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I don't do odd combinations but I do think, "ooh the PSB is nearly ready, must get some gammon..." or " lots of peas, lets have lamb steaks..." or "oooh kaleslaw with our jackets today!"
I like to add radish when making skirlie that's fried oatmeal and chopped onion, and adding chopped radish to the frying pan gives a bit zing to the dish
it may be a struggle to reach the top, but once your over the hill your problems start.
Member of the Nutters Club but I think I am just there to make up the numbers
I don't do odd combinations but I do think, "ooh the PSB is nearly ready, must get some gammon..." or " lots of peas, lets have lamb steaks..." or "oooh kaleslaw with our jackets today!"
It's just coleslaw with kale instead of cabbage... Shredded carrot, shredded kale, a bit of onion if you like it, mayonnaise, anything else you fancy. Sometimes I add some pumpkin seeds and sometimes some apple.
I think a lot of veggies are naturally sweet like peas, carrots, parsnips and beetroot. I also belong to the family of people that don't taste any bitterness in Brussel sprouts. Some things have been done like carrot or beetroot cake but, what about parsnip mousse, or fennel ice cream.
I also think we don't make enough use of our naturally sour fruit, what about adding blackcurrants to a biriani or adding gooseberries to a Green Thai curry. I don't know if they would work but they would add something different.
I love adding fennel seeds and Szechuan pepper into soups as little pockets of interest, so why not dried redcurrants in a tomato soup that might be unusual.
Peas might work in a biscuit or a granola style bar and would make a lovely fruit leather type snack.
When I look at my garden I don't see food per se or recipes, I see a nice day out with a picnic. I love digging in the soil and furtiling for potatoes. Watching seedlings poke through the soil is like seeing a newborn baby to me, ahhhh. I relish the battle with the bugs every year as we each try to gain the upper hand while mother nature gives us both thick ears for insolence. I love my garden.
Mmmmm.... I like a clear differentiation between sweet and savoury so a lot of these wouldn’t work for me.
At the stage of planning a garden i sow stuff we like to eat but at the stage of planning a meal I eat what’s ready and good.
I like to add radish when making skirlie that's fried oatmeal and chopped onion, and adding chopped radish to the frying pan gives a bit zing to the dish
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