Controversial Culinary Comments

When I make my beef teriyaki stir fry (with snow peas and bean sprouts), I like to add water chestnuts for a bit of texture. It gives the dish a nice crisp addition and because they’re covered in the teriyaki sauce, they have flavor.

I like my coffee tepid or even cold out of the fridge.

Anyway things served too hot just kill your taste-buds, I like to taste my food.

I like my coffee luke warm. But otherwise, I completely agree with you.

(Johnny Carson) " I did not know that!"

All Vodka starts the same and then it is filtered etc by the bottler, it’s amazing how people are duped into buying fancy Vodkas.

Well, not all vodka starts the same — many different things it can be made from.

Is there an accepted definition? I don’t know. Is there a customary definition? Certainly. A martini has gin, vermouth, and an olive or maybe a lemon twist.

I think variations on a martini, changing this or that, is fine. I don’t care - it’s your drink - it’s good if you like it, not good if you don’t like it. But if someone is going to nitpick about one aspect, saying it’s impossible to modify the recipe, and then in the next breath say they’re going to modify the recipe, I call BS.

Vodka definition

So you can make it from anything that can be fermented into alcohol- the key is just distilling it in such a way that it’s essentially flavorless.

If it actually retains the character of the fermentable substance, it’s probably best described as an unaged version of whatever the spirit made from that fermentable is. A sugarcane vodka that actually tastes like sugarcane to any extent is really a white rum, in other words.

Rick Kitchen Nothing wrong with Jim Beam- I was just saying that if you’re going to mix your bourbon with Coke, then there’s no reason to spend more money- Beam is perfectly good for that purpose, and certainly more appropriate than buying Knob Creek Reserve or Michter’s and mixing it with Coke!

Well, yes, that’s the goal and definition of vodka. “Essentially” is the key word there. But it doesn’t just taste like pure watered down ethanol. There are trace flavors there, IME, and the fermentation source contributes to it.

That said, I don’t really like vodka as it essentially is supposed to be flavorless, but there are subtle differences, and I’ve got to believe most of those differences are due to the fermentation source. This doesn’t mean the high price of boutique vodka brands isn’t marketing bullshit in its finest form, but I also don’t believe the fermentation source doesn’t contribute to the final product. And it clearly is just plain factually incorrect that “all vodka starts the same.” It does not.

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The ones I’ve had (admittedly from chain restaurants) have all been advertised as “Chicago deep dish” and have all been uniformly doughy. I’m partial to thin crusts overall and maybe I need to try the “real” thing but so far every iteration I’ve had has been a disappointment.

Yeah, that what non-Chicagoan’s think deep dish is.
It shouldn’t look like this:
http://i.gzn.jp/img/2017/06/19/united-airlines-deep-dish-pizza/00.jpg
It should look like this:
https://assets3.thrillist.com/v1/image/968702/size/tl-horizontal_main.jpg

What I don’t understand is that this isn’t like a NY Bagel “It’s in the water” scenario. Deep dish is pretty simple to make and there’s nothing stopping people from making a decent one outside Chicago.

I don’t know how people can stand the stench of hard-boiled eggs.

Also, what’s with this “bowl food” fad?

I’m kind of bummed that 3/4 of all recipes out there have onions in them, because I don’t like onions.

Fun read. Sidney Frank - The Man Behind Grey Goose Vodka - Nymag

A recipe is a great starting point, but feel free to modify it to suit your needs!

Actually reminded of these by the carrot cake thread, even though neither is carrot-cake related. >_>

Oatmeal raisin cookies are far superior to chocolate chip (not that I’ll say no to chocolate chip!).

Pizza without pineapple is a sad waste of ingredients.

Oatmeal raisin chocolate chips cookies- my wife makes them, perfect!

Barbarian. :stuck_out_tongue:

A while back, my brother purchased some hemp milk and a couple of other products made with it, and was not impressed. He added, “I wouldn’t be surprised if some of these ‘healthy’ hemp products contain high fructose corn syrup.” :stuck_out_tongue:

eta: If you don’t know, hemp milk is a pale bluish-gray color, kind of like the window I’m typing in right now. It tastes about the same as any other vegetable milk.

Some people like their cereal with orange juice. I’ve tried it myself and it wasn’t bad, but it would depend on what kind of cereal you use. Most likely, for me it was Raisin Bran.

I will never ever ever understand the North American insistence on including melted cheese in (what seems like) practically every dish. I find it extremely weird.

Nobody else seems to agree with me, though. Sad!

Count me as one who agrees with you! And things that normally do have some cheese in/on them, there is the persistent attitude that if it has cheese, MORE cheese must make it better.