#also vinaigrette
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Would you say you have a food addiction?
not really, tbh? if we’re going by the strict definition, at least. i tend to forget to actually eat because adhd, i’ll just be thinking abt food 😭😭 it’s weird haha
besides for feedism, food is an interest of mine!! i love to cook and bake and i love learning the cultural sides to foods as well!! it’s like a hobby to me!!
i think i definitely had a food addiction in the past, though. as soon as i was able to take control of what i ate, it got a lot better. except now i can’t make myself eat a ton unless im really really enjoying the food, which is rare 😭😭 i have expensive taste, lol!!
#also i live in a small town and the foods i want are far away :(((#so i subsist on coke zero and chocolates and the greek vinaigrette salads i’ve been eating w extra onions#talk#ask
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i love u salads i love u leafy greens i love u balsamic vinegar + olive oil 🥗
#i also do like red wine vinaigrette but balsamic + olive oil..#ooh btw my fave salad is: arugula and spinach base. tomatoes. cucumbers or carrots whichever u have.#walnuts. blueberries. some cheese if u want. red onions either pickled or raw..#salt pepper red chilli flakes (trust me) onion + garlic powder. balsamic vinegar olive oil. mwah! 💌#u can add chicken or whatever too i just dislike chicken in salads lol
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listen to me. i believe in poly vbs. but it did not happen at once. there is an order to it. it starts with toya and kohane. introvert x introvert. then an is like i kinda like the guy my girlfriend is dating. and then akito in a complete separate situation is interested and kohane and toya is delightfully smug about it.
akito and an in true hater spirit completely refuse to acknowledge the other as romantic partners. then one of them starts feeling fond of the other. its a massive shit show. they become partners begrudgingly and only show affection to each other when the others are not around to give them A Look about it. are you listening
#aristotle.txt#ship stuff#i am a poly vbs truther ESPECIALLY because of akikoha#i think akito is technically interested in kohane before toya but hes emotionally constipated#an is an so when toya and kohane get together she immediately wants to get to know him#toya is just along for the ride#an and akito are like oil and water. in the vbs poly toya and kohane are the mustard#holding the vinaigrette together. you see what im saying.#i feel like i shouldmake another blog for all deranged ship stuff . but im not gonna#poly vbs#poly proseka#im soo mentally ill about them lately . i love u vbs#akito has two hands. an also has two hands. they headbutt each other instead. love wins
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Whoever is responsible for the combination of halloumi + dates + pistachios + pomegranate arils + blood orange wedges at this restaurant deserves to be carried around on a litter like an ancient emperor no jokes
#there was also possibly balsamic vinaigrette but I was too feral about the rest to remember to apply it#I am in food heaven#personal
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Any further tips/advice for freezing veggies? Or any kinds of dish that are good for frozen veg that loose their usual texture (like celery, potatoes etc)?
Basically, cut and clean them to the size you will want in the final dish, since they'll be a bitch to try to cut once freezing makes them soft. For anything juicy, spread it out to freeze first so it doesn't all stick together in one chunk, or portion it into the servings you want to take it out in.
[When I get a camera cord, remind me to photograph my freezer stash, I have mixed potatoes, cabbage, celery and some other things in there now waiting on doing a duck roast,]
And honestly I haven't noticed much loss of texture after cooking. Unless you are used to very lightly steamed celery, the difference in texture there, as example, isn't notable. I don't use celery in stir fry, for example, because I don't eat stir-fry, but I use it in sauces and soups or in tiny bits in stuffing for poultry, so there's no difference there.
If it's the kind of thing that browns you can try tossing it in vinegar or lemon juice but honestly I don't care much about the look of my potatoes or whatever oxidizing slightly.
Pasta sauce and soups, or sauce put put on rice, curry etc.. is a good use for bits of frozen veg.
Really any dish where they normally get cooked a lot in with other things or fluids of any kind. Even tossed into meat pies I haven't notice a difference. It seems scary when they're raw because they seem weirdly soft like if they went bad, but it's because the water in their cells has burst out, much like it would with cooking anyway.
You can puree onion and garlic or herbs instead of having to cut it and make ice-cubes with it, and toss them in a bag, or even pre-caramelize all the onions and then make ice cubes of them to take out one at a time.
And potatoes, potatoes you don't freeze after cooking into a dish, you freeze them pre cut into either chunks for boiling, fries, wedges or shreds, freeze them, and when they come out you put them in whatever you would normally, like boiling them to make mashed potatoes, or mixing them into hash or latkes... It's like how you can get bags of frozen french fries and they bake or deep fry like fresh. I would not pre-make mashed potatoes necessarily because the other ingredients might separate oddly, unless I was making perogis to freeze for later or something. But freezing can even help get out extra water so they're easy to drain and dry or squeeze out for frying or adding to batter.
The goal isn't to necessarily find something to batch cook, it's to just get them cut up in a usable state and in the freezer with as little work as possible before they spoil. Deal with actual meal planning later as a whole separate process.
Pre-shredding carrots can mean having shred carrot to add to things easily, like cakes, tomato sauces, meat or vegetable pies, soups potato hash, ect, but it might help to freeze it spread out on a tray so it all doesn't stick together in a lump, or ice cube tray it, and then bag it, or -alternately- dehydrate carrots in a dehydrator in thin slices for soups. Dehydrated carrot is shelf stable a long time but if you freeze it dehydrated they last indefinitely, which can help make use of those huge bags of big cheap carrots that go on.
I'm not big on eating vegetables raw or half raw due to digestive sensitivities, and boiling or baking them makes them way softer than freezing does anyway. It isn't going to give you something lightly roasted or steamed, but it's better than throwing them out.
If you want to get clever about it keep track of how you cut up various veg for various meals and settle on 1-2 sized you are okay with them being in a variety of things and go with that.
The main thing is to predict to some degree what you'll want to make, but the benefit is being able to just reach into the freezer and grab pre cut veg. I like to grab out a pinch of frozen onion slices one meal at a time, rather than having an onion to work through in the fridge.
And if you are really into soups, you can actually puree tomatoes, cucumber and even lettuce that's about to go off, just clean it up and blend it, and then add it to soup stocks and stews and sauces, where it won't add much to the texture, but it'll add in those nutrients you would have missed from throwing them out instead. Most veggies that turn to utter mush when frozen can be blended and used for soups and sauces so long as you are at peace with them not adding any texture, and looking like goop or a block of coloured ice coming out of the bag.
Just make sure you clean and cut them like you would for meal prep first. You will NOT be able to clean and cut them properly -after- freezing, so you can't just shove them in there thinking you'll deal with any of the prep later, you have to do it first.
Personally, I batch prepare veggies this way into freezer bags before winter and stock up my box freezers with them, that way I have veggies all winter that are nearly fresh. I can just reach in and grab pre-cut peppers, onions and mushrooms to toss into a meal.
It's kind of easier to batch process like 10+ bell peppers at once and not worry about any other meal prep and then just have them for later, as example, and you can buy the bulk packages of stuff that's on sale because it's about to go off. It ends up saving money, sure but also means you are eating a more well rounded diet because you end up with this selection of veggies to just grab and toss in to anything on a whim... That aren't going bad.
You can buy enough corn on the cob to feed a big family, when it's cheap or on sale, and then just defrost one or two at a time for yourself.
Frozen ginger gets soft enough that you can squeeze out all the juice with a garlic press and leave behind the stringy bits, so if you cut it into 1/2-1inch chunks it can be good for that, and then you can take the crushed bit and brew it in a cup of tea, or soup stock... just rinse the ginger off before freezing it.
I also buy huge cuts of meat when they are on cheap, portion them myself and freeze them for later, so basically any meal just becomes taking out your pre-portioned ingredients and doing the actual cooking part with about 0 food waste. I also take the bones and fat off of meat I am cooking and freeze that separately for soup later, or frying or baking etc. Bones are a mash of bits by the time I am throwing out the remains.
Have leftovers you don't want to eat immediately in the following day? Frozen for later! next time you are hungry and don't want to cook you just toss that boy in a baking dish, bam! No food waste.
And when a whole bunch of something is about to go off, you don't have to stand there trying to figure out what you want to cook in the next 3 days that's going to use up 20 potatoes, you just cut them up and put the pause button on them.
If you don't have a box freezer, they are typically sold for 100$ second hand on facebook or kijiji and are a good one time investment when a tax cheque comes in.
Just make sure you are actually using the frozen food. You can't be thinking of it as less good than fresh or harder to make use of, because if you avoid using it and just keep buying more, you are going to run out of space and end up with freezers full of food you aren't eating. Get comfortable reaching for portions of frozen vegetables to add into things, and shop your freezers when you are getting ready to cook meals. [Pinch of bell peppers? Don't mind if I do! It's like a spice rack of vegetable add-ins now! Peruse.]
The last tip I have is to not buy a bunch of stuff to do this with all at once thinking you will have the spoons to do a week of meal prep with it all. Space it out. Buy the big bag of onions one trip, and get most of them frozen before you worry about grabbing a big bag of apples or potatoes, buy cabbage and celery the next trip and cut up most of those to freeze when you get home, or in the following days. Whatever is about to go bad, if it comes to that, just clean it up cut it and freeze it. or prep the whole things when you get to the meal you bought some of it for, depending on what it is, and freeze what you don't use.
Before long you'll have a stash of basically everything you use on hand. Then you can get pickier about waiting to buy things until they are on sale when you can. Like I buy butter on sale only and keep it frozen, but I also buy raw cranberries once a year at Christmas for 2$ or less a bag and just rinse and freeze the whole bags [they have holes int he bags for air flow]. I buy pumpkins for sale -after- halloween and cut them into quarters, bake the quarters so they are squishy, fold them flat into freezer bags, and then have a quarter pumpkin to use in pies or whatever I want. You get pumpkins for like a dollar, so you get each bag of frozen pumpkin for 25 cents [I have known people who do this -after- carving them for Halloween, if they aren't outside, just rinse bake and freeze them for food]. They have a sale rack sometimes of food that's about to go off that's all been bagged up together and discounted, and that is your friend if you are taking home one thing at a time and actually using it.
Frozen apple wedges, btw, do fine in an apple pie. And apple dehydrates nicely at home too. Same logic applies as carrots, if you dehydrate and then also freeze them, they don't stick together and you can have them indefinitely, and they take up a lot less space. But really I just freeze apple slices and then make pie filling with them [or add them to stuffing].
I will eventually formalize and share actual recipes, but so much of the cooking I do is measuring with my feelings that I need the spoons to go through making each dish and documenting what has it come out the best. There's some batch cooking things I do like pre-roasting chickpea flour to coat dumplings and rolls in so they don't stick together in the freezer. I make about 50+ spring rolls at once from frozen bean sprouts and etc, and then freeze those to eat 2-3 at a time.
I just can't stand having food go bad in the fridge if I don't have the energy to cook, and I hate the idea of simply not eating vegetables because of it. I'm trying to save money and also eat well and my response to problems tends to be a little "smash it all with one simple elegant solution". If you have any specific questions please let me know <3
#either keep it alive by planting it freeze it or dehydrate it#basically#learn to love either soup or sauces#Sometimes I make green pasta sauce with just green vegetables like peas green beans frozen lettuce or cuc and whatever#which you would think wouldn't be good but if you like a hot vinaigrette they way I do it with and aged cheese it's good#but also I am probably insane a little bit#I take things to very uncompromising extremes with my systems for dealing with things#thank you for the ask <3
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sometimes being consumed by urges doesnt look like buying a little treat or being desperate for a hug or standing in the rain. sometimes being consumed by urges means eating a large bowl of fresh basil straight, anointing it occasionally with balsamic vinaigrette.
#consumed by urges#i sat at my table casually consuming pieces of herbal leaf like a cow#om nom nom#munchy munchy#basil is really good#also with balsamic vinaigrette??? i'd kill and die for you basil
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4. Plush With The Best Name
This was a hard one, but I think I’d have to award this one to Wee Hen!
Warrior Cats is one of my oldest special interests, and the name “Wee Hen” always stood out to me—even though she was a loner who never actually appeared in a book! And since she’s a Little (Wee) Henry Hound, it felt like a brilliant name for her :)
#cheeky barks#15 day plush challenge#she’s helping me make a vinaigrette for dinner :)#food tw#also dw I’m still quite critical of the series and authors even if I am a fan#apologies for this being so late in the day! I’ve been prepping for ab internship interview tomorrow and playing the game its for all day 😖#my plush: wee hen#jellycat#dog#plush#actually autistic#safeplush#plushblr
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Fuck this
Tourmaline deserved so much better than ending up with Vignette
#I can't stand vignette okay#She was a Shit girlfriend to tourmaline#carnival row spoilers#Carnival row#vignette stonemoss#tourmaline larou#Also I went from calling her vinaigrette to Dressing to Salat#carnival row season 2#Carnival row season 2 spoilers
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made my first ever salad today because i did not know what else to do with romaine and. oh boy. OH BOY.
#the chunks were not mixing with the leaves??? and the purple onion turned out to be so spicy it gave me the shakes??? what the fuck#also i didn't make enough vinaigrette 💀#i poured it in and it disappeared. where did it go. where did it all go.#and this is why i always eat my veggies cooked.#i would've added garlic but after i tasted a bite with the onion i thought i had better cool it with the alliums ://
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also, whoever made my chiptole today???
i hope you find a million dollars and have good sex and/or good meals (in case you’re not into sex) every single day of your life, thank you !!
#for starters i actually got the vinaigrette!!#and it's so fucking good#i try to order it every time and have only gotten it once#well technically twice but that one time the lid got stuck to the sticker on the bag so it...came off#yeah anyway#got it!!#also they gave me extra queso??#i saw it when i got the bag but didn't see the side of corn i ordered#so i just assumed maybe they were out of corn and gave me that instead#which i was still thrilled with because thank you!!#but no the corn was just underneath it so it's extra!!#:'3#i got a quesadilla for today and a bowl for tomorrow and the quesadilla is so fucking good#i already know the bowl is going to be amazing#and i feel like this might be the first time i actually get an order that doesn't have some accidental meat in it!!#i took a bunch of ibgard anyway just in case but so far so good#i know it's just food and a lot of people (validly) think chipotle sucks so fair#but i am very happy right now#and very grateful to whoever made this thank you again so much#i think my edibles are kicking in maybe also ok bye
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Growing up is learning that salads are actually really delicious if you make them right
A mountain of iceberg lettuce with one piece of shredded cheese and an old cherry tomato is not a salad but this is what most “salads” are
I used to hate salads [esp as someone with celiac who had to eat a lot of salad by default] until I started making my own and I discovered that they’re very ease to throw together and when you use a variety of ingredients it’s actually really good and filling
#mixed greens with protein#add some nuts and an apple or pear#and veggies you want#ohh and cheese if you please#craisins are a game changer#also avocado is a must#also ranch is not necessary all the time#don’t sleep on vinaigrettes#also some lemon juice and hummus???#salads are great when they’re made right#salad#salads#food
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also i need to reread house of leaves again <- sentences commonly said by women on the absolute brink
#marijaneposts#i also need to change the medication i’m on but surely this is unrelated.#i want to put johnny truant in a tupperware container with some vinaigrette and sliced snap peas and shake it until he dies.
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I hated your salad,
I never told you but I know you knew, you knew you put too much vinegar, that the taste was overbearing, sat in the bowl for hours like the dredges of sink water
I never told you but there was a skin that clung to my throat with every mouthful of vinegar, the bowl to my lips I could feel it clawing down my throat, stuck at the table for hours because you made it wrong
I never told you but I could see how weak you were, tried to convince me that was my doing, if I just acted better, if I listened more, if I drank the vinegar until it gushed from my throat, then maybe it would all stop
And when it did
When it finally did, I found people who offered honey, olive oil, garlic and vinegar, just enough of each, they became my own flavours far from yours
In my kitchen for hours, learning and growing, if I am kinder to myself, if I speak up, if I take up space, it was never my fault I never told you, but I know you knew
I hated you and your fucking salad.
#my abusive stepdad died a while ago#since then ive learnt many things about cooking#including why his vinaigrette was awful#rot in hell asshole#my salads fuck#tw abuse#not to be all the curtains are blue but the vinegar is also toxic masculinity#tw vent#vent post#i think its time to post this one#is it good? no#im glad its out of my head tho#to anyone reading this im good *does a lil dance*
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so many things stressed me out in such a small amount of time that i fear my mood has been fucked up for the entire week
#plus i tried to distract myself with fanfic but the mc is so fucking hopeless and sad in this that it was making me worse#it hasnt gotten to the good stuff yet#so im listening to my mina playlist its mostly upbeat dance music#also doesnt help that im hungry half the reasons i got stressed out was that everything i wanted to eat was either wrong or i didnt have the#stuff to make it like i had some leftover plain pennes from last night i was gonna eat and my fucking dad ate them then i went to make#sandwich but we're out of lettuce and GOOD pickles bc we do have pickles but they're the disgusting ass walmart pickles#so i went to just have a salad and my almost FUCKING FULL BOTTLE of italian dressing#was just gone. and the raspberry vinaigrette. the lemon herb is there but its got little to no flavor#most of the food we have is microwaveable but our microwave has been broken for 2 weeks and the guy that was supposed to come replace it#hasnt come to do it even tho he was supposed to come last week#i literally havent eaten anything today
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i cant be the only one who was under the impression that last fest would be the final one before finalfest right?
#huh#anyways I think this is the first one in a long time that I've genuinely felt tossed up about all choices#i thought about it for a bit and remembered about how when I was younger and just got my driver's license how I'd regularly go to the store#to buy a whole baguette to then stash in my room and devour plain over a couple days and repeat the cycle#i think I had food insecurity 💔#anyways. so it feels like I should probably go team bread just for that lol#also that shit with some vinaigrette and olive oil. no I shant say
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The Dungeon Meshi renaissance is making me want to share the resources that taught me how to cook.
Don’t forget, you can check out cookbooks from the library!
Smitten Kitchen: The rare recipe blog where the blog part is genuinely good & engaging, but more important: this is a home cook who writes for home cooks. If Deb recommends you do something with an extra step, it’s because it’s worth it. Her recipes are reliable & have descriptive instructions that walk you through processes. Her three cookbooks are mostly recipes not already on the site, & there are treasures in each of them.
Six Seasons: A New Way With Vegetables by Joshua McFadden: This is a great guide to seasonal produce & vegetable-forward cooking, and in addition to introducing me to new-to-me vegetables (and how to select them) it quietly taught me a number of things like ‘how to make a tasty and interesting puréed soup of any root veggie’ and ‘how to make grain salads’ and ‘how to make condiments’.
Grains for Every Season: Rethinking Our Way With Grains by Joshua McFadden: in addition to infodumping in grains, this codifies some of the formulas I picked up unconsciously just by cooking a lot from the previous book. I get a lot of mileage out of the grain bowl mix-and-match formulas (he’s not lying, you can do a citrus vinaigrette and a ranch dressing dupe made with yogurt, onion powder, and garlic powder IN THE SAME DISH and it’s great.)
SALT, FAT, ACID, HEAT by Samin Nosrat: An education in cooking theory & specific techniques. I came to it late but I think it would be a good intro book for people who like to front-load on theory. It taught me how to roast a whole chicken and now I can just, like, do that.
I Dream Of Dinner (so you don’t have to) by Ali Slagle: Ok, look, an important part of learning to cook & cooking regularly is getting kinda burned out and just wanting someone else to tell you what to make. These dinners work well as written and are also great tweakable bases you can use as a starting place.
If you have books or other resources that taught you to cook or that you find indispensable, add ‘em on a reblog.
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