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10 votes
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Inside Iceland's futuristic farm growing algae for food – Vaxa Technologies has developed a system that harnesses energy from the nearby geothermal power plant
7 votes -
Young people should be banned from buying drinks with high levels of caffeine, say health and consumer groups in Denmark
35 votes -
What are your favourite things to mix with natural yogurt?
I'm in need of inspiration for tasty and fun food combinations to make myself eat more natural yogurts instead of the preflavoured ones (which I found out are definitely not as healthy!). What are...
I'm in need of inspiration for tasty and fun food combinations to make myself eat more natural yogurts instead of the preflavoured ones (which I found out are definitely not as healthy!). What are your preferences and recommendations, oh fellow yogurt eaters? Which natural yogurt is superior for such a snack? What do you mix with it and how much? I must know!
16 votes -
What are your favorite special kitchen ingredients?
I’m looking to explore a bit so i’d love to hear your thoughts. These are the items that make my kitchen special. I mainly cook Asian style food (Chinese, Japanese), so my ingredients trend in...
I’m looking to explore a bit so i’d love to hear your thoughts. These are the items that make my kitchen special. I mainly cook Asian style food (Chinese, Japanese), so my ingredients trend in that direction. This is a combination of ingredients, condiments, and even snacks that bring joy to me.
If there’s a particular special brand that you think is extra special, i’d love to hear it too!
- Mirin (in Toronto there is a small store that makes homemade mirin)
- Yuzu ponzu sauce (same supplier)
- Furikake / shichimi
- Korean seasoned salt
- Perilla Oil (an amazing nuttier substitute to sesame oil) - great on subtle dishes like zaru soba
- Szechuan peppercorns - amazing to put into the mortar with other aromatics
- Chinese cured pork belly - wow how immensely flavorful - I like the five spice one. Small cubes makes fried rice sing
- Oyster sauce (two ladies LKK not panda LKK)
- Nem Chua
- Good butter (Kerrygold or St Brigid)
- Sambal Oelek
- Pandan leaves and frozen chopped lemongrass
- Maldon salt
- Frozen cheap chocolate squares (Swiss Delice)
- Lao Gan Ma black bean chili crisp
- Salted yolk potato chips, Honey Butter chips
- Korean seaweed sheets for stock along with the little anchovies
- Frozen unshelled clam meat - just throw a handful into anything like pasta or stir fries. So cheap and so good!
- Chinese cooking wine
- Perilla leaves (gganib)
- when I can find them, Alphonso, Kesar, or Colombian Sugar Mangos
- Concord or Muscat grapes
- fatty Biltong (Florence meats is best)
- wavy soba (for some reason I like the mouth feel)
- frozen special handmade ramen
- Calabrian peppers
- Peperoncinos (I like the ones from Terroni)
- Peruvian sweety drop peppers
- Thai kefir leaves (frozen)
- Thai birdseye peppers
- Vietnamese veggies (rau ram) and Thai basil mmm
- fermented tofu bricks - kinda smelly but adds a slickness and sourness when stir frying Chinese veggies
- Korean coque d’asses (Japanese ones are a bit dry for me). Great frozen as well.
- mango gummy candy from cocoa land lot 100
- Chinese snow pear
- kewpie mayo (creepy baby)
- kozlik triple crunch mustard
- Vietnamese fried onions (need to figure out what brand is best)
- affordable soy sauce (made in Japan ones - yamasa or kikkoman)
- fermented black pepper (I like the Trader Joe’s ones - I put it into ramen broth)
- kecap manis (abc brand) for making Indonesian stuff
- Hungarian Hunters sausages - great snacks that last
19 votes -
Why do so many recipes call for powdered sugar instead of regular sugar?
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing...
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing always seem to call for powdered sugar? If I want to add sugar to a something, why would I also want to add the anti-caking agent (usually starch I think) for powdered sugar as well? Is that starch actually something beneficial for a whipped desert? Because as far as I can tell, the only time powdered sugar makes sense is when it's dusted on top of something or incorporated into a desert that is being mixed by hand and doesn't have the shear of a mixer to dissolve or emulsify the granulated sugar. And I've never had any issues just using regular granulated sugar and honestly prefer it to powdered sugar for icings, whipped cream and the like. If a recipe calls for powdered sugar, but it's being combined with a mixer or beaters I just use regular sugar and the results are great.
Anyone have any thoughts or experience as to what I'm overlooking? Or is it just a hold over from a time when electric mixers weren't common and you needed a finer sugar to incorporate the sugar by hand?
18 votes -
Icelandic supermarkets have been left in a pickle, after a viral TikTok trend saw an unprecedented surge in demand for cucumbers
7 votes -
Seal, whale, reindeer – and plankton? When your restaurant is high in the Arctic Circle you have to get pretty creative with your fine dining.
12 votes -
Denmark has recalled several spicy ramen noodle products by South Korean company Samyang, claiming that the capsaicin levels in them could poison consumers
42 votes -
Because European sunscreens can draw on more ingredients, they can protect better against skin cancer
26 votes -
Swiss scientists invent a new type of chocolate using more of the cocoa plant, reducing need for additional sugars
31 votes -
What do baking soda and baking powder do?
16 votes -
Scientific research suggests it might be a good idea to add python to your diet
20 votes -
From ocean to plate, the female-led seaweed company Lofoten Seaweed in Norway – in pictures
3 votes -
3D printed pasta: Aglio e olio and sea urchins with Andrea Antonini
4 votes -
Can a chef turn KFC into a completely different dish?
16 votes -
Coffee connoisseurs have long believed that adding a little water to beans before grinding them makes a difference. A new study by researchers at the University of Oregon seems to confirm exactly why.
35 votes -
Christmas beer made from green peas and marinated red cabbage has become a festive hit in Iceland
9 votes -
Can a chef turn a Subway sandwich into a completely different dish?
11 votes -
A sesame allergy law in the US has made it harder to avoid the seed. Here's why.
28 votes -
British cooks try Filipino food and cooking methods
7 votes -
Spaghetti bolognese - same ingredients, different techniques
6 votes -
People who make smoothies, what are your favorite ingredient combinations or spices?
My husband just presented me with a cantelope based smoothie to which he added cardomom. I don't know what if any other ingrediants. It's pretty good. Looking forward to your discussion and ideas.
42 votes -
Unique cocktail ingredient workshop thread
An offshoot of /r/cocktails recently had a weekly challenge of making cocktails with specified ingredients. In lieu of that, I thought it might be neat if you had an ingredient (spirit, liqueur,...
An offshoot of /r/cocktails recently had a weekly challenge of making cocktails with specified ingredients. In lieu of that, I thought it might be neat if you had an ingredient (spirit, liqueur, fruit, etc.) that you've wanted to use in a cocktail, we could workshop potential uses. Alternatively, if you've found something that works (maybe unexpectedly), you can share it here.
12 votes -
Why is real balsamic vinegar so expensive (Part 1 of 3)
11 votes -
America doesn't know tofu
11 votes -
Excessive outbreaks of seaweed are clogging up our waters – now the algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products
5 votes -
Is real vanilla actually worth it?
8 votes -
The truffle industry is a big scam. Not just truffle oil, everything
13 votes -
How pearl meat became Australia’s newest luxury ingredient - Once humble divers’ fare, the meat of the pearl oyster now commands up to $200 per kilo
7 votes -
The US Food and Drug Administration finally liberates French dressing from 72-year-old ingredient mandates
4 votes -
Scone recipe with just three ingredients sends 92-year-old baker Muriel Halsted viral
14 votes -
Missing an ingredient? Here are substitutions you can use instead
4 votes -
The measurements to convert common whole spices into ground
9 votes -
The bitter truth behind Madagascar’s roaring vanilla trade
8 votes -
The surprising truth about Indian food
10 votes -
Eat more kelp, the ocean's favorite superfood
7 votes -
Kitchen spices look startlingly different in the wild
14 votes -
This land is meant only for saffron. Without it, it means nothing.
10 votes -
How fortunes are being made and lost in Madagascar's vanilla boom
6 votes -
Australian restaurants scramble to get their hands on emu eggs
4 votes -
Bracing for the vanilla boom in Madagascar
13 votes -
What is gluten? Here's how to see and feel gluten.
6 votes -
Haute pot: How high-end California chefs are cashing in on marijuana
5 votes -
Fighting the vanilla thieves of Madagascar
4 votes