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Cookin again

A little thread snackromancy has returned this related thread back:

 

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I wish there was more India take out here, but we have many great pizza places here. Buffalo is known for cup n char pizza. There's also quite a few places that have a good fish fry around too.

At one point they were doing 10" pizza for $3 usd approx.

Not sure what it costs now.
 

At one point they were doing 10" pizza for $3 usd approx.
There was a place in my neighborhood called Kapaneks Pizza that delivered until 4AM. Their slogan was "Don't Panic, Call Kapaneks" If you called at 3:59 AM they'd deliver. In the late 90s you could get a small pizza and 10 wings with tip and delivery for $10.
 

It seems that the Indian-Mexican fusion places are drying up around here. Don’t know why in particular. The one around the corner from me was pretty good, and $1.50/street tacos on Wednesdays was a killer deal.

I usually mixed and matched the ethnic ingredients, like getting a spicy chicken filling with cilantro and their creamy avocado sauce (essentially a lighter, thinner version of guacamole). But one day I was driving by and noticed they had become a straight-up taco place. I haven’t had the heart to see if the new menu is any good.
 

It seems that the Indian-Mexican fusion places are drying up around here. Don’t know why in particular. The one around the corner from me was pretty good, and $1.50/street tacos on Wednesdays was a killer deal.

I usually mixed and matched the ethnic ingredients, like getting a spicy chicken filling with cilantro and their creamy avocado sauce (essentially a lighter, thinner version of guacamole). But one day I was driving by and noticed they had become a straight-up taco place. I haven’t had the heart to see if the new menu is any good.

Probably two different types of food. Spicy is really only common link.

Good Mexican hard to find here. Auckland maybe. 1000km that way.

One place was doing $5 curry but I thinknits $8 now for lunchtime special. It was roughly on par with mall food court quality.
 

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Plated: Opa’s hatch chile sausage links, oven baked cauliflower, sautéed portobello mushrooms, sautéed yellow squash & onions, zucchini & onions in a chunky tomato sauce.

Wrecked my kitchen cooking dinner tonight. I haven’t cooked this many dishes at once for MONTHS!

Everything was relatively simple & straightforward. The most complex thing was the cauliflower: brushed with olive oil & melted butter, seasoned with garlic & herb seasoning plus a generous amount of grated Parmesan, then slowly baked in the oven at 350degF. Usually, I cook it at a higher temp for a shorter time, resulting in a bit more browning and a touch of crunch. But I opted for the lower temp because I knew I had a LOT of chopping to do, and that takes time.

The Opa’s links are nice. They’re mild enough you could use them as a hotdog or country sausage substitute, but they DO have a mild kick to them. Hatch chile products in general don’t have a lot of heat to them. Opa’s are on the milder side of the spectrum of the various hatch sausages we’ve tried. Some brands are closer to Earl Campbell hot links in terms of spiciness.

FWIW, hatch chili products have historically been more seasonal, but companies seem to be expanding their window of availability in this past year.

Tangent: My Mom is st least part fire elemental. Why do I say this? Because her tolerance for high-temperature foods is NOT NORMAL! I have known her all my life, so this was not in and of itself a surprise. I’m used to it.

But she caught me off guard when I served her tonight. She only wanted the sausage, cauliflower & zucchini. I plated her dish with zucchini from a pot I had just turned off, cauliflower right from the pan that had just been removed from the 350degF oven, and sausage that had only been off the burner for the time it took me to plate the other food she wanted.

I put her plate in front of her, started to dish up my meal, and she asked me to put her plate in the microwave for 60 seconds.
 

I recently went to one of my favorite middle-eastern/Mediterranean restaurants. They used to be a chain with several locations in Texas, but they’ve had some struggles, resulting in several closures. I have no idea how many remain.

One nifty thing about them is they put fried chicken drumsticks on their buffet, presumably for kids & picky eaters. I’ve tried them and found them to be lightly breaded, perfectly cooked…and criminally underseaoned. I still get them on occasion, dipping them in their garlic spread or other condiments or whatever. (Maybe next time, garlic spread & tabouli…)

If this were a simple family-owned restaurant, I’d ask to talk to someone about them. I could easily imagine them using seasoning similar to shawarma or some other classic cultural spice combination.

Combined with their already apparent skill at COOKING those drumsticks, Mediterranean Fried Chicken could become a thing.

I can even envision Samuel L. Jackson doing commercials for MFC. The dialog almost writes itself…
 

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