, but my mom was about to get scammed online into buying non stick pans and told me that it was impossible to make eggs without them sticking to our pan

I showed her that with the right temp every pan is non sticky, and save her some money on the process
 
Making a modestly sized batch of chicken stock because I'm out and am having friends over tomorrow.

1000004803.jpg

Menu is currently a spatchcocked chicken roasted over some aromatics, carrots and Brussels sprouts along with mashed potatoes and chicken gravy and I want that gravy to fuckin slap, so here we are.

EDIT: just ran that thru my chinois and that's gonna be a tasty gravy. The stock is already a little gluey to the touch.
 
Last edited:
Making a modestly sized batch of chicken stock because I'm out and am having friends over tomorrow.

View attachment 8195263

Menu is currently a spatchcocked chicken roasted over some aromatics, carrots and Brussels sprouts along with mashed potatoes and chicken gravy and I want that gravy to fuckin slap, so here we are.

EDIT: just ran that thru my chinois and that's gonna be a tasty gravy. The stock is already a little gluey to the touch.
1763716712668.png
how have you managed such meme magic to have a fat Canadian brand pot

I made some homemade Basil Pesto Pasta, with some scrimps. I tried using butter this time instead of olive oil as well as fresh lemon juice. I'd give it a.... 10 outta 10, pretty gud
 
Upside-down Pumpkin Pie À La Mode
IMG_9712.jpeg

I made dessert to bring to work, and half them are vegan or gluten free or whatever so I summoned the powers of alchemy to make a fancy pumpkin dessert.
First I made a pumpkin jelly with agar. Pumpkin, maple syrup, spices, oat milk. Blend in the agar while it’s cold. Boil and decant to your mold, I used a loaf pan.
Then I made the crust out of pecans, brown sugar, and salt. Ground it and put it on top of the jelly and slapped that bitch under the broiler.
Served over vegan coconut vanilla ice cream I got at the store.
Honestly, it’s damn good and I quite like the texture of agar based jellies. I’ll workshop the recipe a little more but it was a hit and super easy to make, yet fancy enough to look like you know what you’re doing.
 
Tomorrow marks Thanksgiving pt.I in my family so I am obligated to make pimento cheese dip once again. I have shared the recipe before. Now I have a picture:
Pimento.jpg
Any crackers will do, Bauducco Toast is ideal and works out to half the cost for the same amount of Melba. I also made "Secret Cornbread" mostly to shock people with it including a whole jar of Cheez Whiz (contains no cheese). The family I see tomorrow prefers their cornbread extra done and I will probably shave a couple minutes off at Thanksgiving pt.II. Depending on how it is received I am tempted to try the other recipe that calls for a bottle of ranch instead of Cheez Whiz at pt.III.
CornBread.jpg
-3 eggs
-2 boxes of Jiffy Cornbread mix
-1 15oz jar of Cheez Whiz
Mix, 13x9 pan, 20-25 minutes at 375
 
Had some friends over for game night and made dinner as mentioned above. Everything got demolished to the point that I didn't have any leftovers, which was pretty surprising for the amount of food and number of people involved. I do love hosting a nice dinner party.
 
Last edited:
I made borscht, taco rice (it’s an Okinawan thing so I was told, I am not Okinawan but a family member spent a lot of time there so I learned to make it for them) and a chocolate cake (the cake is for another family member’s birthday) today. I meant to get to making Roselle/grape jelly too but the day got away from me and I got busy doing other stuff.

I make food all day long, pretty much every single day and typically I cook Eastern European food and Southern American food. I make it all from scratch from stuff I grow mostly in my yard or real, old school ingredients. If I’m not a total bore and don’t get negrates for my rambling, I’ll post more if y’all want to hear about it.

Edited to add that y’all make some amazingly delicious looking food! My peasant food hangs its head in shame!
 
Last edited:
Garlic bread mozzarella grilled cheese (on homemade mini baguette) with pesto chicken soup. I have no recipe for the soup but it was just seasoned and seared chicken thighs, diced zucchini, sauteed chopped spinach, parm, mozz, chicken stock, heavy cream, a bit more seasoning, fusilli, and a hefty spoonful of homemade pesto at the end.
 
Shrimp and mussel pasta!

Shell the shrimp and boil the shells for shrimp water (if you're using pre-shelled, don't worry about it; I just hate wasting the shells if I have them). Cook pasta in salted shrimp water. Reserve some starchy, shrimpy pasta water to add to your sauce.

The sauce is sautéed onion and garlic, olive oil, juice of 1-2 lemons and a lemon's worth of zest, tomatoes, bell pepper, sweet paprika, smoked paprika, parsley, thyme, tarragon, and rosemary (I used a splash of dry white wine and chicken Better Than Bullion as well). Salt and pepper to taste. Let the sauce simmer while you pan-sear the shrimps, then set aside. If you are using in-shell mussels, stir those in when the sauce is about done and then turn off the heat once the shells have opened. If you're using shelled mussels, add them to the sauce along with your seared shrimp (even when frozen, shelled mussels take all of 40 seconds to thaw in the hot sauce). Once the sauce is done, add the shrimp. Serve over pasta of choice, garnish as you please (Italian parsley is my go-to; I also sprinkled parm, grinder pepper, and a little diced tomato on). Toast up some bread, too, if you want to sop up the sauce.

Sorry to give a recipe which doesn't specify herb/spice quantities; I genuinely just add until it tastes right.
20251122_153859.jpg
 
Last edited:
I was given a sack of slightly sub-par clementines so the only thing for it was to make a hefty batch of marmalade and share it around to my coworkers. Homemade marmalade on homemade toast is a special kind of treat.

1000002856.jpg
 
Last edited:
I made borscht, taco rice (it’s an Okinawan thing so I was told, I am not Okinawan but a family member spent a lot of time there so I learned to make it for them) and a chocolate cake (the cake is for another family member’s birthday) today. I meant to get to making Roselle/grape jelly too but the day got away from me and I got busy doing other stuff.

I make food all day long, pretty much every single day and typically I cook Eastern European food and Southern American food. I make it all from scratch from stuff I grow mostly in my yard or real, old school ingredients. If I’m not a total bore and don’t get negrates for my rambling, I’ll post more if y’all want to hear about it.

Edited to add that y’all make some amazingly delicious looking food! My peasant food hangs its head in shame!
Post up that Eastern European food. It's woefully underrepresented in this thread and I suck too bad at cooking to make it.
 
creme brulee
well, "cooked" is relative, it was premade custard and a packet of sugar from aldi
I toss in a bit of extra sugar then crack lighter it up with a butane torch
I should learn how to make the custard myself, this shit's good
I tried making this once. Let’s just say I made pudding instead :shit-eating:
 
Back
Top Bottom