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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out
for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those "Fruit Roll Ups." I've put pix up on my Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ Also, my marginally successful ravioli/wonton adventure. --Bryan |
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On May 20, 7:02*am, Food Snob® > wrote:
> When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > "Fruit Roll Ups." *I've put pix up on my Flickr site:http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ Well, since tomatoes *are* a fruit, those would *be* fruit rollups. Tomato rollups! :-) My tomato plants are doing great, and I have basil springing up too! Yay! :-) John Kuthe... |
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On May 20, 7:48*am, John Kuthe > wrote:
> On May 20, 7:02*am, Food Snob® > wrote: > > > When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > > for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > > be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > > "Fruit Roll Ups." *I've put pix up on my Flickr site:http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > > Well, since tomatoes *are* a fruit, those would *be* fruit rollups. > Tomato rollups! > > :-) > > My tomato plants are doing great, and I have basil springing up too! > Yay! :-) IIRC you were a cooked tomato only person. Has that changed? > > John Kuthe... --Bryan |
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In article
>, Food Snob® > wrote: > When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > "Fruit Roll Ups." I've put pix up on my Flickr site: > http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > > Also, my marginally successful ravioli/wonton adventure. > > --Bryan Interesting idea. -- Peace! Om Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain. -- Anon. |
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On Wed, 20 May 2009 05:02:51 -0700 (PDT), Food Snob®
> wrote: >When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out >for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can >be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those >"Fruit Roll Ups." I've put pix up on my Flickr site: >http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > Now chiffonade it and scatter it atop a green salad or strew it over some mozzarella and basil.. Tara |
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On May 20, 7:50*am, Bobo Bonobo® > wrote:
> On May 20, 7:48*am, John Kuthe > wrote: > > > On May 20, 7:02*am, Food Snob® > wrote: > > > > When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > > > for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > > > be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > > > "Fruit Roll Ups." *I've put pix up on my Flickr site:http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > > > Well, since tomatoes *are* a fruit, those would *be* fruit rollups. > > Tomato rollups! > > > :-) > > > My tomato plants are doing great, and I have basil springing up too! > > Yay! :-) > > IIRC you were a cooked tomato only person. *Has that changed? Radically, yes. I discovered the Joy Of Eating Raw Tomatoes!! Far too many years late too! Oh well, just goes to show... ;-) John Kuthe... |
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On May 20, 7:01*pm, Tara > wrote:
> On Wed, 20 May 2009 05:02:51 -0700 (PDT), Food Snob® > > > wrote: > >When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > >for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > >be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > >"Fruit Roll Ups." *I've put pix up on my Flickr site: > >http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > > Now chiffonade it and scatter it atop a green salad or strew it over > some mozzarella and *basil.. You know, I posted this as a joke, but if one were to dry tomato puree such that it made those thin sheets, and then did as you suggested, that might be interesting. If it were thoroughly dried and cut into pieces that were, say, 1/8" x 1", hmmm? The idea of concentrated tomato flavor, quickly tossed into a salad, or as you said, strewned on top of something might be nice. Humidity would be your enemy, as I imagine this would get sticky, as it would re-hydrate, but as long as it did not rehydrate until it was already distributed, it could be quite pretty, and add nice flavor. I'm very into tomato sauce seasoned with nought but bay leaf. I use powdered, but one could add bay leaf infusion to tomato paste w/o adding too much water. I like the idea of using that in a lettuce salad with croutons scattered on top. Very labor intensive, and I can't think of anything that would keep those strips from sticking together w/o being yucky. Maybe powdered rice bran. Is microcrystalline cellulose even available to consumers? You've given me a lot to think about, Tara. Thanks. > > Tara --Bryan |
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In article
>, Bobo Bonobo® > wrote: > On May 20, 7:01*pm, Tara > wrote: > > On Wed, 20 May 2009 05:02:51 -0700 (PDT), Food Snob® > > > > > wrote: > > >When you cook tomato sauce in a non-stick pot, then leave it sit out > > >for a few hours, the sauce dries onto the insides of the pot, and can > > >be peeled off, yielding a product that is similar to one of those > > >"Fruit Roll Ups." *I've put pix up on my Flickr site: > > >http://www.flickr.com/photos/15522299@N08/3548736032/ > > > > Now chiffonade it and scatter it atop a green salad or strew it over > > some mozzarella and *basil.. > > You know, I posted this as a joke, but if one were to dry tomato puree > such that it made those thin sheets, and then did as you suggested, > that might be interesting. If it were thoroughly dried and cut into > pieces that were, say, 1/8" x 1", hmmm? The idea of concentrated > tomato flavor, quickly tossed into a salad, or as you said, strewned > on top of something might be nice. Humidity would be your enemy, as I > imagine this would get sticky, as it would re-hydrate, but as long as > it did not rehydrate until it was already distributed, it could be > quite pretty, and add nice flavor. > I'm very into tomato sauce seasoned with nought but bay leaf. I use > powdered, but one could add bay leaf infusion to tomato paste w/o > adding too much water. I like the idea of using that in a lettuce > salad with croutons scattered on top. Very labor intensive, and I > can't think of anything that would keep those strips from sticking > together w/o being yucky. Maybe powdered rice bran. Is > microcrystalline cellulose even available to consumers? > You've given me a lot to think about, Tara. Thanks. > > > > Tara > > --Bryan Corn starch? -- Peace! Om Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain. -- Anon. Subscribe: |
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