T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
379.1 | Get rid of *ALL* that fat!!!!! | TEXAN::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Dec 02 1988 12:21 | 24 |
| Whenever you make anything that calls for browning ground beef,
pork, turkey, or sausage, try doing the following:
Take a large plastic colander (Rubbermaid makes one, others are
readily available also) and put it in a microwave-safe dish so that
the bottom of the colander is at least 2 inches above the bottom
of the dish.
Put the meat into the colander. Microwave on high for 2 - 3 minutes
(depending on amount of meat), stir, cook 1 - 2 minutes, stir, cook
1 minute, ... Do this till it's done.
You won't BELIEVE how much gross fat ends up in the bottom of the
dish!!!! Yuk!
Since I'm now on WW program, I blot the meat with paper towels after
I finish cooking it, which removes even more fat.
Trust me, the flavor and texture are not affected by this method
in any way whatsoever!
Pat
|
379.2 | Another one | COOKIE::WILCOX | No more new notes | Fri Dec 02 1988 14:35 | 10 |
|
And yet another fat-reducing cooking technique. Whenever a sauce recipe
calls for melting butter then adding flour, then stirring in the milk
I mix the milk with the flour then heat that mixture. I never could get
the flour to mix well with the melted butter.
:-).
liz
|
379.3 | Good Point | TEXAN::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:12 | 9 |
|
Interesting you should mention that. I recently made a casserole
from a recipe in the current issue of Cooking Light. It had a white
sauce base, and I was surprised to note that the white sauce was
made from nothing but milk and flour. Worked like a charm!!!
Pat
|
379.4 | Yet Another Fat-Reducing Method | SRFSUP::TERASHITA | California Native | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:38 | 11 |
|
I hav found that most of the fat called for in main-dish recipies
(as opposed to baked items) can be eliminated, especially if you
have non-stick pans (such as Silverstone). I have successfully used
1 teaspoon of fat (oil, margarine or butter) for each tablespoon
called for when I use my Silverstone pans. Sometimes I can get
away with no fat at all, using just a spray of PAM. I've even made
omlettes this way!
Lynn T.
|
379.5 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | | Mon Dec 05 1988 13:03 | 4 |
| Steaming veggies with soy sauce in the steaming water adds flavor and also
keeps all the healthy-stuff in the veggies rather than it seeping into the
water.
|
379.6 | No-stick pans are great | ATSE::KASPER | Black holes: Where God divides by 0 | Mon Dec 05 1988 16:29 | 18 |
|
I agree with .4 about using Silverstone; you can easily cut out a lot of
fat that way. Also, Baker's Secret pans rarely need to be greased. If
there's any fat at all in the recipe, it won't stick.
As an example, I made cornbread to stuff my (last year's! :-) Digital
Turkey; The recipe called for greasing the pan, but it popped right out
even though I didn't grease it at all!
Re: .1: Regular plastic can meltdown in the microwave; Tupperware makes
an Ultra 21 bowl & colander set that's approved for microwave use, and
can take the heat. They are expensive, but they do have a lifetime
guarantee (no, I don't work for T-ware, though I am having a party
tomorrow evening...).
Beverly
|
379.7 | Balsamic Vinegar | SRFSUP::TERASHITA | California Native | Thu Dec 15 1988 16:33 | 16 |
| This isn't really a cooking hint...it's more of a preparation trick:
Have you tried balsamic vinegar? This stuff is the greatest salad
dressing available. It doesn't taste like vinegar. It is distilled
a special way (don't ask me how, I don't know) and it has the most
wonderful rich flavor that I can't describe. It isn't cheap, but
it is very concentrated and a teaspoonful will be plenty for one
serving of salad.
And the best part is (as nearly as I can figure) - It has NO calories!
It's so great that I, a dedicated dressing lover, now find the idea
of oil on my salad downright repulsive.
Lynn T.
|
379.8 | Question | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:08 | 8 |
| I have a question about cooking with wine and liquor. If the dish
is heated enough to evaporate the alcohol, leaving only the flavor,
then are the calories less or the same than if the dish isn't heated.
In other words, do any of those little calories go up in smoke???
Hopefully,
Pat
|
379.9 | | ANT::ZARLENGA | Abe Frohman, sausage king of Chicago | Thu Dec 22 1988 09:59 | 7 |
|
.8> In other words, do any of those little calories go up in smoke???
Yes.
-mike z
|
379.10 | So, how many are left????????? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Mon Jan 09 1989 14:06 | 5 |
| So how do I count the calories when, say I put 1/2 cup of wine in
a sauce and then cook all the alcohol out of it?
Pat
|
379.11 | | ANT::ZARLENGA | it's dejavu all over again! | Mon Jan 09 1989 22:48 | 9 |
|
I assume the same number of calories.
There's still lots of sugar and alcohol left even after you
simmer it for a while. Yes, some alcohol does vaporize, but how
much? I'd only be guessing.
-mike z
|
379.12 | Substituting ground turkey for hamburger | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Wed Feb 01 1989 12:34 | 14 |
| I have a question about substituting ground turkey for ground beef.
Last night I decided to make the Sloppy Toms recipe that appears
elsewhere in this file, but to let it cook in the crock pot all
day today for tonight's dinner. I had never used ground turkey
before. When I browned it, I could tell absolutely no difference
in the amount of fat that came from it and the amount I normally
get from browning an equal amount of hamburger. I looked at the
label (I had bought packaged Louis Rich since my butcher had sold
out of it), and it said at least 85% lean. I usually buy hamburger
that's 85% lean. So what's the advantage of using the ground
turkey?????
Pat
|
379.13 | Lots of differences | SMURF::VERGE | | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:10 | 21 |
| Here's some numbers from a chart at my doctors office that might help a
little:
3 1/2 oz Lean Ground Beef, Broiled:
87 MG. Cholesterol, 272 Calories, 18.5 (GR.?) Fat
3 1/2 oz. Turley, Light meat, roasted, no skin:
86 mg. Cholesterol, 140 Calories, 1.9 (GR. ?) Fat
So, there is less fat in Turket, as well as less calories. My guess
might be that what cooked out of the turkey was partly water, as the
ground turkey is ususally previously frozen. Also, I have made turkey
loaf and turkey burgers, and they tend to be on the dry side if you are
not careful, due to the low fat content.
Hope this helps!
Val
|
379.14 | dark meat villainry | HPSRAD::LEWIS | | Tue Feb 07 1989 12:17 | 10 |
| And I suspect that the "Light meat" was the key. As I recall
dark turkey meat is substantially higher in fat than the light meat.
So, if your ground turkey has a higher ratio of dark to light you'll
get more fat.
And what does "85% lean" mean anyway? Is it by weight or by percentage
of calories?
|
379.15 | | ANT::ZARLENGA | Straight up, now, tell me ... | Tue Feb 07 1989 13:43 | 8 |
|
.14> And what does "85% lean" mean anyway? Is it by weight or by percentage
.14> of calories?
By weight.
-mike z
|
379.16 | Get that grease out!!!!! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Tue Mar 07 1989 19:03 | 16 |
| I've been seeing those self-draining meatloaf plans lately in the
stores. They want about $6.00 for two loaf pans, one having holes
in the bottom. In addition, since I always make a half recipe for
just the two of us, they're much bigger than I'd want. But the
idea is nice.
Sooo... In about ten minutes, my husband drilled out one of my
small loaf pans with 15 holes in the bottom. I set it in a slightly
larger pan, and...voila...I have a self-draining meatloaf set in
the size I want, and for a total expenditure of maybe $1.50.
I used it last night, and ended up with a full quarter-inch of grease
in the bottom of the outside pan. So I assume it did some good.
Pat
|
379.17 | Frozen yogurt question | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Mon Apr 10 1989 17:19 | 22 |
| I have a question about frozen yogurt. An ice cream store near
us has the most WONDERFUL frozen yogurt in the world! It comes
in fruit flavors, but also in plain ol' vanilla. None of the flavors
I've tried has even a tiny hint of that yogurt twang -- it tastes
for all the world like smooth, rich ice cream.
Now, for my question. I have one of those Donvier ice cream makers at
home. I love the thing, and make frozen yogurt in it quite often. But
mine always has that "twang" so characteristic of yogurt, particularly
when I make it with less than 50% fruit. Mine is not bad, but it
certainly isn't as good as the commercial variety I've grown to love.
OK, what's different about mine? Well, for starters I use nonfat
yogurt at home, while the ice cream place advertises their yogurt
to be 96% fat free. The only other difference I can think of is
that I sweeten mine with Equal, while they use sugar. Would either
of those things cause a fairly drastic difference in the flavor??
HELP!!
Pat
|
379.18 | | HAMSTR::JAFFE | The Big Blue Buster from CMG | Tue Apr 11 1989 10:20 | 7 |
| My wife made me the most wonderful treat this past weekend. She
combined a 20 Oz. low fat plain yogert with 1 package of the nutrasweet
vanilla pudding (instnt no bake kind) and folded in a can of drained,
unsweetened pinapple chunks. After chilling for a few hours, enjoy.
I hear it is even better frozen but knowing how good it tastes,
I just can't wait that long.
|
379.19 | shakes and pudding | HPSRAD::LEWIS | | Tue Apr 11 1989 13:21 | 8 |
| On that same note, try mixing a 2 mixed alba shakes with 1/2 package
nutrasweet pudding. Freeze 20 minutes. Yummy! My favorite is vanilla
shake made with 1 tsp instant coffee in the cold water mixed with
chocolate pudding.
(sometimes we don't wait, too)
|
379.20 | Yogurt pudding is great! | ATSE::BLOCK | With a mind of magic & a magical mind | Tue Apr 11 1989 13:56 | 17 |
|
I suspect the difference in the yogurts is the fat content and the
sweetness. You could try adding more Equal.
I've taken to making the yogurt/pineapple pudding in double batches;
that way I can use the big (4 cup) carton of yogurt and not have to
measure any of the ingredients! I use crushed pineapple instead of
chunks.
Someone elsewhere in this conference suggested using chocolate
pudding mix and cherries canned in water; it's *great*! Much less
tart than the pineapple version. We're going to experiment with
other combinations -- I'm looking forward to chocolate-strawberry
(with fresh berries! Yum!)
Beverly
|
379.21 | Pistachio pudding with crushed pineapple | DLOACT::RESENDEP | nevertoolatetohaveahappychildhood | Tue Apr 11 1989 15:22 | 11 |
| I'm the brave soul who experimented with chocolate pudding and
cherries. The best one yet, though, is pistachio pudding with crushed
pineapple. Delicious!!!
Pat
BTW, I'll try adding more Equal to my frozen yogurt tonight and
see if it makes a difference. I REFUSE to add fat!!! (^;
|
379.22 | No need to sweeten it | GENRAL::KILGORE | We are the People, Earth & Stars | Fri Apr 21 1989 15:53 | 9 |
| We've got one of the small, ice cream makers that you keep in the freezer.
When you get the ice cream blues, take it out, add plain, non-fat yogurt
and any fruit you like (fresh strawberries and bananas, canned (with no sugar)
fruit...add juice and the cut up fruit), put in the stirring blade and put on
the lid and start stirring. Makes excellent frozen yogurt in about 20 minutes
...at least ours does. No need to add Nutrasweet or any other type of sweetner.
Judy
|
379.23 | | CECV01::STRATTON | I (heart) my husband | Fri Jun 23 1989 17:45 | 8 |
| re.21
The banana (sp?) is pretty good too. I haven't been able to find
it lately though.
Roberta
|
379.24 | 3 oz cooked or uncooked? | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Tue Mar 03 1992 20:32 | 2 |
| When a recipe calls for 3 oz. of meat, does that mean pre-cooked?
Sarah (usually RO, but this is my second note today : )
|
379.25 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | miss, I coulda gotten that for ya | Wed Mar 04 1992 01:37 | 1 |
| Yes, uncooked weight, unless otherwise specified.
|
379.26 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | umm, dan, there's no e in potato | Sun Jun 21 1992 17:22 | 24 |
| They stole the idea I had in 4.36!!
4.36> Brown hamburger in frying pan, then empty into strainer and run
4.36> under hot water to remove all fat. When done press the meat with
4.36> a spoon to force the remaining liquid out.
Rinse your burger?
Lat year, a widely-reported article by Boston University researchers
offered a way to reduce the fat in ground meat. But that was a fairly
complicate process, involving cooking, straining, refrigerating, skim-
ming, and remixing.
Now, Univeristy of Minnesota researches have developed an easier tech-
nique: simply brown ground meat in a non-stick pan, drain off the fat,
pour hot water over the meat, and drain it again. Using that process,
the cut the fat in regular ground beef from 27% to 7%.
As you might expect, some of the flavor gets drained off with the fat.
And the meat doesn't hold together well. So it's best for spaghetti
sauce, casseroles, chili, and other seasoned dishes.
[ source: Consumer Reports on Health, Feb92, p13 ]
|
379.27 | low-fat chicken stock | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Thu Jan 21 1993 16:09 | 17 |
| In a recipe I entered recently I made reference to "defatted chicken
stock."
You can buy low or non-fat chicken stock (Campbell's Healthy Request is
great) but if you have regular canned chicken stock (I usually use
College Inn) here's what I do. I keep a couple cans in the back of the
frig...then when I need chicken stock, it's ready to go - all the fat
is hardened at the top of the can and can easily be scooped out with a
spoon.
I've heard that dragging and ice cube through stock can also gather up
the fat (it clings to the ice.)
Another thing you can do is use boullion cubes or dried stock in
packets (Ox or Knorr). Those are very low fat as well.
D!
|
379.28 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Jan 27 1993 21:30 | 8 |
| Even if it's not chilled, the fat will float on the top, and congeal
into a mass. I usually open the can and spoon the fat out.
Both College Inn and Swanson have less than a tablespoon of fat per
can (my eye says it's more like a teaspoon).
Next time, after I spoon the fat out, I'll chill it and see it any more
collects, but I can't see why it would.
|
379.29 | | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Thu Jan 28 1993 20:57 | 14 |
| The advantage of chilling it is not that it gets more fat out, but that
it is *easier* to get the fat out, because scooping a hard lump is
easier than some liquid grease on the top.
Also, for forgetful people like me, I often go to the cupboard, grap a
can and drop it, turn it upside down or otherwise disturb it. If it
hasn't been chilled, the fat will mix in and I'll have to wait at least
15 minutes for it to seperate out again. If it has been chilled, no
problem.
I would be curious to see how many grams of fat is in an (un defatted)
can of chicken stock.
D!
|
379.30 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Feb 04 1993 02:17 | 11 |
| Diana, it's not liquid at room temps and my kitchen is at least 68F.
I'm making soup tonight so I got the can out this morning, scooped the
lump of chicken fat out with a spoon, then put the can in the fridge.
When I took it out, there was no more fat on the surface.
Unless you store your cans in a place that's warmer than my kitchen
pantry, you shouldn't have to chill the cans. This was College Inn
broth, by the way. Have you tried storing it at room temp? Was the
fat congealed or liquid? Mine was nearly solid and very lumpy, not
even close to being a liquid.
|
379.31 | definitely liquid at room temp for me | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Thu Feb 04 1993 16:17 | 6 |
| Dunno...when I keep mine at room temp it is definitely liquid. Any,
it's moot now, because now I use Healthy Request chicken broth which is
fat free, cheaper (per ounce - about $.65 for 16 oz instead of 14), and
already fat free, no scooping or chilling required.
D!
|
379.32 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Feb 16 1993 03:12 | 8 |
| Rice a Roni (and most other rice side dishes) taste just fine with only
a spray of Pam in the pan, rather than the tablespoon of butter or mar-
garine the box recommends.
It doesn't brown as nicely, but that doesn't bother me at all. One
added benefit is that the rice and pasta absorb the water faster, so
cooking time is reduced. Chicken package says 15 to 20 minutes, it
was done in about 10.
|
379.33 | Who needs butter? | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Tue Feb 16 1993 14:03 | 9 |
| re .32
Yes, I've found this out too. Also, I do the same thing with stuffing
mixes. And, as I've mentioned somewhere before, one can make packaged
macaroni and cheese with skim milk and a minimal amount of butter.
Comes out to about 2 grams of fat per serving with most brands. I
think it tastes better this way, too.
-ellie
|
379.34 | another tip on mac+ cheese | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Tue Feb 16 1993 18:58 | 6 |
| I've had good luck with making boxed macaroni and cheese using skim
EVAPORATED milk - the texture comes out about the same as with
butter...high in protein, low in fat! mmmm
D!
|
379.35 | Great Idea! | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Wed Feb 17 1993 13:59 | 6 |
| re .34
Ooooooh! Good idea! I've also heard of people making whipped "cream"
out of evaporated skim milk, but I've never tried it.
-ellie
|
379.36 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Wed Feb 17 1993 15:56 | 14 |
| D!
Do you use the evaporated skim milk in place of butter, or in addition
to a small amount?
Sounds like a great idea! I love mac & cheese, but have cut it out of
my "diet" due to the high fat content. Would love to add it back in
again in moderation. Also, isn't there a lot of fat in the powdered
cheese? Dumb question considering everyone here is eating it and
losing weight, but I always thought there was a lot of fat in it.
Thanks,
Roberta
|
379.37 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Feb 17 1993 16:22 | 6 |
| Be warned, there may still be a lot of fat left.
Cheese is naturally high in fat, even if you don't add more with the
extra butter and milk.
Is there any "as packaged" information on the box?
|
379.38 | more on mac+cheese + whipped milk | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Wed Feb 17 1993 17:00 | 17 |
| I use evap milk in place of both the butter and the milk - that is, no
butter at all. Kraft Mac+Cheese has 2 grams of fat per serving as
packaged (ie: without the butter they tell you to add). There is
nutritional info on the side. I found another brand (a store brand -
don't remember which) that only had 1 gram of fat per serving. Not bad
attall.
re: skim milk as whipped cream...I tried this the other day. I mixed a
half cup skim milk with a half ounce dried milk (equiv to a half cup
evap) and whipped it up in to something that looked like whipped cream.
(It took a little longer than regular whipped cream.) however, it
tasted rather "empty" (for lack of a better term) and it lost it's
whipped feeling and collapsed back in to merely frothy milk in a matter
of minutes. Anyone have any ideas on how to prevent that? I added a
little cream of tartar like I do with merangue (sp) but it didn't help.
Diana
|
379.39 | Cheese Popcorn | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Wed Feb 17 1993 17:03 | 6 |
| Yes, I don't know how they do it, but that cheese powder is much lower
in fat than you would expect. I wish I could buy it without the
macaroni! I sprinkle it on popcorn -- it only takes a little bit, and
then the popcorn tastes like REAL JUNK FOOD.... 8^}
-e
|
379.40 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Wed Feb 17 1993 21:13 | 15 |
| Mike,
It just so happens I grocery shopped at lunch, and checked the box for
the Kraft Mac & Cheese info. As D! stated, it is indeed 2 grams of fat
uprepared (without the butter and milk; the only ingredients you add to
make the stuff). I felt the same way you did initially.... that there
has got to be some hidden fat in that powdered cheese!
Of course purchasing the pop tarts because there was no fat free cake
left on the shelves isn't going to do wonders for my eating habits!
Will have to count fat grams carefully on the days I eat those.
-Roberta
|
379.41 | mac and cheese | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Feb 19 1993 05:59 | 1 |
| How many servings per package?
|
379.42 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Fri Feb 19 1993 14:28 | 2 |
| I think there is 4. So, like with everything, moderation is the key.
|
379.43 | | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Fri Feb 19 1993 15:03 | 4 |
| Actually I think it's three servings per box, which would make it 6 g
of fat per box. not bad...
|
379.44 | low-fat crust | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Fri Feb 19 1993 15:55 | 9 |
| Anyone have a recipe for a low-fat crust for a pie or quiche? All the
recipes I have seen, whether based on pastry or cracker crumbs or
whatever are pretty high in fat. Someone in here said once that s/he
uses a yeast based dough to cut down fat; is there a recipe for that?
Would it be like making pizza dough?
Tips appreciated.
Diana
|
379.45 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Fri Feb 19 1993 16:50 | 7 |
| Hmm, you are probably right D! (regarding the mac & cheese servings per
box). In any event, I tried it prepared with the evaporated skim milk
and it is yummy! I'll admit to using a teaspoon of whipped butter
along with that for an extra 3 grams fat, but promptly put half the
portion away for next day's lunch so as not to consume the entire box
for dinner. It was really rich and creamy with the evap. skim milk.
|
379.46 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Feb 19 1993 18:47 | 3 |
| 6 grams of fat per box is nothing.
Thanks for the tip Diana, I haven't had mac and cheese since college.
|
379.47 | I dough, I dough | SOLVIT::TRUBACZ | | Fri Feb 19 1993 19:30 | 6 |
| I have some great ones, let me see if I can dig 'em out and my new
recipe books has some good ones also.
Until Monday...
Pauline
|
379.48 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Feb 21 1993 14:01 | 7 |
| .39>Yes, I don't know how they do it, but that cheese powder is much lower
.39>in fat than you would expect. I wish I could buy it without the
It's lower in fat because the cheese topping isn't cheese.
It's usually some salt, some whey (milk protein) and some cheese
flavoring.
|
379.49 | sounds great, when's dinner? | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Mon Feb 22 1993 14:50 | 10 |
| It's usually some salt, some whey (milk protein) and some cheese
flavoring.
Mmmm, stop it Mike, you're making me hungry! :-)
---
Thanks in advance for the dough recipes, Pauline.
D!
|
379.50 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Feb 22 1993 21:41 | 5 |
| I tried the macaroni and cheese with skimmed evaporated milk.
It was pretty good.
Diana, how'd you learn about that? Or did you think it up yourself?
|
379.51 | Just a little more digging | SOLVIT::TRUBACZ | | Tue Feb 23 1993 13:54 | 4 |
| D! Haven't forgotten. Got married at the beginning of December and I'm
getting through the remaining unpacked boxes
Pauline
|
379.52 | can't take credit, alas | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Tue Feb 23 1993 15:21 | 11 |
| Mike, I don't remember. I think there was a note somewhere in here
about it, or I heard it from someone who was on a diet or something. I
didn't think of it myself, for sure. I always thought of Mac+Cheese as
unredeemably Bad For You. (Actually I heard you didn't need the butter
- I thought of the evap milk myself because it is richer + creamier
than regular milk, and so I use it frequently in place of recipes that
call for cream, or milk+butter.)
Pauline, no hurry, thanks!
D!
|
379.53 | | HOOTCH::VASQUEZ | we are everywhere | Tue Feb 23 1993 19:00 | 10 |
| I have a question about evaporated skim milk. Does anyone else have a
problem with shelf life? On two occasions, I purchased e.s.m. only to
discover, upon opening it, curds and whey.
(The directions say to shake well before opening, but no amount of
shaking would have recombined the rubber mass with the ooky liquid.)
Any suggestions?
-jer
|
379.54 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Jesus, the Gift that keeps on giving! | Wed Feb 24 1993 13:03 | 4 |
|
What's the amount of evaporated milk ? 1/2 cup ?
Karen
|
379.55 | try using dried milk | GOLLY::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Wed Feb 24 1993 17:43 | 12 |
| I've never had that problem with evap milk.
However, lately instead of evap milk, I use dried milk mixed with
regular skim milk (1 cup milk:1 oz dry) for about the same taste and
texture, but without having to keep the cans around. It works much
better with *non-instant* dried milk. i find the Carnation stuff
(instant) really yucky. I get bulk dried non-instant at Bread and
Circus and it's great. Not only does it make "evap milk", it is also
good mixed in to hot cereal, muffins, etc to make them taste richer
than plain milk.
D!
|
379.56 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Feb 24 1993 17:58 | 7 |
| .54> What's the amount of evaporated milk ? 1/2 cup ?
I used about 1/4 cup, maybe a little less.
Add it slowly while stirring the macaroni. Stop when you get to the
consistency you want. I didn't take the time to pour from the can into
a measuring cup beforehand.
|
379.57 | | DKAS::GALLUP | Everything is, or it isn't. | Mon Mar 15 1993 21:12 | 11 |
| I'm probably wishing, but I love Thai food, in fact, my
favorite dish, Chicken with Panang Curry is the culprit.
It requires a Can of Coconut Milk. (aka, Death).
Does anyone have an alternate, low-cal way to make
curry recipes "good" without using Coconut Milk??????
kath
|
379.58 | coconut flavouring? | USHS05::VASAK | Sugar Magnolia | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:37 | 13 |
|
Kath,
I'm another Thai-food lover, so your note got me thinking...
What about buttermilk or evaporated skim milk flavoured with coconut
extract? I haven't tried it yet, but it seems worth a try for curries.
For something like Tum Ka Gai (chicken coconut soup) though, I would
expect that a substitution wouldn't work.
/Rita
|
379.59 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Get a *new* life! | Mon May 03 1993 22:43 | 12 |
|
This isn't a cooking hint, but it's a cooking related question,
and I had no idea where to put it.
Does anyone know how to estimate the weight of skin and bones
on a chicken breast ? The grocery store was out of boneless/skinless
chicken breasts when I went, so I picked up regular (bone-in)
chicken breasts. I'm trying to figure out the approximate amount
of chicken meat per breast.
Thanks in advance,
Karen
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379.60 | 3-4 ounces, give or take... | GOLLY::CARROLL | the stillness shall be the dancing | Tue May 04 1993 15:27 | 5 |
| Are they split breasts? Depending on the size of the piece, I usually
find that 1 piece (ie: 1/2 breast) is about 3-4 ounces of meat (after
cooking.)
D!
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379.61 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Get a *new* life! | Tue May 04 1993 17:11 | 6 |
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Thanks!
(yes, they were split breasts)
Karen
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379.62 | did you know - chestnuts are low fat? | GOLLY::CARROLL | a work in progress | Mon Nov 15 1993 14:30 | 12 |
| I just wanted to tell everyone that CHESTNUTS are very low in fat!
I've never had chestnuts, saw them in the store for the holidays, and
looked them up in my book. I don't have the data here, but it was
something like...one ounce of roasted, peeled chestnut has about 50
calories, less than one gram of fat or protein (as opposed to most
nuts, which are mostly fat with a little protein and very little
carbohydrate.)
So I tried them -- mmm, very sweet!
D!
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379.63 | Nuke 'em! | BPSOF::NEWBERG | | Mon Nov 15 1993 16:19 | 5 |
| I do them in the microwave. Just carve an x in the flat side and nuke
for a couple of minutes. You can tell when they're done, they start to
open. I thought they were no-nos. This is great news!
Amy
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379.64 | sausage with less fat? | GOLLY::CARROLL | the courage of my contradictions | Thu May 19 1994 22:58 | 20 |
| I heard that if you boil sausage before you cook it, that a lot of the
fat goes in to the water and then down the drain, instead of onto your
thighs.
So last night I tried it - usually I use turkey sausage but they were
out so I bought regular pork Italian sausage. I made pizza - I cut the
sausage in to pizza-size bits and dropped them in boiling water for
5-10 minutes. I don't know *how* much fat you get out this way, but I
saw a *lot* of fat go down the drain. The sausage looked grey and
unappetizing after boiling, but I put it on the pizza and then baked
the pizza - when it came out, the sausage had a more familiar browned
look to it. It tasted delicious!
I hear you can also boil and then fry sausage, too.
Since I don't know how much fat it leaves in I suspect I won't do this
often, but for when you get those sausage cravings, here's a way to do
it with less guilt.
Diana
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379.65 | low fat pizza | POLAR::ROBERTSON | | Mon Jun 13 1994 20:51 | 17 |
| That's sounds like a great idea!
I'm going to try that the next time I make a pizza.
The last time I made a pizza I used the Schneiders Lite Kolbossa
Sausage and cut it up into pieces and placed them nicely on the pizza.
3 slices are approx 90 calories and it really tastes good when you also
add the non-fat mushrooms, low-fat cheese, green peppers, etc.
Not much fat and lots of great taste.
I'm interested to know the fat %/calories in the cooked sausage you
talked about in the previous note.
J.
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379.66 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Do you hear the people sing ? | Tue Jun 14 1994 19:00 | 11 |
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I made Van de Kamp's Crisp and Healthy fish fillets for
dinner the other night. They're low fat and pretty tasty
(they don't look as good as they taste). I was craving
tartar sauce, so I took a couple tablespoons of Cain's Fat
Free mayonaise and mixed it with a couple spoonfuls of pickle
relish. It wasn't perfect, but it was very very close to regular
tartar sauce. A bit of minced onion would have perfected it (Cain's
uses dehydrated onions in their tartar sauce.)
Karen
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