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Vegetable of the week thread (Read 79187 times)
muso
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #165 - Feb 15th, 2012 at 4:36pm
 
The Scots make the best baked rice pudding too.

I've been making a lot of Biryiani lately, but I won't post a recipe because I cheat using Biryiani mix from the Asian shop.
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Grey
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #166 - Feb 15th, 2012 at 8:20pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 4:36pm:
The Scots make the best baked rice pudding too.

I've been making a lot of Biryiani lately, but I won't post a recipe because I cheat using Biryiani mix from the Asian shop.


That's right discredit the English again. My dear fellow the Scots are hard pressed to make porridge.
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #167 - Feb 15th, 2012 at 10:38pm
 
Grey wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 8:20pm:
My dear fellow the Scots are hard pressed to make porridge.


And on what do you base that statement?  If you are so knowledgable on the subject, would you care to enlighten us as to what makes the perfect porridge and where it can be found?  Are you talking about steel cut or rolled oats or maybe some other grains?
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #168 - Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am
 
Frances wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 10:38pm:
Grey wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 8:20pm:
My dear fellow the Scots are hard pressed to make porridge.


And on what do you base that statement?  If you are so knowledgable on the subject, would you care to enlighten us as to what makes the perfect porridge and where it can be found?  Are you talking about steel cut or rolled oats or maybe some other grains?


Based on my knowledge of the Scots, Frances.  Grin

I guess you might well be Scottish, as they were always fond of France. Look The Scots are very good at a number of things, engineering and science generally, military music, comedy festivals, annoying the English. But as cooks....I'm afraid if we (the English) didn't throw some offal and scraps over the wall from time to time so they can make that haggis abomination, they'd have starved centuries ago - okay salmon and grouse I'll grant you. Though grouse are more fun to shoot at than eat. Venison? Well that just shows how desperately hungry they are. Anybody can see that Scottish deer are to be looked at not eaten. It's a cold barren rocky place not much use for veggie growing. Especially the veggies native to central and Southern America any half decent cuisine relys on. 

I'd give a good recipe for porridge, but you'd think it pretentious and it lacks salt.
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #169 - Feb 16th, 2012 at 1:35pm
 
Grey wrote on Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am:
I guess you might well be Scottish


I'm not, but my father was.

Grey wrote on Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am:
that haggis abomination


Haggis is actually quite nice as long as you don't think (or don't care) about what it's made from.

Grey wrote on Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am:
I'd give a good recipe for porridge, but you'd think it pretentious and it lacks salt.


You mean you make porridge without salt?
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #170 - Feb 19th, 2012 at 4:05pm
 
A lot of my best friends are Scottish  Grin (they are really).

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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #171 - Feb 21st, 2012 at 1:58pm
 
Grey wrote on Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am:
Frances wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 10:38pm:
Grey wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 8:20pm:
My dear fellow the Scots are hard pressed to make porridge.


And on what do you base that statement?  If you are so knowledgable on the subject, would you care to enlighten us as to what makes the perfect porridge and where it can be found?  Are you talking about steel cut or rolled oats or maybe some other grains?


Based on my knowledge of the Scots, Frances.  Grin

I guess you might well be Scottish, as they were always fond of France. Look The Scots are very good at a number of things, engineering and science generally, military music, comedy festivals, annoying the English. But as cooks....I'm afraid if we (the English) didn't throw some offal and scraps over the wall from time to time so they can make that haggis abomination, they'd have starved centuries ago - okay salmon and grouse I'll grant you. Though grouse are more fun to shoot at than eat. Venison? Well that just shows how desperately hungry they are. Anybody can see that Scottish deer are to be looked at not eaten. It's a cold barren rocky place not much use for veggie growing. Especially the veggies native to central and Southern America any half decent cuisine relys on. 

I'd give a good recipe for porridge, but you'd think it pretentious and it lacks salt.


Well I was pleasantly surprised on my last visit to Aberdeen. They have some very good restaurants and the standard had definitely lifted since my previous trip. I think it's fair to say that the Scots have a new found confidence, especially with the prospect of independence.

You did know of course that the standard of education in Scotland was always much higher than that in England. Prior to the Education Act, the literacy rate in England was in the low 30%'s, whereas Scotland had almost universal literacy for several hundred years before that, due to the prevalence of parish schooling.

I remember being impressed by the high standard of handwriting of by 16th century relatives during my geneology research afe years ago.

I've also been a Burns Night MC  on many occasions, so if you want to cast cultural aspersions against the Scots, I have a mighty arsenal with which to fight back the English onslaught.   Grin

Quote:
You mean you make porridge without salt?


- Aye, and tha's no how ye make porridge.  Grin

I used to eat haggis. On my visits to Scotland, I now eat vegetarian haggis. It's very tasty.
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #172 - Feb 21st, 2012 at 11:59pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 21st, 2012 at 1:58pm:
Grey wrote on Feb 16th, 2012 at 11:42am:
Frances wrote on Feb 15th, 2012 at 10:38pm:
[quote author=756273756664070 link=1317089609/166#166 date=1329301244] My dear fellow the Scots are hard pressed to make porridge.


And on what do you base that statement?  If you are so knowledgable on the subject, would you care to enlighten us as to what makes the perfect porridge and where it can be found?  Are you talking about steel cut or rolled oats or maybe some other grains?


Based on my knowledge of the Scots, Frances.  Grin

I guess you might well be Scottish, as they were always fond of France. Look The Scots are very good at a number of things, engineering and science generally, military music, comedy festivals, annoying the English. But as cooks....I'm afraid if we (the English) didn't throw some offal and scraps over the wall from time to time so they can make that haggis abomination, they'd have starved centuries ago - okay salmon and grouse I'll grant you. Though grouse are more fun to shoot at than eat. Venison? Well that just shows how desperately hungry they are. Anybody can see that Scottish deer are to be looked at not eaten. It's a cold barren rocky place not much use for veggie growing. Especially the veggies native to central and Southern America any half decent cuisine relys on. 

I'd give a good recipe for porridge, but you'd think it pretentious and it lacks salt.


Quote:
I think it's fair to say that the Scots have a new found confidence, especially with the prospect of independence.


Amazing the number of countries that have faced the prospect of independence like that. Uganda, Zimbabwe, the USA. Talking about civil war it wouldn't surprise me if that was high on the agenda.

Quote:
You did know of course that the standard of education in Scotland was always much higher than that in England. Prior to the Education Act, the literacy rate in England was in the low 30%'s, whereas Scotland had almost universal literacy for several hundred years before that, due to the prevalence of parish schooling.


That's so the clans could keep score and accounts of who had done the wrong thing by who. See above.

Quote:
I remember being impressed by the high standard of handwriting of by 16th century relatives during my geneology research afe years ago.


Impressing you wouldn't be hard if that sentence is anything to judge by.

Quote:
I've also been a Burns Night MC  on many occasions, so if you want to cast cultural aspersions against the Scots, I have a mighty arsenal with which to fight back the English onslaught.   Grin


Hit me with your best shot  Grin

Quote:
- Aye, and tha's no how ye make porridge.  Grin
I used to eat haggis. On my visits to Scotland, I now eat vegetarian haggis. It's very tasty.


The best way to make porridge is to burn the recipe and make muesli instead. A vegetarian Haggis now there's a thing. We know what a vegetarian spaghetti ragu is, it's a spaghetti ragu without any meat. Pretty poor fare. But a vegetarian haggis... what's that? It's bullshyte isn't it? Grin Actually if you stuffed a condom with cow dung and boiled the crap out of it that's about as close as you could get Grin.
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #173 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 2:48pm
 
You're just jealous because my Vegetable of the week is consistently better than yours.   Tongue

I actually eat muesli for breakfast every morning, so I don't have a problem with it. 

Quote:
Scotsman walking through a field, sees a man drinking water from a pool with his hand.
The Scotsman man shouts 

"Awa ye gypit feel, tha's full O coos Sharn'"

(Don't drink the water, it's full of cow s ** t.)

The man shouts back 'I'm English, Speak English, I don't understand you'.

The Scotsman man shouts back 'Use both hands, you'll get more in.'


Quote:
God was describing his newly created world to the Archangel Gabriel. Gabriel points to this small country in Northern Europe.

"What's this bit?"

Ah" said God. "That's Scotland, the most glorious place on Earth. There are beautiful snow capped mountains, untouched rivers, streams and lochs of exquisite, timeless beauty.
The people make a drink called Uisge Beatha or Whiskey which means "The Water of Life".

The people are good looking, intelligent and humorous and they're going to be found travelling the world. They'll be extremely sociable, hard-working and high-achieving, and they will be known throughout the world as warriors, engineers, inventors and pioneers.

Gabriel gasped in wonder and admiration but then said
"You said there will be BALANCE!"

God replied wisely.
"Wait until you see the bastards I'm putting next to them!".
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #174 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 3:49pm
 
An Englishwoman goes into a Scottish butcher shop and says to the butcher, "Bring me a sheep's head and make sure it is an English sheep."

The Scottish butcher puts his head in the back room and shouts out, "ONE SHEEP'S HEAD. AND TAKE OUT THE BRAINS!"
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #175 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 5:03pm
 




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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #176 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 5:06pm
 
I hope someone has mentioned beetroot
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #177 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 5:11pm
 
bobbythefap1 wrote on Feb 23rd, 2012 at 5:06pm:
I hope someone has mentioned beetroot


Yeh, it's been done to chard  Smiley


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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #178 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 6:44pm
 
Grey wrote on Feb 21st, 2012 at 11:59pm:
A vegetarian Haggis now there's a thing. We know what a vegetarian spaghetti ragu is, it's a spaghetti ragu without any meat. Pretty poor fare. But a vegetarian haggis... what's that? It's bullshyte isn't it? Grin Actually if you stuffed a condom with cow dung and boiled the crap out of it that's about as close as you could get Grin.


Vegetarian haggis is really quite tasty. It's certainly a lot more wholesome than the real thing, which uses sheep's lung to add a bit of spiciness. It's similar to falafel in a way.

I make a vegetarian pasta to die for. It includes fresh and sundried tomatoes,chopped mushrooms, capers, sliced olives, coarsely chopped garlic and shallots, with a dash of freshly chopped  "basilico" and seasoned to perfection.  I make fresh spinach tagliatelli to go with it. .
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Re: Vegetable of the week thread
Reply #179 - Feb 23rd, 2012 at 11:56pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 23rd, 2012 at 6:44pm:
Vegetarian haggis is really quite tasty. It's certainly a lot more wholesome than the real thing, which uses sheep's lung to add a bit of spiciness. It's similar to falafel in a way.


Then drop the pretence and call it a big falafel


Quote:
I make a vegetarian pasta to die for. It includes fresh and sundried tomatoes,chopped mushrooms, capers, sliced olives, coarsely chopped garlic and shallots, with a dash of freshly chopped  "basilico" and seasoned to perfection.  I make fresh spinach tagliatelli to go with it. .


If you added some minced beef and diced bacon it might well turn out okay Smiley
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