Who here likes to cook? | FerrariChat

Who here likes to cook?

Discussion in 'Other Off Topic Forum' started by Dubai Vol, Jan 14, 2007.

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  1. Dubai Vol

    Dubai Vol Formula 3

    Aug 12, 2005
    1,418
    back in Dubai
    Full Name:
    Scot Danner
    Just wondering: I started cooking back in the '70s when I was 18 and had set out on my own with limited resources. I would strap three paper bags of groceries to my Honda 250 with bungee cords and drive home from the Piggly Wiggly.

    From those humble begnnings I have become, over some 25 years, a competent chef. I can also rebuild your engine and tune it to produce optimum power, but somehow, being a guy who cooks is a special source of pride for me.

    And the chicks really dig it! (hey, I told you I grew up in the '70s!)

    Anybody got any killer recipes to share? I have a good one for pizza crust, and one for curry, and....

    And I can bench press more than you and I have more racing trophies than you, and....

    :)
     
  2. ErikV10

    ErikV10 Formula 3

    Oct 30, 2006
    1,653
    I cook but its not really my hobby. I had to learn how to do it because my parents are always out of the country for some business and vacations.

    I know how to cook lots of Chinese/Filipino dishes that my mom (who is a really good cook) thought me.
     
  3. Dubai Vol

    Dubai Vol Formula 3

    Aug 12, 2005
    1,418
    back in Dubai
    Full Name:
    Scot Danner
    Cool. I like Chinese, and Filipino. Christmas dinner was a Filipino feast. Hope you'll take the time to share, cos I know it's not easy to write up a recipe.

    Here's my pizza:

    Dubai's foolproof pizza crust:

    8 ounces very warm water
    1 teaspoon salt
    1 teaspoon sugar
    1 package yeast
    16 ounces flour plus a bit

    Dissolve the salt, sugar and yeast in the water and let the yeast "proof." When a froth rises to the top of the water you got it right. Now add the flour, and cover with a cloth to rise for an hour in a warm place. Turn it out onto a floured surface, rub some flour on your hands, and get kneading. Add flour as needed. If you're really good, fling the dough like you see them do in proper pizza places. It's actually not that hard. I mean, I can do it, and I'm a man, so how hard can it be?

    Oil up your pizza pan and spread the dough onto it. A little patience will get it evenly spread. Let it rise for another half hour or so.

    Now this is the most important part: BAKE THE CRUST BY ITSELF.

    A proper pizza oven is very hot and the pan sits right on the brick floor. Your oven won't cook the crust fast enough, so cook the crust for 10-12 minutes and then put on the sauce (plain old tomato paste with oregano and garlic powder, thinned with water works fine) and the toppings. Unlike most restaurants, I think putting the cheese on last is better; it stops the other toppings drying out. Bake another 10 minutes in a hot oven, take it out and let it cool for a few minutes before you cut it.

    Sounds like a long time but most of it is just drinking beer and waiting.
     
  4. wax

    wax Five Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa

    Jul 20, 2003
    52,449
    SFPD
    Full Name:
    Dirty Harry
    http://www.cookingforengineers.com/recipe.php?id=20&title=Grilled+Pork+Chops
    All the seasonings used in the preceding linked recipe should be in any kitchen worth it's um, salt. Made 3 chops 2 nights ago, rubbed that stuff deep with 4 hours in fridge - yum! 3 more chops cooked after 24 hours - cumin & chili powder more noticeable on palate - so, it detracted from experience. So, probably halve those 2 ingredients next time around.

    Nevertheless - as "advertised," Cooking For Engineers is a good cooking site for analytical minds.
    ____

    Some of our young'uns might be afraid of the kitchen, so...

    On my own, played with a few things over the years - basic K.I.S.S. rules apply:

    Cheap, quick, relatively satisfying thing to do with this'n'that for otherwise crappy soup when you just don't feel like cooking and give it a hint of authenticity:
    Ramen (packaged)
    [Some of many Optional toppings]:
    Chinese BBQ Pork (leftovers)
    Egg (hardboiled)
    Onion (any will do, green or scallions best)

    While Ramen is cooking for 3 minutes:
    Slice onion, egg & BBQ Pork - zap Pork in Micro for a few mo's

    Prep Ramen as usual, add toppings.

    Voila! Done in less than 5 minutes.
    ____

    Easy Mexican sides:

    Refried Beans;
    Next time you do some Tacos, Burritos, Fajitas, whatever - put a can of Refried Beans in the pan after other stuff is out, stir it around occasionally until it's cooked.

    Voila! Instant Beaner!

    Same can be done with Rice - just add some tomato sauce & impress yourself & your College buddies/buddiettes.
     
  5. darth550

    darth550 Six Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa

    Jul 14, 2003
    61,176
    In front of you
    Full Name:
    BCHC
    #5 darth550, Jan 14, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  6. staylor

    staylor Formula Junior

    Aug 20, 2006
    766
    Sydney/London
    Full Name:
    Scott
    hahaha :) thats not the point of cooking though.. im a useless chef unfortunately :( ill probably just take a course on it in the future :)
     
  7. PAP 348

    PAP 348 Ten Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Dec 10, 2005
    100,224
    Mount Isa, Australia
    Full Name:
    Pap
    I like to cook, but I suck at it. :p:p
     
  8. elpadrino

    elpadrino Formula Junior

    Aug 29, 2005
    694
    Bogota NJ
    Full Name:
    Gabriel
    A Latin Style Ceviche: Its a cold seafood salad that gains it taste over the course of setting. Every Latin American country has their own style and their own ingredients but this is how ive always "cooked" it and was taught.


    1 lbs. Calamari
    1 Lbs. Pulpo (this is octupus)
    1 lbs. bay scallops
    1 lbs. Conch(sea snail)
    1 lbs. shrimp

    1 Large Green pepper
    1 large Red Pepper
    1 Larger Onion
    1/2 fresh bunch of Cilantro
    2 bags of Limes (citrus Juice)

    1/2 cup oil ( i prefer Olive Oil)
    1/4 cup white vinegar
    Salt - to taste
    pepper - to taste
    1 bottle of "normal " size Cocktail sauce

    First blanch all of the Seafood for about 6-7 minutes. Then immediately run under cold water to stop the cooking processes. You then pour all the seafood into a big pot (whatever youll use to store and add the rest to). Then proceed to juice the two bags of limes..youll want enough citrus juice to be level with the top of the seafood in the pot. here you can add other juices like Lemon, Orange, Grapefruit as long as its a citrus juice. Youll let it then sit for 24hrs or until the rest of the cooking process has finished (youll notice the fresh shrimp turn Red when cooked). When all the seafood is cooked (youll want to stir it every like 6 hours in the citrus juice). youll then dice the cilantro, cut the peppers and onion into small squares that you would eat if say in a salad and then take the vinegar and oil and add it all to the
    seafood, also add the bottle of cocktail sauce in at this time...stir it, and then let it set for a couple of hours at least....serve cold; i usually serve it in bowls.

    The longer you let the seafood sit the more tender it becomes from the acid breaking it down, and also the more tastes are absorb by the seafood. I made a double batch for Xmas and made it 3 days prior, first day to soak the searfood, second day to mix in the rest, and a third day of sitting... make sure your fridge isnt too cold though, so that the juices become a slushy-ish fluid.

    coming from a Hispanic background thats my main focus of cooking, i also wanted to start a cafe that served authentic latin/carribean food so ive learned quite a bit. hope you guys enjoy it if you try to make it. its not hard, I instructed my father (whos really a meat and potatoes kinda guy) over the phone and it came out just fine.
     
  9. Zahiba

    Zahiba Formula 3

    Mar 29, 2005
    1,427
    Victoria, Canada
    Full Name:
    Malcolm
    I seriously think I will try this in the near future...
     
  10. rollsorferrari?

    rollsorferrari? F1 Veteran

    Jun 5, 2006
    9,984
    St. Louis
    Full Name:
    Scott
    grilled cheese:
    2 slices of bread of your choice, should be flat cut
    2 slices of cheese of your choice, i like american.
    butter/margarine
    directions:
    butter one side of each of the two pieces of bread, place one piece butter side down on a pan. put cheese on top of this bread. place second piece of bread on top with butter facing up. grill to your liking, i like the bread burnt to the point where if you drop it it will break. enjoy!

    macaroni and cheese:
    grab the kraft box out of your pantry. i like the spiral variety. place noodles into boiling water. let them get soft. then you follow the instructions on the side of the box, and voila, your set to go work for mortons of chicago.
     
  11. djui5

    djui5 F1 Veteran

    Aug 9, 2006
    5,418
    Phoenix, Arizona
    I love cooking. Was a professional for 6 years before getting into the hellhole of a music industry.

    Sorry, no recipes to share. I don't use them, just throw stuff together. I will say that soaking your ground beef in Worcestershire sauce before making burgers is the "Bees knees".

    ohh...maybe I do have a recipe for you. French baked oysters.

    Take some oysters and shuck em, leaving the oyster in the shell. Then, on a griddle or in a skillet sautee' onions with some garlic powder, seasoning salt, fresh cracked pepper and a bit of Worcestershire sauce. Scoop this onto the top of the oysters, sprinkle with a mixture of shredded mozzarella and parmesean cheese that is seasoned with thyme and oregano, and bake until cheese is golden brown.
     
  12. Dubai Vol

    Dubai Vol Formula 3

    Aug 12, 2005
    1,418
    back in Dubai
    Full Name:
    Scot Danner
    If you want really simple recipes:

    Pasty Goo

    1/2 cup rice
    1 cup water
    1/2 teaspoon salt (stops boiling water from foaming)

    Bring rice to a boil in the water, cover with a lid, reduce heat to low, simmer for 20 minutes. That's it! perfect rice! Rice is so easy to cook. If you have a gas stove, you have to get the burner down to where it almost goes out, the "low" setting is too high.

    Dump in a can of chili and some Velveeta, or better yet proper cheddar. Yum.

    You can use pasta instead of rice, but rice is better.

    Remember, nobody started out as a good cook. It's one of those things where practice is the best way to learn. Last Thanksgiving I was volunteered to make a cake. Normally I do Betty Crocker cakes (hard to beat from scratch) but the hostess wanted a carrot cake! Yikes. So I had to make my first ever cake from scratch. It was "exciting," but it came out good.

    Right now I'm figuring out how to make French bread: it tastes good, but the shape is wrong. Tomorrow I will try again! For those interested, the recipe is the same as for my pizza crust, but with more flour and longer rising times.
     
  13. wax

    wax Five Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa

    Jul 20, 2003
    52,449
    SFPD
    Full Name:
    Dirty Harry

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