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This is why you're fat.

This is why you're fat.

sketchy bunnies Pomodori Secchi Se leram o post de hoje da Marizé, já sabem porque me fui lembrar disto. A quiche magnífica que é ali descrita leva um ingrediente raro entre nós, o tomate seco. Como não podia deixar de ser, conheci os Pomodori Secchi em Itália.Ali, tanto podem ser ingredientes de cozinhado, matéria-prima para o Pesto Rosso (vermelho), ingrediente de sanduíches incríveis e até petiscados assim, como aperitivo para uma cerveja.Apaixonei-me há muitos anos pelos pomodori secchi, de que trazia verdadeiras carradas, que nessa altura ainda ninguém os conhecia por cá. Depois, porque não ia sempre a Itália, fazia-os.Agora são já quase comuns, se bem que carotes, mas eu continuo a fazê-los a cada Verão, quando o tomate é quase dado (às vezes, mesmo dado) e o Sol é de graça, como toda a gente sabe.Claro que ainda é cedo para o Verão e para o tomate barato, mas fica a receita para quem quiser, e puder. Ingredientes: Tomates grandes e carnudosSal grossoAzeite Preparação: Nota:

The cherry blossom girl Marmitako Recipe Cut the tuna into chunks, discarding the bone. If using bonito, cut it first into slices, then with a knife or fork pull off chunks of the flesh from the bone. Heat the oil in a heatproof casserole and in it saute the chopped onions, garlic and peppers, cleaned of seeds and cut into strips. When they are soft, add the tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped, the paprika, salt and pepper and chili. When tomatoes are somewhat reduced add the potatoes, cut in dice. Stir for a few minutes, then add the wine and water. Let the casserole rest, covered, for 5 to 10 minutes before serving. Your Marmitako is ready. Related recipes: Marmitako, Spanish, Tuna, Bonito, Fish Season specials: Easter Recipes, Passover Recipes, Christmas Recipes, Season Recipes, Xmas Recipes

pepito mi corazon ItO, cOpain, jardin ...Il a une graaaaande bOutche mais il est sympathique & élégant ♡ : )Et puis merci ♡ CarOline... bientôt le Moonwalk grâce à ses pOmpes chiC ★★★ Ratatouille Food Recipes, - by Provence Beyond Also: | Ratatouille - Classic | Ratatouille Common Method | Ratatouille Simple Method | This Niçoise dish is much more than a vegetable soup. It can be prepared fairly quickly by cooking everything together at the same time, but that needs to be done in the correct sequence to not miss out the art and the flavour of the dish. It's also true that the recipe can legitimately vary (somewhat) according to tastes, but the variations should be based on experience. The volume is also very variable. "Too much" doesn't apply to ratatouille. Cooking Pot - we use a large pressure cooker, without the pressure. Recipe (12 servings makes about 4.5 litres) Classical Method This is the "old fashioned" method. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Design You Trust Thai Recipes Home Style from Temple of Thai Welcome to our Thai recipes section. Thai cuisine is adaptable, innovative and dynamic. The best Thai cooking uses the freshest ingredients available to create the unique Thai taste. This taste can be defined as the use of all 5 flavors: spicy, sweet, salty, bitter and sour. Only Thai cuisine brings out all of these flavors to play together harmoniously in a meal. Get started with our home style Thai recipes for Pad Thai, Sticky Rice, Curry & Satay. Most of the Thai recipes here are not elaborate but good useful everyday food that can be prepared with a reasonable expenditure of time and labor. These recipes are mainly home-style i.e. not in the palace tradition. That said, the recipe should be a only a rough guideline. Like all great cuisines, the foods in season should be the most important factor to determine what to cook. Basic knowledge of the balance of the five flavors is key. Try a basic menu to get started. Also visit our Thai Cooking section to read our latest cooking articles.

FAIL Blog: Epic Fail Pictures and Videos of Owned, Pwnd and Fail gourmets amadores AcidCow.com - videos, pictures, celebs, flash games The man who unboiled an egg | Compare and buy He can measure the pressure inside a chip and has worked out how to produce 24 litres of mayonnaise from a single egg. Hervé This, France's most famous chemist - and inspiration to Heston Blumenthal - gives Ian Phillips the strangest cooking tips he's ever heard Hervé This is on a mission. 'By the time I die, I want cooking to have changed,' he says. In this country, one of Hervé's biggest fans is Heston Blumenthal, with whom Hervé, 51, has worked on several experiments. His specialism is the science of cooking. Over the years, his musings on chemical reactions have led to a number of discoveries. Almost 10 years ago, Hervé investigated colloids (substances that are neither completely solid nor liquid, such as emulsions, mousses and gels) and devised a system of formulae based on the dispersion of gases, liquids and solids within each other. 'It can be used to invent an infinite number of dishes,' he claims. He then shows me several other experiments.

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