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Good dinner recipes?

Forums › Forums › General Discussions › Open Topic › Good dinner recipes?

  • This topic has 17 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 21 years, 4 months ago by Rich.
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 18 total)
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  • January 23, 2004 at 9:31 am #46644
    stephe
    Participant

      Last night I was trying to think of something to make for dinner, however I realized I am totally sick of everything I know how to make. Does anybody have any decent recipes they would like to share?

      January 23, 2004 at 7:51 pm #98506
      Bucky Ramone
      Participant

        ….got this recipe from a friend of mine, it was quite hard to find that ‘Goya Recaito’ over here, but thanks to a couple of friends I got it in the end, and it makes the difference…. 8)

        ARROZ SIN POLLO (I think it means ‘chicken with rice’ :roll: )
        4 servings

        Try it some night when it’s too late to cook but you’re hungry anyway.

        1/4 cup olive oil
        3 tablespoons chopped onion
        1 clove garlic, minced
        1 small cube of salt pork (1â€

        January 25, 2004 at 6:16 pm #98507
        Bucky Ramone
        Participant

          Nice & easy:

          Mafioso-style Chicken Parmigiana

          You will need:
          2 cups Italian style bread crumbs
          1 large egg
          4 large boneless, skinless fresh chicken breasts
          A bunch of parmigiana cheese (shaker variety)
          1 large ball of salted, fresh mozzarella cheese
          Some chopped garlic
          Olive oil (extra virgin)
          Italian seasoning (basil, oregano and rosemary)
          Sauce, gravy of choice

          To Prepare
          1. Wash and seperate chicken breast. With a sharp knife cut in half horizontally (cutlet style). Press flat with base of your hand.
          2. Beat egg in bowl
          3. Dip chicken cutlets into egg, roll in mixture of bread crumbs, seasoning and parmigiana cheese
          4. Heat liberal amount of olive oil (1/4 inch) in frying pan until spitting. Add chicken (careful! Just 6 or 7 minutes per side) until chicken is deep golden brown. (Then drain on paper towel)
          5. Arrange chicken in casserole dish & nearly cover with sauce/gravy of your choice.
          6. Slice mozzarella ball as thin as desired with knife, arrange it over chicken/gravy.
          7. Cook in preheated 375 degree oven for 30–40 minutes or until cheese is melted and bubbling and slightly brown at edges
          8. Serve with pasta
          9. Eat in silence alone or with loved ones
          10. After meal, drink coffee (strong), leave empty plate where it lies and mysteriously get up and disappear into the city night

          February 11, 2004 at 3:22 am #98508
          Bucky Ramone
          Participant

            Pizzagra….

            :aliensmile: :twisted:

            March 25, 2004 at 8:08 am #98509
            Bucky Ramone
            Participant

              From ‘the Times’:

              Scots hail the fried chocolate sandwich
              By Gillian Harris, Scotland Correspondent

              FROM the country that invented the deep-fried Mars bar comes another culinary triumph: the deep-fried chocolate sandwich.

              At 1,000 calories apiece, Scotland’s latest delicacy promises to be one of the world’s fattiest snacks.

              The sandwich first appeared on the menu at an Edinburgh hotel, selling for £4.95, but is now available throughout the country for diners with a sweet tooth and a cast-iron stomach.

              Debbie Walter, food and beverage manager of the Ramada Jarvis Hotel, where the sandwiches were introduced, said that they had proved popular with Scots, who favoured fattening desserts over fresh fruit and low-fat options.

              “The sandwiches are delicious. Also, if we sold only fresh-fruit salads we wouldn’t have any customers,â€

              April 6, 2004 at 8:11 pm #98510
              Carl.
              Participant
                "stephe" wrote:
                Last night I was trying to think of something to make for dinner, however I realized I am totally sick of everything I know how to make. Does anybody have any decent recipes they would like to share?

                UGH!!!! I hate when the happens.. It is a total bummer… I then go CRAZY scouring our cookbooks, magazines, and Internet for anything that sounds good (You wouldn’t believe the lack of repetition here).

                Then, if that goes horribly, then it is time to hit the bookstore and see if there is a magazine (preferably) or cookbook which may tickle our fancy.. of course, this can get expensive. :)

                April 14, 2004 at 1:25 pm #98511
                AGAP
                Participant

                  Sometimes I like to eat… :P :wink:

                  May 5, 2004 at 6:49 pm #98512
                  Bucky Ramone
                  Participant

                    Woman buys 10,000 chocolate bars

                    [img]http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40116000/jpg/_40116913_marsbar203.jpg[/img]

                    10,656 of them, actually :lol:

                    May 5, 2004 at 7:17 pm #98513
                    AGAP
                    Participant

                      :shock: :!:

                      May 18, 2004 at 6:38 am #98514
                      Bucky Ramone
                      Participant

                        From the New York Daily News: A 1000$ omelet!
                        (If you want to make it yourself see the recipe at the bottom of the article) :lol: :mrgreen: :aliensmile:

                        Le Grand Omelet
                        1G entrée no yolk on Parker Meridien menu

                        By JOE DZIEMIANOWICZ
                        DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

                        Le Parker Meridien hotel features the thousand-dollar omelet.

                        Culinary craziness has reached new heights in New York with the debut of the $1,000 omelet!

                        Le Parker Meridien hotel on W. 57th St. recently added the bank-breaking breakfast dish to its menu, charging patrons what it costs to buy about 200 omelets at your local greasy spoon.

                        But the so-called Zillion Dollar Frittata is apparently no ordinary omelet, consisting, as it does, of a mix of eggs, lobster and lots of caviar. It’s so exclusive, so spectacular and so expensive that … nobody’s ordered one yet.

                        "Every six months we come up with new dishes for the menu," said Steven Pipes, the hotel’s general manager. "We don’t like things to get stale."

                        For penny pinchers, Norma’s, the restaurant in Le Parker Meridien, offers an economy version of the frittata, a crustless quiche that contains 1 ounce of sevruga caviar.

                        It costs $100.

                        The supersize version of the frittata boasts 10 ounces of the pricey caviar. Along with its $1,000 price tag comes a written challenge on the menu: "Norma dares you to expense this."

                        As with several other menu items, the frittata is highlighted in red ink as one of "Norma’s recommendations."

                        When Pipes and Norma’s executive chef, Emile Castillo, decided to incorporate caviar into a frittata, they knew it would be a costly proposition. They pay $65 an ounce for sevruga.

                        "We priced it out and realized we’d have to charge $100 for the regular frittata," Pipes said.

                        "Since we knew it was going to be a very expensive dish, we decided to have some fun with it," he added. "If someone really wants to splurge, we gave them a $1,000 option. It’s not just a gimmick, though. It tastes good."

                        Since the deluxe lobster-and-fish-egg frittata appeared on the menu on May 5, not one customer has taken the bait for either the $100 or $1,000 version.

                        "I couldn’t believe it was the price when I first saw ‘1,000’ on the menu," said Virginia Marnell, 59, of Greenwich Village. "I thought it was the calorie count. It’s outrageous!"

                        Patty Zimmerman of San Diego said she and her three friends were amused by the eggs-treme price tag. "It made us chuckle," she said. "It’s definitely a conversation starter."

                        Second-year Fordham Law School student Allison Adler was breakfasting with her mother, Jackie, from San Diego.

                        "It’s for people with much deeper pockets and much larger bank accounts than us," said Adler, whose mom recommends the lobster and asparagus omelet instead.

                        At $25, she said, "It’s a relative bargain."

                        Easy … & rich

                        Here’s the recipe for the Zillion Dollar Frittata now offered at Norma’s at Le Parker Meridien hotel.

                        Ingredients:

                        6 eggs
                        1 tbsp. chopped chives
                        1½ tbsps. butter
                        1 lobster
                        5 tbsps. heavy cream
                        10 ounces sevruga caviar

                        Directions:

                        Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

                        Place whole lobster in a pot of boiling water. Boil for one minute, then put lobster in a bath of cold water. Remove tail from lobster and pry meat from shell, keeping it whole. Remove meat from claws and chop the meat. Cut the lobster in half and remove the tomalley, or liver (that soft, blackish-green stuff in the stomach).

                        Heat ½ tablespoon of butter in a small saucepan. Add heavy cream and bring to a boil. Cook three minutes while stirring. Strain sauce into a bowl and set aside.

                        Break eggs into a bowl. Add chives and half of the sauce and beat with a fork.

                        In an omelet pan, heat ½ tablespoon butter. Add chopped claw meat and sauté two minutes.

                        Add the egg-chives mixture and cook slowly over medium heat until firm, about five minutes.

                        While the omelet is cooking, in another saucepan heat ½ ­tablespoon butter and cook the lobster tail for three minutes. Slice and arrange on top of the omelet and finish cooking in the oven two more minutes.

                        Place the cooked omelet on a serving plate and spoon remaining sauce over it. Spoon caviar on top and serve.

                        Bon appétit!

                        Originally published on May 17, 2004

                        May 18, 2004 at 11:18 am #98515
                        Aatos
                        Participant

                          Use pesto with everything!! :P

                          May 18, 2004 at 5:09 pm #98516
                          Robert
                          Participant
                            "Aatos" wrote:
                            Use pesto with everything!!

                            AMEN!

                            May 18, 2004 at 7:32 pm #98517
                            Bucky Ramone
                            Participant

                              [img]http://www-personal.umich.edu/~msittig/bento/1050601415_5.jpg[/img]

                              8)

                              (click on the pic to see more….. :lol: )

                              July 11, 2004 at 7:04 pm #98518
                              Bucky Ramone
                              Participant

                                Tons of fun (and bad recipe ideas) can be found in the Gallery of Regrettable Food :lol: :aliensmile:

                                [img]http://lileks.com/institute/gallery/misc/gel1.jpg[/img]

                                Bon appetit! :twisted: :lol:

                                July 13, 2004 at 3:47 pm #98519
                                FlyingCloud
                                Participant

                                  [img]http://lileks.com/institute/gallery/misc/krups1.jpg[/img]

                                  Quote:
                                  From an early 70s book touting ze Superior Virtues of das Krrrrrups food perrrrrrocessorr. Here we have a brick of pressed gland-meat wrapped in cellophane, deep fried and dumped on a bed of Krrrrrrups-shredded lettuce.

                                  …my mom used to have a Krrrrrups food perrrrrrocessorr, but I can’t remember that that kind of food came out of it :? :aliensmile: :shock:

                                  very funny site, thanks for the link :D

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