peanut sauce pizza
peanut sauce pizza
I dont know what it is about deep fried sandwiches, but they just dont seem appealing to me. Perhaps an unfried versionThat actually sounds good to me.
Surely I'm not alone in this.
If I was going to do it, id want like a woodfired set up. Id cook the pizza and do the scallops in a pan. Drop them on after the pizza comes out. Point being, there is a way to do it, but most places just toss the pie into a super hot oven without any consideration.On a pizza I've seen them over cooked, which is bad, but undercooked is even worse (too slimy). It was a topping that just didn't compute for me. I'd do lobster before scallops on a pizza
It includes the cheese.I am very curious about this. Does it also have cheese or is does it use something else to go with the banana flavor? Actually I wonder how a peanut sauce pizza with bacon and banana would taste
What is deep fried? Is it like toasted? or is the whole thing immersed in fried oil - like deep fried chips?I dont know what it is about deep fried sandwiches, but they just dont seem appealing to me. Perhaps an unfried version
I believe the French loaf is hollowed out, the ingredients stuff in, and then dropped into a vat of oil. Like a Monte Cristo.What is deep fried? Is it like toasted? or is the whole thing immersed in fried oil - like deep fried chips?
Deep-frying is frying such that the food is covered over the top with oil, and either floats or is supported by something like a basket, so the oil is what's conveying the heat to the food. Pan-frying has oil some way up the sides of the food, but the food is resting on the pan, so there's more of a hard sear happening there.What is deep fried? Is it like toasted? or is the whole thing immersed in fried oil - like deep fried chips?
Yeah I didn't read the entire article. I agree with you - I mean I'm sure it tastes ok, but I'd prefer it on a toasted sandwich.I believe the French loaf is hollowed out, the ingredients stuff in, and then dropped into a vat of oil. Like a Monte Cristo.
Yeah I didn't read the entire article. I agree with you - I mean I'm sure it tastes ok, but I'd prefer it on a toasted sandwich.
If someone in the American South doesn't have a deep fryer big enough to hold a turkey, are they really a Southerner?Deep-frying is frying such that the food is covered over the top with oil, and either floats or is supported by something like a basket, so the oil is what's conveying the heat to the food. Pan-frying has oil some way up the sides of the food, but the food is resting on the pan, so there's more of a hard sear happening there.
You can, in principle, deep-fry potato chips in a skillet. Something like a loaf of bread probably needs something more like a commercial deep-fryer.
That and pot fillers.If someone in the American South doesn't have a deep fryer big enough to hold a turkey, are they really a Southerner?