Author Topic: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)  (Read 7043 times)

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Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #75 on: April 16, 2025, 02:53:40 pm »



Offline Ali the Baseball Cat

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #78 on: April 22, 2025, 11:56:25 am »
I might have to get a car for this  :D

Offline varoadking

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #79 on: April 27, 2025, 08:47:56 pm »
I might have to get a car for this  :D

So...we did a thing today...at the only Timmy's in the Commonwealth (Norfolk, VA)




Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #80 on: April 28, 2025, 09:58:05 am »
I have made this salmon recipe several times this spring and we really liked it. My wife likes hers cooked a little more than the recipe specifies, so I leave it under the broiler for a little longer to ensure the thickest part isn't quite so rare. I gauge doneness for this primarily by the amount of charring on top. You want the sugar to caramelize and char a little bit, but not so much that it turns into a blackened mess.

(Notwithstanding the URL, I have not done this in the toaster oven, primarily because usually we use that to heat up something else to go with the fish but also because I don't want fish spatter getting all over the toaster oven.)

https://www.seriouseats.com/miso-glazed-salmon-in-the-toaster-oven-recipe

Online JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #81 on: April 28, 2025, 10:09:51 am »
food safety question:

I have a glass jar of honey with a metal top. Last year, I had to throw out half a jar because the top was impossible to open (soaked it in hot water multiple time, may have flipped it upside down in boiling water, just could not get it to budge). I just finished off a plastic honey container with a plastic flip top with a small hole. I've cleaned the plastic container pretty well (hot water to get rid of the hardened honey at the bottom and in the bottle, soaked it in detergent a couple of times). I'm thinking about just dumping the jar into the plastic container, but I'm a little worried about the safety of reusing the plastic container for this. Is there any reason to be concerned? Should I just go with the glass jar and wipe it down / clean it frequently?

Offline English Natsie

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #82 on: April 28, 2025, 05:33:09 pm »
food safety question:

I have a glass jar of honey with a metal top. Last year, I had to throw out half a jar because the top was impossible to open (soaked it in hot water multiple time, may have flipped it upside down in boiling water, just could not get it to budge). I just finished off a plastic honey container with a plastic flip top with a small hole. I've cleaned the plastic container pretty well (hot water to get rid of the hardened honey at the bottom and in the bottle, soaked it in detergent a couple of times). I'm thinking about just dumping the jar into the plastic container, but I'm a little worried about the safety of reusing the plastic container for this. Is there any reason to be concerned? Should I just go with the glass jar and wipe it down / clean it frequently?

Should be fine if you're going to use the honey within a month - longer than that is best in glass. Any form of cleaning causes chemicals to leach from the plastic, and creates micro-scratches which can harbor bacteria if repeatedly used beyond the short term.

Online JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #83 on: April 28, 2025, 05:44:27 pm »
Should be fine if you're going to use the honey within a month - longer than that is best in glass. Any form of cleaning causes chemicals to leach from the plastic, and creates micro-scratches which can harbor bacteria if repeatedly used beyond the short term.
makes sense. I don't trust cleaning plastic if I can't scrub it a bit inside the container. I think I will just wash the top of the glass very frequently,  maybe each time I get any honey on the rim

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #84 on: May 25, 2025, 12:04:20 pm »
Tried a new (for us) restaurant last night: Alias in Fauquier County. One of our Caps season ticket partners recommended it last year, really raved about it, and we were supposed to go there this same weekend last May for our birthdays (my wife's was Thursday, mine is next Saturday), but Ms1995hoo came down with Covid and we didn’t want to go to a restaurant when she was running a 102° fever. So we finally made it there last night. It’s at the old Vint Hill Farms Station, the old "listening post" off Route 215. I found the location amusing because I remember in my Boy Scout days 40 years ago, Vint Hill was way out in the sticks and we went there for campouts. Back then there was nothing around for miles.

The restaurant has a single seating per night and has two fixed menus, the regular one (see below) and a vegetarian option. The menus change monthly. We both got the regular one. The fellow on the phone said a good number of couples split it—one gets the regular, one gets the vegetarian—so as to try everything, but that didn’t appeal to us. The rockfish was the star of the menu in our opinion. The poke was quite good and had a serious kick to it. The sparkling Riesling cut the kick quite nicely.

There is a microbrewery next door, Old Bust Head. Didn’t try anything there. Didn’t seem like a good idea what with the wine pairings with dinner.

We'll definitely go back, though not on a routine basis simply because of where it is. I took the I-66 express lanes on the way out to make sure we’d be on time. Good thing I did—the two right lanes in the mainline were blocked west of Manassas and the mainline was backed up to Centreville, but I just left the cruise control at 70 mph the whole way. Downside of that? Well, the toll from the Beltway to Gainesville added up to $55.20. But once in a great while when you need to be somewhere at a specific time…

Also, the second picture below is the final plate served after dessert. Notice the top right and bottom left.




Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2023–2025)
« Reply #85 on: May 25, 2025, 05:29:09 pm »
We’re regulars at OBH. Best brewery in the area imho. Irish red is can’t miss but most other beers are good.