Originally posted by french frank
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What are you cooking now?
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Originally posted by jean View PostYou still add fat though, and even that much effort is too much for Beefy - though twisting the edges of the foil or putting the lid on the cooking vessel seems to involve a degree of sodding about.
Back on topic, I'm baking a lasagna at the moment, will be ready in half an hour. Just right for a late lunch/early dinner, before going to the gym to burn all the calories off.
I wonder if they roast lasagne in Scotland.
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3 new threads needed, I feel:
What are you roasting now?
What are you baking now?
What is it you are doing with monkfish now, roasting or baking it, and are you absolutely sure?
IMPORTANT EDIT: re scottish cuisine.
I know for a fact, (and so that you might possibly avoid disappointment) that the ASDA in Livingstone has a very strict policy on their 8 item breakfast of " Nae more than 5 meat ".
Which is firm but fair, I think.Last edited by teamsaint; 24-02-14, 15:37.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by jean View PostYou still add fat though, and even that much effort is too much for Beefy - though twisting the edges of the foil or putting the lid on the cooking vessel seems to involve a degree of sodding about.
However, with an olive oil drizzler always to hand, it doesn't take much effort to drizzle it over the fish, perhaps with some dill, before shoving it in the oven. I usually drape the fish over a layer of fresh herbs - anything I have to hand - so that it sticks to the herbs rather than the bottom of the dish.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostTo be fair, life wouldn't be worth living without porridge, langoustines, salmon, smoked fish, whisky, Dundee cake, Scottish marmalade and haggis (and that's just what I have for breakfast!).
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostPorridge / porage I can live without although very occasionally I'll have a small dish with a teaspoonful of double cream (it doesn't get a whol lot more inauthentic than that!) and a wee dram o' malt. Smoked fish I likewise have only occasionally. Dundeed cake I can and do manage without. Scottish marmalade can be most pleasant but not necessarily any better than the best of Spanish ditto. Haggis I reserve for the appropriate night, wi' neeps an' tatties and a glass o' malt, as one does. Whisky is not only an essential (although I don't drink much of it), its very name implies that it is just that! Salmon I love - and as for langoustines, no praise can be high enough, although the last plateful that I enjoyed just a few days ago was in St. Malo's Intra Muros which even the evidently compromised sense of direction that causes you to harbour doubts as to the locations of Cornwall and Wales probably doesn't prevent you from ealising is not in my native Scotland!...
But, life without Dundee cake? At least sometimes
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostPorridge / porage I can live without although very occasionally I'll have a small dish with a teaspoonful of double cream (it doesn't get a whol lot more inauthentic than that!)
langoustines, ... the last plateful that I enjoyed just a few days ago was in St. Malo's Intra Muros
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