What's your secret ingredients?
- maverick
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Rlown, I order mushrooms(dried, and fresh) from Oregon when I have larger
function to cater.
function to cater.
- rlown
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
order shrooms? what's that about? it's my friend and he harvests them by the gallon.. free.. yes, i have good friends.. go figure.. :retard:
compound butter would go nicely as well, but.. season is over..
compound butter would go nicely as well, but.. season is over..
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Real garlic, real onion, serrano peppers and sun dried tomatoes. Depending on how the fish is prepared and cooked, I will either use rosemary or dill weed. Rosemary and dill are also fresh (I have plants). Some lemon juice. That's pretty much the "staple" secret ingredients along with oil and a bag of fish fry. The reamining stuff varies.
- dave54
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Tabasco sauce.
Wild onions when I find them.
Wild onions when I find them.
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- East Side Hiker
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Picking wild onions in the Sierra should be done with great care and consideration as they are a native plant that has a hard enough time surviving nature and the wild animals. I know it seems there are a lot of onions, but their populations are fragile and it takes many years (5-7) for a seed to produce a flower.
Oregano, basil, thyme, and sage, together with crushed red peppers, occasionally cumin, are my spices of choice, but I don't fish and I'd like to figure out how to stay in the mtns without cooking at all.
Oregano, basil, thyme, and sage, together with crushed red peppers, occasionally cumin, are my spices of choice, but I don't fish and I'd like to figure out how to stay in the mtns without cooking at all.
- vandman
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
I have a special spice bag that I carry. It's lightweight and brings flavor to grains and rice. There's a tiny Nalgene filled with some olive oil, a few cubes of chicken bouillon for each night, also a section of garlic or shallot for each night and lots of herbs. I grow my own herbs and always have a supply of dried basil, thyme, sage, tarragon and rosemary. Also included are smoked dried chili, dried tomatoes and mushrooms--porcini and morels hydrate fastest and taste best. There's a bag of Parmesan cheese and a few packets of soy sauce, ketchup, hot sauce, salt and pepper. It might sound like a lot, but it's a small bag packed with flavors and except for the bouillon additive free.
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- gregw822
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Take a cup of sesame seeds. Toast them in a skillet until they're golden brown. Add salt to taste. You can add any other spices you like, maybe some dried garlic. Anyway, when the seeds have cooled, grind the mix to a powder in a mortar and pestle or a food processor. Sprinkle on anything you like or just eat it with a spoon. Very high calorie content for minimal weight and volume. Delicious if you like sesame.
- justjim
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
OKAYSO............"Everything is Better With Bacon" might be tough for some to take but......itz the truth............really!!!!
Real bacon bits generally sold as salad toppings are high in every factor (including price). These guys offer a nice flavor, fat, and protein boost to cous-cous, potatoes, or just about anything else that you use as an evening staple. Another nice (for my tastes) seasoning is a basil pesto + Tabasco, loosened up with extra EVOO such that it can be poured from say a 500 ml Nalgene.
So.......Ya take a package of Ore Ida flavored mashies and add some bacon bits before the water. Then when rehydrated, you top off with the oily pesto and some additional shaved Parmegiano Reggiano.
Not bad A-Tall and makes a fine side dish for feesh or a meal unto itself.
JJ
Real bacon bits generally sold as salad toppings are high in every factor (including price). These guys offer a nice flavor, fat, and protein boost to cous-cous, potatoes, or just about anything else that you use as an evening staple. Another nice (for my tastes) seasoning is a basil pesto + Tabasco, loosened up with extra EVOO such that it can be poured from say a 500 ml Nalgene.
So.......Ya take a package of Ore Ida flavored mashies and add some bacon bits before the water. Then when rehydrated, you top off with the oily pesto and some additional shaved Parmegiano Reggiano.
Not bad A-Tall and makes a fine side dish for feesh or a meal unto itself.
JJ
- Ikan Mas
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Wild Onions, I'm not picking very many anyhow and 90% of hikers probably don't know what they are.
My wife is Asian and we shop the local Ranch 99 alot. I'm always looking for something to make meals more interesting and here is a couple.
Instant Miso Soup. This consists of a packet of miso and a packet of drive mushrooms or seaweed. Add a packet of just dried vegatables from Just Tomatoes (availalbe at the front counter in the Concord REI) and you have a really nice soup. Nice salt replentishment on those hot days.
Another item from the Asian stores is Kaisou Salad. Its a Japanese dish that consists of dried seaweed, snow fungus and agar-agar. You rehyrdrate it and you have a nice crunchy salad. I'm working on a miso-based salad dressing to go with it. Amazon sells it as well. Here's a link:
http://www.amazon.com/Marutomo-Seaweed- ... B001AY460K" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
If you are in berry country (Pacific Northwest) and you don't want to carry sugar, a few dried mangos will help sweeten up what can be somewhat sour berries. In Goat Rocks a couple of year ago, my brother was rather spent from a tough day going over old snowy. While he was napping, I rustled up a bunch of Winberries (red huckle berries) and boiled with the dried mango. The resulting soup helped him feel better.
My wife is Asian and we shop the local Ranch 99 alot. I'm always looking for something to make meals more interesting and here is a couple.
Instant Miso Soup. This consists of a packet of miso and a packet of drive mushrooms or seaweed. Add a packet of just dried vegatables from Just Tomatoes (availalbe at the front counter in the Concord REI) and you have a really nice soup. Nice salt replentishment on those hot days.
Another item from the Asian stores is Kaisou Salad. Its a Japanese dish that consists of dried seaweed, snow fungus and agar-agar. You rehyrdrate it and you have a nice crunchy salad. I'm working on a miso-based salad dressing to go with it. Amazon sells it as well. Here's a link:
http://www.amazon.com/Marutomo-Seaweed- ... B001AY460K" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
If you are in berry country (Pacific Northwest) and you don't want to carry sugar, a few dried mangos will help sweeten up what can be somewhat sour berries. In Goat Rocks a couple of year ago, my brother was rather spent from a tough day going over old snowy. While he was napping, I rustled up a bunch of Winberries (red huckle berries) and boiled with the dried mango. The resulting soup helped him feel better.
- maverick
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Re: What's your secret ingredients?
Ikan Mas wrote "Instant Miso Soup." I started making this 2 years ago, and it is quite
good.
Whole Foods has it, and they have a reduced sodium version, which I like using.
They used to carry packages of dried tofu, but has been discontinued a while ago
unfortunately.
good.
Whole Foods has it, and they have a reduced sodium version, which I like using.
They used to carry packages of dried tofu, but has been discontinued a while ago
unfortunately.
Professional Sierra Landscape Photographer
I don't give out specific route information, my belief is that it takes away from the whole adventure spirit of a trip, if you need every inch planned out, you'll have to get that from someone else.
Have a safer backcountry experience by using the HST ReConn Form 2.0, named after Larry Conn, a HST member: http://reconn.org
I don't give out specific route information, my belief is that it takes away from the whole adventure spirit of a trip, if you need every inch planned out, you'll have to get that from someone else.
Have a safer backcountry experience by using the HST ReConn Form 2.0, named after Larry Conn, a HST member: http://reconn.org
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