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    1. 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
    2. How to get used to spicy food?

      I started eating spicy food (mainly the 2x spicy chicken flavored instant noodles) and very spicy pho ever week. this all culminated in me having done the hot ones like 3-4 times now and it's been...

      I started eating spicy food (mainly the 2x spicy chicken flavored instant noodles) and very spicy pho ever week.

      this all culminated in me having done the hot ones like 3-4 times now and it's been fun. More or less, I can take the heat and its becoming enjoyable.

      The one issue that still remains though is when the spicy food hits my digestive tract. sometimes it doesn't bother me at all, but more commonly it can cause serious discomfort and pain for about half an hour before I can finally hit the bathroom. The only thing I have found that remedies it is drinking vegan milk as it passes my digestive tract.

      problem is I don't know what to do about it. apparently my stomach is more sensitive then my mouth to spicy food but I don't really know how to make my stomach less sensitive. I'd have though after a year it would get used to spicy and it's doing better than at the beginning I guess but still not without occasional pains.

      15 votes
    3. Just bought a Sous Vide. Those who own one, what are your favorite things to use it for? Any recommended accessories?

      Have a friend who has raved about using these for cooking meet during the work day and pan searing it for a quick easy and delicious meal. Plan on doing that with steaks/chicken, but wanted to see...

      Have a friend who has raved about using these for cooking meet during the work day and pan searing it for a quick easy and delicious meal. Plan on doing that with steaks/chicken, but wanted to see if anyone else on Tildes owns one and has any tips or favorite use cases to share.

      25 votes
    4. What would you like to see in your dream food blog?

      I am in the process of starting up my own food blog. I have no hopes or aspirations of being huge or making money, it will solely be a labor of love and an outlet for my love of food to share with...

      I am in the process of starting up my own food blog. I have no hopes or aspirations of being huge or making money, it will solely be a labor of love and an outlet for my love of food to share with the world.

      Unfortunately, I don’t have a specific niche that will be targeting and was looking to crowd source opinions on what people would feel they would like in a food blog. I’m hoping to avoid suggestions like “less convoluted stories about your grandmothers tablecloth for 3 pages before the recipe” since I think we can all agree on that front.

      Some of you may be thinking the world needs another blog like you need another asshole, and that may be true. However, part of my impetus was that many of the recipe blogs I find online have the same generic 30-40 recipes with minimal variation. Others of higher quality are moving behind paywalls. My goal is to try to include slightly more obscure recipes from all over the world, tried/tested/optimized for simplicity in cooking and flavor, or more unique variations on more common recipes. I also aspire to do some articles a bit more experimental / scientific in nature in the vein of some of J Kenji Lopez Alts articles a la serious eats but that is a larger aspiration for down the road.

      I welcome any suggestions or sharing of your current favorite food blogs. I know the current social media trend is YouTube, TikTok, and the like. However as I find myself here with you all, you may understand my preference for sticking with the written word (and occasional photos). Cheers!

      13 votes
    5. What to snack on (other than slices of parmesan)

      so this might be a weird question but -- occasionally, particularly in the evenings, I get a strong craving for parmesan cheese. I live in Germany, so I don't mean the green tube kind either. I'll...

      so this might be a weird question but -- occasionally, particularly in the evenings, I get a strong craving for parmesan cheese. I live in Germany, so I don't mean the green tube kind either. I'll just take little slices off a wedge of real-ass parmesan that we bought to shred over pasta and such.

      Thing is, parmigiano reggiano is pretty expensive, and the similar replacement cheeses like pecorino aren't that much cheaper. But I don't know of any other snack that can deliver the combo of saltiness and umami like just munching on slices of italian hard cheese.

      So, does anybody else on Tildes understand this? Or have any recommendations for other foods to scratch this itch? Keeping in mind I'm in Germany, so I'm limited to stuff I can buy here.

      38 votes
    6. Freeze drying ramen noodle add ins

      My mother and her husband's hobby is trawling Facebook marketplace for things they never realized they wanted (and often repairing them) and they managed to obtain a Harvest Right Freeze Dryer at...

      My mother and her husband's hobby is trawling Facebook marketplace for things they never realized they wanted (and often repairing them) and they managed to obtain a Harvest Right Freeze Dryer at a laughably low price. They've had some fun with it, and I'll be over soon and am considering giving it a try.

      We're getting into winter, so my first thought was to freeze dry some toppings to pour into my ramen as needed -- I often add whatever is in my fridge, but it would be nice to have something mindless to throw in. Once you're running the dryer, it makes sense to fill it completely for efficiency's sake, so I'd be making a good quantity. There are 5 trays, so it would make sense to do 5 different mixes, though I could do more than that by making a tray separator with foil.

      A little bit on freeze drying: To do it efficiently, you pre-freeze whatever you want to dry. Small or thin pieces are best, because they will sublimate out moisture faster, meaning the cycle completes faster. That's important, because the whole assembly uses a ton of electricity. Things that are very fatty or oily (ie, bacon or peanut butter) will not freeze dry well, and then will not be shelf stable after drying either. The other benefit of small pieces is that they rehydrate faster in liquid.

      My first thoughts were a mix with frozen peas, carrots, broccoli and edamame (maybe chicken? But that's more work because it would need to be cooked first). Perhaps another with chopped napa cabbage, grated ginger and garlic...? I considered just doing individual ingredients, but I think it would just be easier for me to have a premade packet I can open and go. I typically buy chicken ramen, but I'll occasionally get something different.

      There aren't any big Asian grocers anywhere near where the freeze dryer is, so any obscure ingredients I would want to dry, I would have to bring with me.

      Let me know your ideas!

      14 votes