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Thread: Fave Winter Feeds

  1. #11
    Join Date
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    As said in pevious posts, can't beat a good simple one pot stew for those cold evenings....

    Our standby is -
    Meat - beef, pork, chicken whatever ( good blade steak is tops), diced, coat in flour, ( if you like your stew thick )
    Braise in some hot oil and butter in pot 2 min. to seal meat, then throw in a chopped onion.
    Braise it a bit more.
    Add can of tomatoes and some wine if you have it.
    Throw in diced carrots, potatoes, some herbs ( fresh or dried oregano, thyme, basil, bay leaf, just whatever you have, plus salt & pepper to taste.)
    Let stew slowly for 45 minutes or so, stirring every 10 min, adding more water if necessary.
    You can throw in some dried or tinned peas at the end, or fresh beans etc or whatever green vege you have . ( optional )
    If fresh vege or dried peas are used let it cook for a further 5-10 mins.

    Easy tasty, hearty, filling, warming,, and hardly any dishes.
    Last edited by waynep; 23rd April 2008 at 08:40 PM.

  2. #12
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    Im making Pumpkin Soup ATM

    Pumpkin
    Tin cocnut cream
    Lemon gras
    ginger
    garlic
    corriander
    chillie
    seasoning (use white pepper with this)

    Bliz it at the end. Strain through fine chinois (or cheese cloth if you are serving it to paying customers)

  3. #13
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    Interesting.

    is it sharp to taste? I suppose you could reduce the orange juice down and ad it as a sort of essence.

  4. #14
    solmanic's Avatar
    solmanic is offline One Merc post away from being banned...
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    Irish stew with big wedges of soft, doughy bread (eg. Scotch loaf).

    Potatoes
    Bacon hock - boiled in stock & water till it's falling off the bone
    Maybe some Lamb or mutton (but not at current prices)
    more potatoes
    onion
    barley
    split peas
    potatoes
    carrots
    potatoes
    pumpkin (optional)
    and finally, some more potatoes.

    Easy to pop in tupperware and reheat on the fire/stove (not in the tupperware though - I actually thought that stuff-up might get me out of domestic duties once but alas all I got was a stern talking to before the credit card went missing ). Always tastes the same no matter how many times you reheat.

  5. #15
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    Brisbane, Inner East.
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    Here is a traditional Danish meal that is ideal for slow cooking in a camp oven.

    Two six packs of cider
    One meaty bacon hock per person.
    quan. suff. white dried beans.
    marinade hock & beans with a bottle (two stubbies) of cider, & a fine chopped hot chili (I use one habanero or three Jalapenos) for several hours, sufficient to plump up and soften the beans.
    bung them in the camp oven with a couple of chopped onions,several cloves of crushed garlic, salt and pepper as required, a can of chopped tomatoes, diced carrots & swedes. Add more liquid as required, cider is good, cook can drink unnecessary cooking cider whilst using a cleaver to fend off bystanders who want to share cider. Cider is a better cook's drink than lemon essence.
    Cook in slow coals under & over the camp oven until the meat falls off the hocks. Check frequently and add more liquid (cider) to prevent drying out and sticking to the oven.

    Its Danish name translates as "cold feet" although it is always served piping hot.

    If cooking for more than two you need plural camp ovens or a bloody big one as bacon hocks take up a good bit of room.

    Danes drink ice cold starkol (strong beer) or Akvavit from the freezer with this.
    URSUSMAJOR

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    VIC
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    Quote Originally Posted by solmanic View Post
    Irish stew with big wedges of soft, doughy bread (eg. Scotch loaf).

    Potatoes
    Bacon hock - boiled in stock & water till it's falling off the bone
    Maybe some Lamb or mutton (but not at current prices)
    more potatoes
    onion
    barley
    split peas
    potatoes
    carrots
    potatoes
    pumpkin (optional)
    and finally, some more potatoes.

    Easy to pop in tupperware and reheat on the fire/stove (not in the tupperware though - I actually thought that stuff-up might get me out of domestic duties once but alas all I got was a stern talking to before the credit card went missing ). Always tastes the same no matter how many times you reheat.
    Too right, can't be beaten!!! Do you put a can of Guinness in? Hell, you have to, even my gran does.



    Russian and German dining is a hell of a lot of fun in winter. Nothing like going to a Russian restaurant where they fill a huge tumbler with vodka, sing, dance, everyone gets trashed. Ahh good memories, lying in the gutter in Market Lane after a very late one at the Hofbrauhaus... It's classic seeing esteemed, mature aged businessmen in suits yacking in the street.

  7. #17
    Join Date
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    Spag on toast.....

  8. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Allestree , its all good.
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    Hot egg,cheese,garlic salt jaffle.Washed down with mug of tea + glass of port/scotch.
    '99 Tdi 300 130 Twin Cab
    When I'm here I want to be out there.

  9. #19
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    Singapore via Melbourne
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    I used to make heaps of steamed puddings in a hot water pot - after main course, remove enough hot water for the dishes leaving about 2 inches of water in the pot, slide in your steamed pudding tin with a big fat dollop of jam in the mixture and by the time your dishes are done, dried and put away, the pud will be ready...

    this delia smith recipe is close - can't find mine here...
    Steamed Treacle Sponge Pudding from Delia Online

  10. #20
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Mornington Peninsula Vic
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    Thumbs up

    In the camp oven....
    lamb forequarter chops
    taters
    carrots
    onion
    peas
    thicken with instant potato mash
    and the most important ingredient....dumplings (use yorkshire pudding recipe)

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