On 05-14-19 11:17, Michael Loo <=-
spoke to Dale Shipp about 383 Doggy bags <=-
There are not many restaurants in our orbit that do not make the serving size much more than we can eat. There are a few who might offer "senior sizes", but not a lot. Best that we can do is to choose between bring
Of course, senior plates most often do not come with
a discount commensurate with the smaller portions.
I suspect that is because the food cost is not a major part of the
overhead for the restaurant. I don't know how much a $20 plate costs
for the raw food, but suspect that it is well less than $8. Do you
know?
half of each entree home, or split an entree (if we find something that
both of us like equally). The only other alternative is to graze on appetizers -- which we do sometimes.
I've been doing that for decades - used to order three
appetizers, then, as I aged and my appetites diminished,
two appetizers or just a main. The distinction between
Which is why we have begun to favor "happy hour", for lower priced
appetizers more than for discounts on the booze.
You may well have had this exact dish at Ian's. Most notable thing
Not at Ian's. Ian would not have offered me an
Indian meal at his table.
Really -- I would have imagined that Ian was rather catholic in his food choices. (Note that was a small c, not capital C).
citations (I am very much against that and will
fix grammar and spelling without compunction).
I often edit recipes I decide to publish. Mostly to break up run on
paragraphs into separate logical paragraphs.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05
Title: LAMB WITH ONIONS
Categories: Indian, Meats
Yield: 6 Servings
4 lg Onions
7 Garlic cloves; peeled
1 Ginger; piece, 1 inch long
-coarsely chopped
1 1/2 c Water
2/3 c Vegetable oil
1 Cinnamon stick; 1 inch
10 Cardamom pods
10 Cloves, whole
2 1/2 lb Lamb shoulder; boneless
-trimmed of fat,
-cut in 1 inch pieces
1 tb Coriander, ground
2 ts Cumin, ground
6 tb Yogurt, plain;beaten lightly
1/2 ts Cayenne pepper
1 ts Salt
1/2 ts Garam marsala
"It's preferable to use freshly ground cumin and coriander seeds
yourself, but in a pinch, store bought ground cumin and coriander
will do."
Halve three onions lengthwise, then cut crosswise into very thin
half rings. Chop fourth onion finely. Keep two types of onions
separately.
Put garlic and ginger into container of blender or food processor;
add 3 Tbsp of the water and process till smooth.
Heat oil in large, wide saucepan over medium-high heat. When hot,
add sliced onions. Stir gently and fry 20 to 25 minutes or until
onions are reddish-brown. If necessary, reduce heat near the end of
cooking time. Remove onions with slotted spoon; spread on cookie
sheet lined with paper towel.
Add cinnamon, cardamom and cloves to hot oil in pan. Stir 5 seconds
over medium-high heat. Add 10 cubes meat or as many as pan will hold
in single layer. (Do not crowd pan.) Brown meat on one side; turn and
brown meat on other side. Remove with slotted spoon; set aside.
Repeat with remaining meat.
Add chopped onion to oil. Stir and fry on medium heat until brown
around edges.
Add garlic-ginger paste. Stir and fry until all water in it seems
to boil away, about 2 minutes. Reduce heat. Add coriander and cumin;
fry 30 seconds.
Add 1 Tbsp yogurt; stir and fry, incorporating into sauce. Add
another tablespoon yogurt, incorporating it into sauce. Repeat with
remaining yogurt.
Add meat and accumulated juices in bowl, remaining water, cayenne
and salt. Stir to mix. Bring to simmer. Cover, reduce heat to low and
cook 1 hour or until lamb is tender.
Add fried onions and garam marsala. Stir to mix; cook uncovered 2
to 3 minutes, stirring gently.
Remove from heat and let pan sit a couple of minutes. Fat will rise
to the top, remove with spoon.
SOURCE: Madhur Jaffray, published in Toronto Star Shared by Anne
MacLellan Submitted By KAREN MINTZIAS On 06-26-94
MMMMM
... Shipwrecked on Hesperus in Columbia, Maryland. 02:40:42, 15 May 2019
___ Blue Wave/DOS v2.30
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* Origin: Owl's Anchor (1:261/1466)