brite wrote:And yet again.. you didn't bring enough for the rest of the class...
I forgot... I'm still basking in my newly found uber geekiness...geonuc wrote:brite wrote:And yet again.. you didn't bring enough for the rest of the class...
I'm selfish and cold-hearted. How come you don't know that already?
FZR1KG wrote:Making pork curry tonight the way Morrolan's wife showed me.
We even have found some fresh curry leaf in a store nearby.
Well if you consider 30miles near.
FZR1KG wrote:I thought the Army had better accuracy than that.
FZR1KG wrote:Making pork curry tonight the way Morrolan's wife showed me.
We even have found some fresh curry leaf in a store nearby.
Well if you consider 30miles near.
FZR1KG wrote:Oh. Oops.
Already ates it.
Will remember next time.
brite wrote:FZR1KG wrote:Oh. Oops.
Already ates it.
Will remember next time.
No pictures... didn't happen...
FZR1KG wrote:That looks good mate.
You could make Croatian sarma (pronounce the a's like the u in up and roll the r).
Basically its meat rolled in cabbage but the cabbage needs to be pickled first.
Meat is usually beef&pork mince with some herbs and rice added with some smoked bacon.
It looks almost the same other than it being sour cabbage.
I don't much care for sour cabbage at all though. The smell just gets to me.
geonuc wrote:But it occurred to me that, prior to dumping a tomato sauce on top, the cabbage rolls kinda look alien. Alien brains, maybe.
If you don't "pickle" the cabbage... you have grumpke... Polish stuffed cabbage... The Poles are just cool like that...FZR1KG wrote:That looks good mate.
You could make Croatian sarma (pronounce the a's like the u in up and roll the r).
Basically its meat rolled in cabbage but the cabbage needs to be pickled first.
Meat is usually beef&pork mince with some herbs and rice added with some smoked bacon.
It looks almost the same other than it being sour cabbage.
I don't much care for sour cabbage at all though. The smell just gets to me.
Swift wrote:Had some really good sauerkraut balls the other day (at a party).
FZR1KG wrote:Looks delicious.
For the record, I like narrow DOF for food photography.
High apertures make everything in focus but then there is no depth to the flavours so to speak
There are also tricks in taking pictures, pretty sure you know but I'll point it out anyway.
The food doesn't have to be eaten after a photo shoot, so they enhance it by sprays of water/oil etc.
Makes it hard to compete when us normal folks eat the food afterwards.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests