@aviaaaaah this looks delicious but it also looks like a screenshot from DOOM 😂
Simplest possible dinner tonight: I put together a nice batch of dashi and brewed an entirely pleasant bowl of miso. Nothing adventurous, just sliced cremini mushrooms, thinly sliced scallions, white miso paste, a couple of scant dashes of mirin - just to add a slight hint of sweetness - and some wakame flakes.
Next time I'll put some more work into the dashi by letting my kombu soak for a few hours beforehand and by shaving my own katsuobushi, but that wasn't the shape of the evening tonight.
@guysoft just because in my neighborhood it's easier to get good quality flour than good masa!
There is an excellent spot for masa just down the street, maybe about a 30 minute walk, but we're in a state of (municipal level) emergency lockdown right now so I cannot avail myself of their bounty at the moment. I'll be visiting them when I can, though.
Do we have #coffee connoisseurs on the #fediverse that can recommend a good coffee machine? ☕
Pretzel buns
I used the brioche bun recipe I like (but don't love the plain egg wash finish), and the lye and pretzel salt from the pretzel recipe I like (but don't love the tough chewiness of the bread), so hopefully I've got something good here
Really I should have dipped the buns in the lye to get a nice even coat, but it's a very soft dough and I thought I'd ruin the rise that way, so I brushed it on with a silicone pastry brush 🥨
Following through on my intention to try out at least one new recipe a week! This time I'm digging into the green leafy options a bit, leaning on some common flavour combinations, and putting together a side dish for the protein I baked up earlier in the week.
Peel, tip, and tail the garlic, then smash it; peel the ginger, then slice very fine against the fibrous grain; then dice them both together, quite finely, to roughly the same consistency.
Chop the roots off the bok choy, wash thoroughly, then cut the green leafy parts away from the white stem parts. Cut the leaves large and set them aside to add later, since they cook so fast; chop the white parts smaller and keep them at hand, they'll go in soon.
Mix sesame oil, soy sauce, oyster sauce, and brown sugar very vigorously - aim to emulsify it all a bit. A small mason jar with a lid works well, or a high sided bowl and a fork.
Dry toast the sesame seeds. Add a bit of vegetable oil into a pan and fry the garlic and ginger until very fragrant and starting to brown a bit, then add in the white bok choy stems and mix until well heated. Add the red pepper flakes, the mixed sauces, the green leafy parts, and about ¾ of the toasted sesame seeds (set the rest aside for garnish); toss well and cook through.
Plate, and garnish with the extra sesame seeds!
(Next time I do this I think I'll try thickening the sauce a bit with just a touch of corn starch.)
Follow-up photos downthread!
Same recipe as upthread only I doubled the jalapeños and swapped out the pinto beans for black beans. (I'm still on the slow cooker method despite convincing advice to switch over to the pressure cooker because I want to finish developing this recipe fully before moving on to an entirely different method, since that usually involves a bunch of secondary adaptations.)
@guysoft oooooh, very nice!