My two coworkers need to stop arguing about the veracity of Matt Drudge now.
People still read Matt Drudge? So last millenium.
'Conviction (1)'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
My two coworkers need to stop arguing about the veracity of Matt Drudge now.
People still read Matt Drudge? So last millenium.
ChiKat, that recipe for you:
Winter Squash Soup
6 servings (about 1 cup each)
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon margarine
1 pound butternut, or other yellow winter, squash, peeled, seeded, cubed
1 cup cubed, peeled Idaho potato
1 cup cubed, cored, peeled tart cooking apple
1 1/2 cups water
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/8-/14 teaspoon ground cumin
1 cup apple cider or apple juice (I used cider)
1/2-1 cup fat-free half-and-half or fat-free milk (I used 1/2 cup whole milk)
Salt and white pepper, to taste
Ground nutmeg, as garnish
1. Saute onion in margarine until tender, 3 to 4 minutes. Add squash, potato, and apple; cook over medium heat 5 minutes. Add water and spices and heat to boiling; reduce heat and simmer, covered, until squash and potato are tender, 10 to 15 minutes.
2. Process mixture in food processor or blender until smooth; return to saucepan. Stir in apple cider and half-and-half; cook over medium heat until hot through. Season to taste with salt and white pepper.
3. Pour soup into bowls; sprinkle lightly with nutmeg.
Ooh, how? I'm thinking you could use chai concentrate in place of part of the cream and cut back on the powdered sugar, but I'm not sure how that would work in terms of consistency
I had the epiphany last night that I could do it with ground spices and instant tea, as instant coffee is often called for in coffee or mocha buttercream recipes.
I was just thinking, it's sorta sad, but most of my belongings would easily fit in Hank.
But in multiple trips.
I had the epiphany last night that I could do it with ground spices and instant tea, as instant coffee is often called for in coffee or mocha buttercream recipes.
Yeah, I can see that, if you used an instant tea that didn't have sugar or lemon added. (And now I'm remembering the powdered Lipton's iced tea my brother and I used to make in the summer. The idea was to make it so strong that you'd get a slurry of lemony sugar at the bottom of the glass. I cringe now, but it was delicious then.)
I've never made chai from scratch, though.
Katie, that recipe looks delish! Have bookmarked.
I swear, I don't think I've ever had bread that I didn't like, even the weird Himalayan steamed bun that was basically flavorless.
Ting-mo! If it's the Tibetan bread, anyway. I like it when it's hot, but it loses all appeal once it gets cool. I mildly dislike injera, but will eat it because I like the stuff that goes on it. And I don't think I could love naan more if I tried. Possibly the only thing better than naan is stuffed paratha. With lots of garlic & potatoes & spices & onions.
Yeah, I can see that, if you used an instant tea that didn't have sugar or lemon added.
Such a thing exists?
I had the epiphany last night that I could do it with ground spices and instant tea, as instant coffee is often called for in coffee or mocha buttercream recipes.
Honest Tea makes a very good chai that could possibly be removed from the teabags and ground to a powder for this purpose.
Ting-mo! If it's the Tibetan bread, anyway. I like it when it's hot, but it loses all appeal once it gets cool.
That exactly, on all counts.
Full as I still am, now I want a Shack burger. DAMN YOU, SHAKE SHACK.
Now I'm madly craving hot naan and a mango lassi and something curried and sag paneer, and I hate all of you, because my craving will go unfulfilled.