Milo's Kitchen Corner
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I just got done cooking it and tried a bite and it tastes good to me =D So I'm happy.
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Vallorns Super Burger
2 beef burgers
1/2 red onion
1/2 sweet pointed red pepper ( bell peppers work too but have less flavor)
1 egg
1 slice bread
1 burger bun (sliced in two)
4 thin slices black pudding
1 garlic clove
assorted salad leaves
Cooking:
2 beef burgers
1/2 red onion
1/2 sweet pointed red pepper ( bell peppers work too but have less flavor)
1 egg
1 slice bread
1 burger bun (sliced in two)
4 thin slices black pudding
1 garlic clove
assorted salad leaves
Cooking:
Spoiler! :
Lord_Mountbatten wrote:I didn't quite hear you over the sound of my eyebrow shooting into the sky.
OI YOU!
YES YOU!
WE HAVE A STEAM COMMUNITY GROUP!
JOIN US AND ADD PEOPLE FOR FUN TIMES!
CUT: Baldrick
- MKindy
- Everybody Have a Logical Time
- Posts: 2231
- Joined: 12 Feb 2011, 05:22
- Location: Arkansas, USA
- Contact:
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Smores Frozen Custard !!!!
For those of you not aware, a smore is two graham cracker squares with a roasted marshmallow and appropriately-sized chocolate square, where you take the roasted marshmallow hot off the fire, put the chocolate on top so it melts, and squish the whole thing between the grahams.
Now available as ice cream D:
Enjoy! I'd post pictures of the one I made, but it all got eaten really quickly. =_=;
For those of you not aware, a smore is two graham cracker squares with a roasted marshmallow and appropriately-sized chocolate square, where you take the roasted marshmallow hot off the fire, put the chocolate on top so it melts, and squish the whole thing between the grahams.
Now available as ice cream D:
Spoiler! :
- Wildwill002
- Posts: 3162
- Joined: 15 Dec 2010, 12:42
- Location: Blackpool
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Bored in food tech so have a soup recipe
ingredients:
3 large carrots roughly chopped
1 large onion roughly chopped
4 celery sticks roughly chopped
1 tbsp olive oil
2 garlic cloves, crushed
2 large potatoes, cut into small dice
2 tbsp tomato puree
2ltr vegetable stock
400g can chopped tomatoes
400g can butter or cannellini beans
140g spaghetti. Make it short
1/2 head savoy cabbage, shredded
Steps:
chop the veg into very small pieces
heat the oil in a pan, add the vegetables garlic and potatoes then cook over a medium heat for 5 mins until softened
stir in the tomato puree, stock and tomatoes. Bring to the boil, then turn down the heat and simmer, covered, for ten mins
tip the beans and pasta in then cook for a further 10 mins, adding the cabbage for the final 2 mins. Season to taste
ingredients:
3 large carrots roughly chopped
1 large onion roughly chopped
4 celery sticks roughly chopped
1 tbsp olive oil
2 garlic cloves, crushed
2 large potatoes, cut into small dice
2 tbsp tomato puree
2ltr vegetable stock
400g can chopped tomatoes
400g can butter or cannellini beans
140g spaghetti. Make it short
1/2 head savoy cabbage, shredded
Steps:
chop the veg into very small pieces
heat the oil in a pan, add the vegetables garlic and potatoes then cook over a medium heat for 5 mins until softened
stir in the tomato puree, stock and tomatoes. Bring to the boil, then turn down the heat and simmer, covered, for ten mins
tip the beans and pasta in then cook for a further 10 mins, adding the cabbage for the final 2 mins. Season to taste
Spoiler! :
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Garlic Beef Noodles.
What you need:
Pack of cheap ass ramen noodles.
two ground beef patties (if you don't have patties... just make the ground beef into pattie shapes)
1 small onion
2-4 small cloves of garlic (Depends on how much you love garlic... me, I love garlic with a pasion)
Seasonings (I went with a dash of hot sauce, a sprinkle of hot pepper flakes, salt and pepper, some sort of italian spices and a dash of italian salad dressing)
3-4 spoons of Salsa /or/ tomato sauce /or/ Ketchup (NOTE: When I say tomato sauce I do not mean Ketchup... I mean pasta sauce)
dash of milk.
What to do:
Cook the beef and get it all chopped up in the pan, set it in a bowl for later.
Chop the onion and garlic into bits (Any size, depends on how you like your onion and garlic) and fry them up. Add spices as you cook.
Re-add the beef.
Add the Sauce and dash of milk and let simmer.
Cook the noodles, then drain
Serve the noodles in a bowl and top it off with the sauce you made.
Enjoy.
What you need:
Pack of cheap ass ramen noodles.
two ground beef patties (if you don't have patties... just make the ground beef into pattie shapes)
1 small onion
2-4 small cloves of garlic (Depends on how much you love garlic... me, I love garlic with a pasion)
Seasonings (I went with a dash of hot sauce, a sprinkle of hot pepper flakes, salt and pepper, some sort of italian spices and a dash of italian salad dressing)
3-4 spoons of Salsa /or/ tomato sauce /or/ Ketchup (NOTE: When I say tomato sauce I do not mean Ketchup... I mean pasta sauce)
dash of milk.
What to do:
Cook the beef and get it all chopped up in the pan, set it in a bowl for later.
Chop the onion and garlic into bits (Any size, depends on how you like your onion and garlic) and fry them up. Add spices as you cook.
Re-add the beef.
Add the Sauce and dash of milk and let simmer.
Cook the noodles, then drain
Serve the noodles in a bowl and top it off with the sauce you made.
Enjoy.
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
- Sti_Jo_Lew
- Posts: 3251
- Joined: 19 Dec 2010, 12:46
- Location: Nevada
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Sounds good except for the onion and hot sauce, don't like those things. Guess I'll have to make up for it with MOAR GARLIC!
SMWasder: BEGONE FOUL BEATS, FOR I AM THE DJ OF THE APOCALYPSE
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Seasonings are totally up to you, so if you don't want hot sauce or onions then its no big deal.
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
This needs more student recipes.
You will need:
One red onion
Bacon (preferably as thick as you can get)
Creme fraiche
Paprika (or other spices I guess, if you want)
1 red pepper
1 green pepper
Chop up yer veg, and cut the bacon into strips. Fry everything and mix it well. Eat.
Hey, I'm a middle class student! I just chuck stuff in a frying pan and see what happens, I found this is good. Also, baked beans with reggae reggae sauce.
You will need:
One red onion
Bacon (preferably as thick as you can get)
Creme fraiche
Paprika (or other spices I guess, if you want)
1 red pepper
1 green pepper
Chop up yer veg, and cut the bacon into strips. Fry everything and mix it well. Eat.
Hey, I'm a middle class student! I just chuck stuff in a frying pan and see what happens, I found this is good. Also, baked beans with reggae reggae sauce.
WWTDD
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I have (Or had) a magnet for my fridge that said "Real men don't need/use recipes!"
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
- Sti_Jo_Lew
- Posts: 3251
- Joined: 19 Dec 2010, 12:46
- Location: Nevada
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Lol, that's how I usually do things. Grab a slab of beef or some shrimp, put a few random spices I hope will taste good together, then throw it on the barbeque. That or I just deep fry things.
SMWasder: BEGONE FOUL BEATS, FOR I AM THE DJ OF THE APOCALYPSE
- Jakeman214
- Posts: 152
- Joined: 24 Sep 2011, 21:07
- Location: Tabi no tochū
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Jakeman214's Easy Apple Crumble!
INGREDIENTS!
1/2 cup of Brown Sugar
1/2 cup of Rolled Oats
1/2 cup of Dessicated Coconut
1/2 cup of Plain Flour.
Tablespoon of butter
300g (medium) Can of tinned apples OR 3 freshly peeled, cored and sliced apples. Pears, peaches and fruit salad (Canned or fresh!) work just as well for great variations!
INSTRUCTIONS!
1. Melt butter in a large mixing bowl in ya microwave.
2. Whilst the butter is melting, take a pie dish around 20cm/8 inches in diameter and put your apple in it so it is a smooth layer.
3. Take mixing bowl with melted butter. Add Flour, Coconut, Oats and Sugar. Mix well and until it becomes an even mix.
4. Evenly spread the crumble mix over the apple.
5. Chuck it in a microwave on high for 5 minutes, or an oven at 180 degrees Celcius for 10 minutes.
6. Let it rest, then dish up with Custard, Ice Cream or Fruit Salad!
And that is how you create an easy and awesome desert within 10 minutes! I usually make it just as dinner is finishing cooking and chuck in the microwave/oven so it finishes halfway through dinner, and is just about the right temperature to serve up right after.
INGREDIENTS!
1/2 cup of Brown Sugar
1/2 cup of Rolled Oats
1/2 cup of Dessicated Coconut
1/2 cup of Plain Flour.
Tablespoon of butter
300g (medium) Can of tinned apples OR 3 freshly peeled, cored and sliced apples. Pears, peaches and fruit salad (Canned or fresh!) work just as well for great variations!
INSTRUCTIONS!
1. Melt butter in a large mixing bowl in ya microwave.
2. Whilst the butter is melting, take a pie dish around 20cm/8 inches in diameter and put your apple in it so it is a smooth layer.
3. Take mixing bowl with melted butter. Add Flour, Coconut, Oats and Sugar. Mix well and until it becomes an even mix.
4. Evenly spread the crumble mix over the apple.
5. Chuck it in a microwave on high for 5 minutes, or an oven at 180 degrees Celcius for 10 minutes.
6. Let it rest, then dish up with Custard, Ice Cream or Fruit Salad!
And that is how you create an easy and awesome desert within 10 minutes! I usually make it just as dinner is finishing cooking and chuck in the microwave/oven so it finishes halfway through dinner, and is just about the right temperature to serve up right after.
Tabi no tochū.
Proud Queenslander, reminding the New South Welshmen exactly WHY they keep losing the State of Origin.
Proud Queenslander, reminding the New South Welshmen exactly WHY they keep losing the State of Origin.
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Same of these sound great, some made me laugh... a lot. I'm still wiping the tears away.
I usually just cook with my stomach and don't use many recipes which makes giving them to other people difficult sometimes. Here's an easy one that I really like for those "Oh heck I was supposed to bring something for the pot luck tonight!" moments.
Creamed Corn:
1 large bag (family size) of frozen corn
1 stick of butter (1/4 lb)
1 regular size box of cream cheese (8oz)
Melt the butter and cream cheese over medium heat, add corn and heat until warm. Turn heat to low and cover for about 20min.
Thanks for sharing all the fun recipes.
I usually just cook with my stomach and don't use many recipes which makes giving them to other people difficult sometimes. Here's an easy one that I really like for those "Oh heck I was supposed to bring something for the pot luck tonight!" moments.
Creamed Corn:
1 large bag (family size) of frozen corn
1 stick of butter (1/4 lb)
1 regular size box of cream cheese (8oz)
Melt the butter and cream cheese over medium heat, add corn and heat until warm. Turn heat to low and cover for about 20min.
Thanks for sharing all the fun recipes.
- MayorLennie
- Site Contributor
- Posts: 1016
- Joined: 23 Aug 2011, 23:09
- Location: Denver, CO
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I love this thread and have always wanted to post. I will post about some staples I keep for cooking, that add a little something to about everything we make at our house.
What sorta cooking staples do you always use?
1. Mongolian Fire Oil http://www.farawayfoods.com/fireoil.html
2. Morton's Nature's Seasoning
http://www.netgrocer.com/pd/Morton/Seas ... c=gproduct
3. Dehydrated onion flakes and dehydrated green onions
4. jasmine rice, new crop for that year (we get a 20 lb bag each year in Feb/March at the Asian Market)
5. Celery and Carrots good in everything
6. A variety of dried pasta and noodles
7. Red sauce and white sauce, canned
8. Broth and soup stock (canned and in freezer)
And we keep a lot of various condiments like Guardineirra, sweet pickles, pepperoncini peppers, italian dressing, ranch dressing and BBQ sauce, pickle slices, and a variety (like 4 kinds!) of mustards, like dijon, hot, sweet, spicy brown, yellow....
Fun Fact: We hate ketchup and don't allow it in our house or on our table.
What sorta cooking staples do you always use?
1. Mongolian Fire Oil http://www.farawayfoods.com/fireoil.html
2. Morton's Nature's Seasoning
http://www.netgrocer.com/pd/Morton/Seas ... c=gproduct
3. Dehydrated onion flakes and dehydrated green onions
4. jasmine rice, new crop for that year (we get a 20 lb bag each year in Feb/March at the Asian Market)
5. Celery and Carrots good in everything
6. A variety of dried pasta and noodles
7. Red sauce and white sauce, canned
8. Broth and soup stock (canned and in freezer)
And we keep a lot of various condiments like Guardineirra, sweet pickles, pepperoncini peppers, italian dressing, ranch dressing and BBQ sauce, pickle slices, and a variety (like 4 kinds!) of mustards, like dijon, hot, sweet, spicy brown, yellow....
Fun Fact: We hate ketchup and don't allow it in our house or on our table.
"No one can escape the inevitable envelopment of will and desire that is Escapecraft. Bring him here." -- Lord_Mountbatten
HOW 2 MAKE A SOFT DRINK !!!
In my school i have been doing a science project with my friend, we are doing a solutions unit and have a project about solutions, sovents, and solutes. i figured since we made pop we should share the recipe so here is how to make REALLY GOOD GINGER ALE!
here you go this is my poisinis amazing ginger ale recipe, hope you like itHow to make a soft drink
Things you will need-
No font coloring
Large pot
Measuring cup
Stove
Empty bottle (s)
Tea spoon
1/8 teaspoon of yeast
3 ounces of fresh ginger
Knife/peeler
Lemon juice
4 and a half quarts of water
¾ cups of sugar
How to make the soft drink-
Step1. Peel the ginger with the peeler or a knife, and then chop it into small bits.
Step2. Simmer the chopped ginger, sugar, and 1 ½ quarts of water in a pot for 30-60 minutes.
Step3. Strain the brew in to a smaller pot, and then re-transfer the brew to the bigger pot.
Step4. Mix the brew with the other 3 quarts of water.
Step5. Let it cool until it is warm.
Step6. In a small jar, mix warm water and the yeast, and let sit for 15 minutes.
Step7. Add the yeast solution to the brew.
Step8. Let the soft drink sit for 10 minutes.
Step9. Leave in fridge for 3-4 days.
Step10. Enjoy!
Video editor. GFX artist. Intro designer. *Pic coming soon* Also follow me on twitter- @Delux_kingzz
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Ah, thanks for moving this,some of these are cool.
Video editor. GFX artist. Intro designer. *Pic coming soon* Also follow me on twitter- @Delux_kingzz
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I am currently in the middle of making this and wanted to toss this on here to share =D
This is very easy to do, so totally try this out.
Ingredients:
For the sponge:
1 1/2 teaspoon dry active yeast
1/2 cup AP flour
1/2 cup warm water (about 100 degrees)
Then:
12 oz bottled beer
18 ounces AP flour (about 4 cups)
1 1/2 teaspoon fine salt
What to do... Watch the video =3
This is very easy to do, so totally try this out.
Ingredients:
For the sponge:
1 1/2 teaspoon dry active yeast
1/2 cup AP flour
1/2 cup warm water (about 100 degrees)
Then:
12 oz bottled beer
18 ounces AP flour (about 4 cups)
1 1/2 teaspoon fine salt
What to do... Watch the video =3
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
My Asian Style Chicken Noodle Soup (one of the only nice things I can make)
Cut up 2 shallots
put in a big pot with a drizzle of oil and a teaspoon of ginger
stir it while it cooks on high heat
add 2 litres of chicken stock
simmer
add 2 tins of sweetened corn Kernels (add juice from 1 can but not the other)
and 1 tin of creamy corn kernels
cut up some chicken breast (however much you want really ) and put in pot
simmer until chicken is cooked
add noodles and cook until soft
NOM IT
NOTE: i usually make this with whatever i can find in kitchen, only part you really need is the stock lol, try some chilli with it... could be nice
ALSO: sorry for the crap description... im not gods gift at recipe making
Cut up 2 shallots
put in a big pot with a drizzle of oil and a teaspoon of ginger
stir it while it cooks on high heat
add 2 litres of chicken stock
simmer
add 2 tins of sweetened corn Kernels (add juice from 1 can but not the other)
and 1 tin of creamy corn kernels
cut up some chicken breast (however much you want really ) and put in pot
simmer until chicken is cooked
add noodles and cook until soft
NOM IT
NOTE: i usually make this with whatever i can find in kitchen, only part you really need is the stock lol, try some chilli with it... could be nice
ALSO: sorry for the crap description... im not gods gift at recipe making
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
As a Bain Marie, do not use a plastic bowl, melt chocolate. Strong melt the plastic load, rather than the end.
- Milo_Windby
- Retired
- Posts: 2274
- Joined: 06 Nov 2010, 15:18
- Location: Canada, British Columbia
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I'm sorry... what?arigatou wrote:As a Bain Marie, do not use a plastic bowl, melt chocolate. Strong melt the plastic load, rather than the end.
Ferengi Rules of Acquisition wrote:#40. If you see profit on a journey, take it
<3Milo's Catnip Fund<3
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
i think itsarigatou wrote:As a Bain Marie, do not use a plastic bowl, melt chocolate. Strong melt the plastic load, rather than the end.
When using a Bain Marie, dont use a plastic bowl to melt the chocolate. the heat melts the plastic rather than the chocolate.
on a side note... my sister once did exactly this. we still have the disk of plastic and molten/burnt chocolate we found at the bottom of the pan...
Lord_Mountbatten wrote:I didn't quite hear you over the sound of my eyebrow shooting into the sky.
OI YOU!
YES YOU!
WE HAVE A STEAM COMMUNITY GROUP!
JOIN US AND ADD PEOPLE FOR FUN TIMES!
CUT: Baldrick
- Wildwill002
- Posts: 3162
- Joined: 15 Dec 2010, 12:42
- Location: Blackpool
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
Sorry for bumping this and necro'ing but I did it for 2 reasons
1. The recipes here are really awesome and need to be shared
2. I'm making something course meal for my better halves birthday and brownies for Valentines day (I lost the recipe)
Again, sorry, but please continue the thread
1. The recipes here are really awesome and need to be shared
2. I'm making something course meal for my better halves birthday and brownies for Valentines day (I lost the recipe)
Again, sorry, but please continue the thread
Spoiler! :
Re: Milo's Kitchen Corner
I remember reading this thread and deciding the instructions by arigatou were probably the best I've ever seen before.
Daemon wrote:I'm going to draw the fuck out of this egg.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests