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First attempt – crispy summer rolls

It might not look much like crispy summer rolls, but an attempt was made and they stayed together enough to put on a plate and bring to the table with a dipping sauce

So I don’t have a lot of experience with rice paper wrappers. I think I’ve maybe worked with them once before. And what I’ve learned is that you should not trust me to be the one wrapping your blunts.

Ingredients (listed in text)

Ingredients – I have some romaine lettuce and vermicelli rice noodles. A few days ago when I was making something else with a daikon radish, I went ahead and cut up the whole thing – here’s some I cut into thin strips with some carrots and dressed with a little vinegar so it would keep. There are also the rest of the jalapeños from my garden. And some fatty sliced beef that I marinated in soy sauce, a spice blend for Chinese beef, and some lemongrass.

I browned the beef and boiled and drained the noodles. And then I tried assembling some summer rolls. And the results… were not particularly professional.

A skillet with three oblong shapes that might be food in the future

But they held together well enough to make it into a hot skillet and get toasted. Even though my heat was pretty high, it took much longer for the rolls to become crispy than I was expecting.

The results of my impatient cooking? Even with the completely amateur attempt, the rolls were still delicious and I ate all of them. I would try again and hopefully level up in skills.

The dipping sauce is not any one authentic thing, but a random concoction of oyster sauce, lime juice, and a version of chili crisp that is actually bad on its own (but worked mixed with the stronger flavor or the oyster sauce). Oh, and the juices that were released from the beef strips after they were cooked and waiting on the plate for assembly.

Aloo Gobi leftovers

So I made roasted aloo gobi a few days ago. This is the post about the leftovers!

It was very good, but I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but I thrive on variety. So I wanted to change them somehow to make it feel like a complete different dish.

Two pint deli containers from my fridge, one with leftover aloo gobi and one with leftover saffron rice. And a big packet of South Indian Curry simmer sauce

Luckily, I’d recently bought some quick heat meals and some sauces from Tasty Bite , so I pulled that out.

Vegetables cooked in the sauce, rice reheated in the microwave, some yogurt, and a couple toasted parathas – and I had a whole new meal in about five minutes.

Another salad!

Lettuce and some dressing components

I am still working through the two heads of romaine. The lettuce is washed, and cut, and in the salad spinner.

For the salad dressing, I’m thinking lime juice, a little mayonnaise, a little sesame oil, and some yogurt.I sometimes order groceries on delivery. So sometimes you have to expect that you’ll be surprised by a daikon radish that doesn’t even fit in your produce drawer. And here’s a chonky carrot, too!

This daikon radish is at least as long as my cutting board, and curved!.

I sometimes order groceries on delivery. So sometimes you have to expect that you’ll be surprised by a daikon radish that doesn’t even fit in your produce drawer. And here’s a chonky carrot, too!

Several different containers with different configurations of cut up radish and carrot. There’s a bottle of white rice wine vinegar to the side.

so while I was cutting up radish for the salad, I also cut it up into a few other configurations for future meals (thin slices like for banh mi, rounds of mostly carrot, and not pictured was the rest on long batons like you get Lebanese turnip pickles with beets – and now I have to harvest the better from the garden before I finish munching on the radish.) But those three containers got some vinegar and went in the fridge, and then what was left on the cutting board went into the salad.

Building the salad with cucumbers and mushrooms

On the far right of this picture you see what looks like a jar of Laoganma. It’s actually a mostly finished jar that I then filled with 2 sliced Persian cucumbers, some peanut butter, some soy sauce, a little bit of hoison sauce, and some black vinegar. That’s been hanging out in my fridge for a couple days and it’s now delicious and also going on the salad.

And then in the foreground of the picture you see me cutting up some king mushrooms into strips to cook until nice and brown and then add to the salad.

Little beef strips cooking in a skillet

Sauteing some strips of beef that were marinated in soy sauce and rice wine. That also goes on the salad! You can see the partially assembled salad in the background next to the dressing.

Almost finished salad

Look at that beautiful salad! It does have some dressing thoroughly mixed in with the lettuce, but as soon as we’re don’t taking pictures, all the rest of the dressing is getting dumped on top! (not photogenic, but tasty)

Oven Roasted Aloo Gobi

This recipe inspiration is from The Delicious Crescent. I don’t follow them, but it seemed like a clever Idea when I tripped over it on the internet.

There’s the rest of the one cauliflower I grew!
And small yellow potatoes from Aldi’s
And all of the ripe Juliet tomatoes left from my garden
And an onion

1/8 size sheet pan with seasoned cut vegetables

They get tossed with vegetable oil, grated ginger, grated garlic, powdered coriander, garam masala, chili powder, cumin seeds, turmeric, and some salt

Everything gets tossed on the roasting pan (lined with a silicone sheet to make cleanup easier).

Sheet pan of vegetables after roasting

After it had been roasting at 400F for almost an hour (30 minutes and then I stirred everything and tasted. The potatoes were still pretty firm, so I stirred everything and put it back for another 25 minutes), the potatoes were creamy all the way through and the tomatoes had some lovely caramelization.

Dinner is served!

Then I put the aloo gobi on a plate with saffron rice. And for some reason I felt like it was missing a secondary vegetable dish, so I heated up a microwave packet of Indian tomatoes and eggplant (and after I put like half a cup on the plate, I put the extra in the refrigerator). And then I toasted up a couple parathas cooked from the freezer and put some yogurt in a bowl.

I think I liked the roasted version better than the times I tried to make aloo gobi using the recipes on the DVD extras from Bend it Like Beckham. I will definitely make this again.

Miscellaneous Meal Roundup

These are going in reverse chronological order

Shakshuka

First meal I made after my oven died was shakshuka – so I was toasting the bread on a skillet while I was poaching/braising the eggs, but you need toast to dip into the yummy!


Quesadilla (and the Wawa box it came in with the order detail)

There’s a lot of regional rivals over which local convenience store or gas station has the best food. I don’t think there has to be a best, but if you’re looking for some of the menu standouts at Wawa, I recommend this pierogi quesadilla. It’s mashed potatoes inside a tortilla with two kinds of cheese (I picked cheddar and pepper jack). I like adding pickled jalapeños and getting a side of sour cream.

If I ever end up with leftover mashed potatoes (highly unlikely) I would make this at home.

One of the other things I recommend from Wawa is that they make their hot chocolate by melting mini chocolate chips in steamed milk!


A burger and fries while I’m the only person at the outdoor dining

I am still – as much as possible – eating outside. Partly because of covid, but also because even before that I significantly preferred outdoor service. This is New Deck, an Irish pub that’s loud and crowded inside and probably has sports that everyone is shouting over. But outside I can eat my meal in peace. And there’s even a heater for their outdoor tables!

(By the time I left, there were two other tables of people eating outside as well)


Half a grapefruit

This was an exceptionally mild and tasty grapefruit! I got a bag of five of them from Weee!


Thali – a round dish with many smaller round dishes inside

Okay, I ate indoors for this one. But Amma’s is so good and it was very late at night with no one sitting near me. It was my treat for getting the laundry to the laundromat before they closed.

I ordered the prix fix South Indian dinner (with meat) and got this stunning thali.

I don’t actually know what’s in the pretty little dishes surrounding the bowl with rice, but it’s two soups, 3 veg dishes, 2 meat, 1 biryani, a pickle, raita, and dessert.