What's on your saucer?

15354565859274

Comments

  • edited February 2012
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    Re-(h)eated beef stew with various ingredients (including bread) on top of sourdough bread: BeefStewOnnaBread.JPG

    P and S For those of you concerned with the plate-to-screen ratio:
    I figured out how to take smaller pics! (but keep that to yerselves)

    ZX you're a top top bloke, but that looks absolutely fuking horrible :mad:
  • zx1zx1
    edited February 2012
    torot wrote: »
    ZX you're a top top bloke, but that looks absolutely fuking horrible :mad:

    Yeah it does look horrible, it looks like a slice of bread with someone's internal organs on top - i hope he hasn't turned into a mass murderer!:smile:
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited February 2012
    i ate his liver on some bread with some fizzy pop. :grin:
  • edited February 2012
    Chicken r?chauff? sur le pain.

    ChiggenOnnaBwead.JPG
  • fogfog
    edited February 2012
    What ZnorX isn't telling us.. is he's surname is HOVIS !! :)

    hence all the bread..
  • edited February 2012
    fog wrote: »
    What ZnorX isn't telling us.. is he's surname is HOVIS!

    " Don't say 'Commodore' ... say 'Sinclair Spectrum' "
  • edited February 2012
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    Chicken r?chauff? sur le pain.

    ChiggenOnnaBwead.JPG

    Now that looks lush - those crispy chicken bits mmm

    Better than the tortured and disembowelled mouse-that-our-cat-brought-as-a-present on toast offering last pic :p
  • edited February 2012
    A bit of onion on sourdough (with a hint of honey) icon14.gif

    OnionOnnaBread.JPG
  • edited February 2012
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    A bit of onion on sourdough (with a hint of honey) icon14.gif

    OnionOnnaBread.JPG

    Back on form mate :eek:
  • zx1zx1
    edited February 2012
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    A bit of onion on sourdough (with a hint of honey) icon14.gif

    OnionOnnaBread.JPG

    Hovis!:smile:
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited February 2012
    ZnorXman wrote: »
    A bit of onion on sourdough (with a hint of honey) icon14.gif

    OnionOnnaBread.JPG

    Onion and Honey....while admittedly I think this might actually work with a little more experimentation I do wonder how some of us manage to survive :lol:
  • edited February 2012
    Onion and honey!!!... this is what some people use as a natural, home remedy for colds! :lol:
  • edited February 2012
    Onion and honey!!!... this is what some people use as a natural, home remedy for colds! :lol:

    Yes I remember a spanish girl I used to live with used this!

    Having said that I can borderline see this working as a tasty meal, maybe mustard too.

    One of the things I might try in fact!

    Has anyone tried the Toast Sandwich yet?
  • edited February 2012
    R-Tape wrote: »
    Has anyone tried the Toast Sandwich yet?

    Sounds more like a blandwich than a sandwich, I might make one at lunch and see what happens. I'll report back. :-D
  • edited February 2012
    GreenCard wrote: »
    Sounds more like a blandwich than a sandwich, I might make one at lunch and see what happens. I'll report back. :-D

    Please do!

    I think salt, pepper and butter are allowed, not too much though, or you might go insane with pleasure.
  • edited February 2012
    R-Tape wrote: »
    Please do!

    I think salt, pepper and butter are allowed, not too much though, or you might go insane with pleasure.

    It was really really nice.

    Well, I say nice, it didn't actually taste of much at all. The cheese, ham and coleslaw sandwich I had afterwards, on the other hand, tasted like heaven! :-)
  • edited February 2012
    How about dipped in batter and deep-fried?
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • edited February 2012
    joefish wrote: »
    How about dipped in batter and deep-fried?

    Considering the fact that batter makes me feel very, very sick, I'll leave that to someone else to test-munch. :grin:
  • edited February 2012
    I have done a fried eggy-in-the-basket sandwich. I think I may have already described this one - you cut a large bread roll into 3 layers, then cut a hole in the middle layer and fry it, with an egg in, over-easy, then put it back in the other bits as filling in a sandwich. You could try it with toast, but not sure how you'd do the egg.

    Come to think of it, what happens to toast in the microwave? If it was completely dry - no water at all - the microwaves shouldn't affect it, and would just cook an egg set in the middle. But if there is still some moisture, I know it can turn bread first soggy then hard (but never crunchy). Maybe someone should experiment...
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • edited February 2012
    joefish wrote: »
    I have done a fried eggy-in-the-basket sandwich. I think I may have already described this one - you cut a large bread roll into 3 layers, then cut a hole in the middle layer and fry it, with an egg in, over-easy, then put it back in the other bits as filling in a sandwich. You could try it with toast, but not sure how you'd do the egg.

    Come to think of it, what happens to toast in the microwave? If it was completely dry - no water at all - the microwaves shouldn't affect it, and would just cook an egg set in the middle. But if there is still some moisture, I know it can turn bread first soggy then hard (but never crunchy). Maybe someone should experiment...

    just fry an egg and put it between two slices of bread. no need to start involving toasters and microwaves.
  • fogfog
    edited February 2012
    reminds me of eggy bread.. bread dipped in beaten egg, fried..

    bread + any form of frying = wrong.. fried slice etc... ya might as well put a spounge in the frying pan :lol:
  • edited February 2012
    mmmmmmm eggy cheese sandwich

    om nom nom
  • edited February 2012
    Aha! The eggy-bread sandwich!
    fog wrote: »
    bread + any form of frying = wrong.. fried slice etc... ya might as well put a spounge in the frying pan :lol:
    You might as well just drizzle some oil over some marinated Kalamata olives on a plate and dip some fresh, crusty bread into it. How awful... :-P
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • edited February 2012
    joefish wrote: »
    You might as well just drizzle some oil over some marinated Kalamata olives on a plate and dip some fresh, crusty bread into it. How awful... :-P

    I have no idea what kalamata olives are, but that sounds effing great! Yum (I think)!

    You've now got me in the mood to stick some camembert on a hot dish and dip crusty bread into it, whilst nibbling on a few olives on the side.

    Christ, I'm hungry. Again. :razz:
  • edited February 2012
    if you want a posh egg sarnie, smack the yoke while its cooking, it'll split and form a yoke film over the white, this will stop the yellow spilling on your cravatte.

    eggy bread is popular up here, i tried it once, seems a perfectly good way to ruin an egg and a slice of bread.

    i saw a bloke on tv cooking a cambert in the wood container it came in.

    it gives me an idea to stick a tube of primular in the microwave for a few mins and then hey presto you have piping hot cheese ready to squirt into your mouth, a perfect snack for a cold mornings walk into work.
  • edited February 2012
    GreenCard wrote: »
    I have no idea what kalamata olives are...
    They're the purple ones. Without going into all the particular varieties an olive-producing country would offer, most available elsewhere in the world come down to green ones (a bit unripe - Italian), black ones (a bit dry, from Spain) and purple ones (nice juicy ones, from a particular bit of Greece). You can just slit them and squeeze them top-to-bottom and the stone pops out. Though within any of those countries, whatever you're served should (hopefully) be something local.

    I always think you have to have spent time somewhere really hot, drinking lots of water but not keeping up your salt intake, before you can learn to appreciate the taste of olives.

    Camembert, warmed until it runs, is really tasty. Though it's often done by slitting the upper crust and waiting for a clove of garlic to sink into the middle before serving. First time I tried it I made the mistake of dipping into the middle and got the whole clump of garlic in one go.
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • fogfog
    edited February 2012
    joefish wrote: »
    Aha! The eggy-bread sandwich!


    You might as well just drizzle some oil over some marinated Kalamata olives on a plate and dip some fresh, crusty bread into it. How awful... :-P

    what you recommend ? castrol gtx or 3-in-1 :D
    thats not the same as frying it.. I'm assuming your using olive oil..

    mile, isn't that squeezy cheese in a metal thing like toothpaste? metal + microwave don't mix surely

    (I don't eat cheese , so not sure what format it comes in)
  • edited February 2012
    As for olives, here there is a very popular variety, stuffed with anchovies, they're delicious!

    StuffedAnchovy_Small.gif

    There are also olives stuffed with red pepper or almonds...
  • edited February 2012
    On the theme of microwaving and toast, that's how I cook cheese on toast - basically do the toast in the toaster, then stick the cheese on and microwave it for 25 seconds.

    The toast loses a bit of its firmness but it means you don't have to use the grill (see earlier post on avoiding grill use to avoid having to clean it).
  • edited February 2012
    Olives are filth!!!

    simple as!
    Every night is curry night!
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