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  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
 
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Default First meal date - ideas please

I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
way of doing it!

  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
aem
 
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wrote:
> I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
> about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
> like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
> way of doing it!


Under the circumstances I'd recommend you cook something you already
have experience with and concentrate your efforts on presentation.
Think about how you're going to serve the meal, table decorations,
plate arrangements, a special dessert (even if it's bought). It's just
too chancy to try to cook something new and fancy. -aem

  #11 (permalink)   Report Post  
jake
 
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wrote:

> I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
> about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
> like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
> way of doing it!
>

Whatever you dom, chocolate mousse for dessert. store bought is fine as
long as you get a qualtiy brand (maybe try it first). Do serve it such a
way that you can't tell it was fro the store.

Do keep things easy for yourself. I've been known to get tto ambitious
and awanting to impress through my cooking that I became bvad at
conversation and being attentive (which is they key, really).


And I'd stay away for very heavy meals, she might be watching het diet
(,lotsa women do). So maybe an easy salad with vainaigrette (oil +
vingar+ a touch of mustard), steak and bread or potatoes. I'd get easy
starters form the storem, too. Marinated artichoeks, olives, sun blushed
tomatoes, things like that.

If you find getting all the foods reay at the same time complivated,
consider baked dishes. Maybe lasagne and salad?
  #12 (permalink)   Report Post  
axlq
 
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In article .com>,
> wrote:
>I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
>shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
>The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea


If your expertise is so low that this is your first-ever cooking
experience, then I suggest you see a professional and have a dinner
catered in -- at least the more challenging parts.

-A
  #14 (permalink)   Report Post  
OmManiPadmeOmelet
 
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In article >,
jake > wrote:

> wrote:
>
> > I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> > shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> > The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
> > about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> > will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> > my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
> > like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> > any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> > to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
> > way of doing it!
> >

> Whatever you dom, chocolate mousse for dessert. store bought is fine as
> long as you get a qualtiy brand (maybe try it first). Do serve it such a
> way that you can't tell it was fro the store.
>
> Do keep things easy for yourself. I've been known to get tto ambitious
> and awanting to impress through my cooking that I became bvad at
> conversation and being attentive (which is they key, really).
>
>
> And I'd stay away for very heavy meals, she might be watching het diet
> (,lotsa women do). So maybe an easy salad with vainaigrette (oil +
> vingar+ a touch of mustard), steak and bread or potatoes. I'd get easy
> starters form the storem, too. Marinated artichoeks, olives, sun blushed
> tomatoes, things like that.
>
> If you find getting all the foods reay at the same time complivated,
> consider baked dishes. Maybe lasagne and salad?


Chocolate is an aphrodesiac..... (sp?)
--
Om.

"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson
  #15 (permalink)   Report Post  
Alan S
 
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> wrote in message
oups.com...
>I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
> about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
> like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
> way of doing it!
>
>Man, pick up a six pack of Lone Star beer and a couple of Big Mac's. She'll
>love you for it! ... No seriously, there are a lot of really amazingly good
>recipes that are very simple. Quality ingredients are essential:


Appetizers:
1) 1 block of cream cheese with a bottle of Pick-A-Peppa sauce poured over
it with crackers. You will be surprised at how good that is.
2) 1 Bag of tortilla chips with a quality salsa and slices of cheddar cheese
3) 1 port wine cheese log with crackers. I like whole wheat crackers for
that one. If you don't like port wine cheese logs, just set out some
crackers with a nice Havarti or a nice Cheddar, or both.
4) 1 bag tortilla chips - 2 Avocados smashed up with salsa and lime juice to
taste

Salad:
1) Chopped Lettuce, grated Carrots, fresh Spinach and/or Arugula, sprouts,
chopped Apples, chopped walnuts and red wine or balsamic vinaigrette
2) Cottage cheese with cling peaches on top with black pepper
3) Chunks of mixed types of fruit cut up into a bowl with chopped walnuts
and a lime squeezed over it

Main course:

Red Meat -
1) Get two well marbled Rib Eye steaks 1.5 inches thick, dump worsteshire
sauce on them and then dust them with course black pepper, Broil for 6
minutes each side. While they are broiling, steam some asparagus, and melt
some butter in a pan with a half a lemon squeezed in it. Pour the lemon
butter on the asparagus when served. Baked potatoes with butter and sour
cream go well with this.
2) Take a glass baking dish and pour a beer in it. dump in a teaspoon of
worsteshire and 1/4 teaspoon Tabasco sauce. Add three or four GOOD Quality
sausages and bake for 20 minutes at 350 (cheap sausage would be a mistake).
Serve with good mustard and kraut. (find out if she likes kraut first) If
she doesn't like kraut, scratch it and the mustard and serve with bar-b-que
sauce. That goes well with store bought potato salad and steamed green beans
with butter and black pepper.
3) Take some butterflied pork loin chops and put cooked stove top cornbread
stuffing in the middle of them and tie them up with bakers string. Bake in a
covered dish at 325 for 20 minutes. Paint them with bar-b-cue sauce and bake
them for another ten minutes uncovered. While they are cooking, quarter some
small new potatoes and boil them until soft. drain them and dust them with
Cajun Seasoning or Seasoned Salt. Serve with Cheddar and French bread.

Chicken-
1) Take some chicken breasts and marinade them in your refrigerator over
night in Italian dressing. Bake them until white all the way through (20 or
30 minutes at 350) and serve them over buttered rice with peas mixed into
it. While they are cooking, steam some carrots until they are soft and drain
them. Add some butter, some maple syrup and some black pepper to the carrots
and stir them up. Fry some Zucchini or Squash slices in Italian dressing
until done.
2) Take a whole chicken and put it in a glass baking dish with a lid. Cover
it with Tamari sauce until it is about 1/2 inch deep in the dish. Cover the
chicken with lots of Rosemary and bake for 50 minutes at 350. Serve with the
Cornbread you can buy in the tubes that pop open from your grocery store and
fresh peas with butter and pepper.

Fish-
1) Mix 1/4 cup melted butter, 3 tablespoons Dijon mustard, and 1 and 1/2
tablespoons honey and spread it all over a nice 1/2 pound Salmon filet. Next
take a 1/4 cup finely chopped pecans, 1/4 cup dry bread crumbs, and four
teaspoons finely chopped fresh parsley mixed up and sprinkle liberally over
the salmon. Bake at 400 degrees for 10 or 15 minutes until flaky. This one
is an amazingly tasty recipe! Serve with vegetable of choice and fresh
bread.
2) If you have access to an outdoor cooker/burner, this is a simple and very
tasty meal neither of you will soon forget. You will need to get a couple of
Dungeness crabs (any crab works, but Dungeness is the best if you can get
them, King Crab or Snow Crab is good too) and 1/2 pound of fresh shrimp. Put
a couple of gallons of water in a big pot and throw in a bunch of new
potatoes, 6 half ears of corn, 1/2 pound of sliced Andouille sausage (if you
can get it, if not any GOOD quality sausage will work) and a bag of good,
spicy crab boil. Boil it until the potatoes are soft and then toss in the
crabs. Boil for one minute and then toss in the shrimp. Boil for another
three minutes and turn off the fire. You will have boiled the crabs for a
total of 4 minutes, that is important. Drain it all and then dump it in the
middle of the table on butcher paper. Put out some cocktail sauce and melted
butter and enjoy! I use a rolling pin to break up the crabs.

Dessert-
1) Get some of those Nestle toll house cookies they sell in the refrigerated
section of your grocery store. You can make them any time and they are easy,
fast, and tasty!
2) Ben and Jerry's Cherry Garcia ice cream! The premier, frozen dairy
confection (although I have to admit, some of this Gelato stuff that has
been showing up lately is mighty god!)







  #16 (permalink)   Report Post  
George
 
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> wrote in message
oups.com...

> ... she'll think I'm devoid of originality.


Something unoriginal done well is far better than something original done
badly.

George


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Joseph Littleshoes
 
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wrote:

> I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
>
> about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
>
> like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the
> bachelor
> way of doing it!


A variation on 'sole meuniere aux champignons' might be suitable.

Take 1 or 2 fillets of sole per person, season and cover with raw sliced
button mushrooms and cook covered in a 250 -300 degree (i forget what
'regulo' this would be) oven for about 10 - 15 minutes. The low temp
allows the mushrooms to release their water and poach the fish. Serve
with a bit of chopped parsley and beurre noisette - hazel nut butter (or
beurre noire - browned butter, also beurre a la maitre d' hotel or
beurre a la meuniere are good) and a bit of sliced lemon on the side.

The original recipe calls for seasoning and coating the fish in flour
then pan frying in butter and when ready to serve covering with
mushrooms sautéed in butter and placed on top of the fish and then
sprinkle with chopped parsley.

serve this with some steamed or lightly blanched cauliflower that is
finished in butter, garlic and lemon juice with a good grinding of fresh
black pepper, perhaps a pommes anna or even substitute fresh peas for
the cauliflower.

A simple green salad with a vinaigrette and for desert a scoop of
vanilla ice cream layered with some crushed pineapple and strawberries
and topped with a bit of freshly whipped cream (fraises Sarah
Bernhardt).

I would serve a good champagne throughout the meal.

If you wanted appetizers a nice cheese tray with some bread and crackers
and sliced meats and olives and a wine of choice, i would suggest vins
du Rhine with the hors d'oeuvres.

Let me know if you want something simpler or more complex, a rose ice
cream is lovely but a bit of work. A chicken with a shrimp stuffing is
easy and very good, steak diane, chicken Williamsburg, chicken
Provençal, veal cordon blue is a favourite and can be made with chicken
instead of veal, stuffed pork chops, eggplant parmesan etc.

Of course for a 'romantic' dinner, set and setting can be as important
as the food itself, good china, silver, candles, linen etc. Mood music,
a quite room, if you have a fireplace and can rearrange furniture to set
up a table near would be very nice, assuming your UK evenings are a bit
cool this time of year.

Have dinner at home and then perhaps go out to a club or theatre after?
This eliminates any problems with washing up after.

If you would like any further information about anything i have
mentioned (recipes, preparation etc.) just ask.
---
Joseph Littleshoes




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~patches~
 
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Melba's Jammin' wrote:

> In article .com>,
> wrote:
>
>
>>my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
>>like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality.

>
>
> Save originality for your bedroom adventures. Make something tasty that
> you're comfortable cooking. If she's worth the effort and you hit it
> off, there'll be time enough for originality. I'd love a well-prepared
> pasta dish. Something that's not too messy to eat, perhaps. JMO. A
> nice green salad, good bread. Good dessert. Enjoy the evening.


Agreed even though you are a little bad with the bedroom adventures
I would tend to be very conservative unless you know exactly what she
likes.. For example, DH is a real foodie and he is an absolute treat to
cook for BUT he doesn't care for heavily spiced foods. I love spicy
foods so I compromise by making some of whatever I'm cooking spicier for
myself but less spicy for DH. This is one of those things you learn
about others over years of living together and yes we are married so I
can't just toss him out even though I never would anyway. He's the best
taste tester I have I like the idea of a nice pasta dish lightly
seasoned and served with a tossed salad maybe with a homemade
viniagrette and I would toss in homemade bread or at the very least a
couple of nice store bought crusty rolls. Top the pasta with fresh
ground parmesan and she will be putting in your hand. I'd use a nice
red wine and something lighter for desert. I'd be tempted to just serve
vanilla ice cream so as to not over power the dinner. Oh and I always
like nice quiet dinner music while I'm eating. It's a girl or at least
a me thing.

To the OP - I hear girls are really into Harry Potter right now so you
might choose HP & the Sorcer's Stone as you're first cool movie. From
experience it is very good! I'd forgoe the icecream if you plan on
popcorn smothered with butter & salt later
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Thanks for all that - very entertaining stuff! The gist does seem to
be to do something that I'm used to doing (and yes I am a dab hand in
the kitchen), rather than to try something complicated and make a pig's
ear of it. I have one or two thoughts that I'll run by the lady
concerned, and then I'll take it from there. But thanks for all your
contributions so far folks - and do keep them coming. I can try the
more complicated examples later in the relationship - if that's how it
pans out. Alan S - you've definitely given me some "food for thought"
there!! Cheers all.

  #23 (permalink)   Report Post  
Goomba38
 
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Sheldon wrote:

> I left an impression, eh?
>
> Sheldon


Oooooh Sheldon.. I'm sure you have better taste than that one... ::shiver::
  #25 (permalink)   Report Post  
~patches~
 
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Melba's Jammin' wrote:

> In article >, ~patches~
> > wrote:
>
>
>>Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>>
>>
>>>In article .com>,
wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
>>>>like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality.
>>>
>>>
>>>Save originality for your bedroom adventures. Make something tasty
>>>that you're comfortable cooking. If she's worth the effort and you
>>>hit it off, there'll be time enough for originality. I'd love a
>>>well-prepared pasta dish. Something that's not too messy to eat,
>>>perhaps. JMO. A nice green salad, good bread. Good dessert.
>>>Enjoy the evening.

>
>
>>Agreed even though you are a little bad with the bedroom adventures

>
>
> Honey, I try to be a realist. :-) Gotta adapt or become extinct. BTW,
> I wasn't meaning to suggest that the bedroom adventures begin after this
> meal. I wonder how deep I can dig this hole? :-/
>
>
>>couple of nice store bought crusty rolls. Top the pasta with fresh
>>ground parmesan and she will be putting in your hand.

>
>
>
> <coughchokesputter> And what EXACTLY will she be "putting" in his hand,
> patches? Eh? I'll bet you meant to say puDDing. ROTFL!


err, a little slip of the tongue. That was meant to be *putty* not
putting or pudding BUT I am blushing


  #26 (permalink)   Report Post  
Chris
 
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"~patches~" > wrote in message
...
> Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
>>
>> <coughchokesputter> And what EXACTLY will she be "putting" in his
>> hand, patches? Eh? I'll bet you meant to say puDDing. ROTFL!

>
> err, a little slip of the tongue. That was meant to be *putty* not
> putting or pudding BUT I am blushing


A little slip of the tongue might go over very well indeed! ;-)


  #27 (permalink)   Report Post  
Nancy Young
 
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"~patches~" > wrote

> Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
>> In article ~patches~ > wrote:


>>>couple of nice store bought crusty rolls. Top the pasta with fresh
>>>ground parmesan and she will be putting in your hand.


>> <coughchokesputter> And what EXACTLY will she be "putting" in his hand,
>> patches? Eh? I'll bet you meant to say puDDing. ROTFL!

>
> err, a little slip of the tongue. That was meant to be *putty* not
> putting or pudding BUT I am blushing


(giggling) Dinner must be *real* interesting at patches' house.

nancy


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jmcquown
 
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> wrote in message
ups.com...
> Thanks for all that - very entertaining stuff! The gist does seem to
> be to do something that I'm used to doing (and yes I am a dab hand in
> the kitchen), rather than to try something complicated and make a pig's
> ear of it. I have one or two thoughts that I'll run by the lady
> concerned, and then I'll take it from there. But thanks for all your
> contributions so far folks - and do keep them coming. I can try the
> more complicated examples later in the relationship - if that's how it
> pans out. Alan S - you've definitely given me some "food for thought"
> there!! Cheers all.
>

Absolutely go with what you know and are comfortable with. Don't worry
about if it's "just pasta" - you can do some pretty fantastic things simply
with pasta and not spend all the time fussing over a stove or a grill or
whatever. If she likes seafood, you might think of a shrimp and crab
linguini dish with a cream sauce topped with grated Parmesan. Serve it with
some hot crusty bread, warmed olive oil with some dried herbs (oregano or
marjoram, basil) in it and cracked black pepper for dipping the bread in and
a crisp chilled white wine.

Atmosphere is everything and it sounds like you would like to impress this
lady. Have a vase of flowers on the table and candles. Music in the
background... something subtle; we aren't talking Metallica here! Good
luck!

Jill


  #29 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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Joseph Littleshoes wrote:
> >

> Take 1 or 2 fillets of sole per person, season and cover with raw sliced
> button mushrooms and cook.


<miles and miles of inane halucination snipped>

Yikes... mushrooms with seafood is a thousand times worse than cheese
with seafood.

You're extremely verbose but that's it... you haven't an iota of
culinary acumen... you may have little shoes but I bet you wear a huge
hat. I'm sure you're another WOP. You could become a data input
specialist but never a cook.

Sheldon

  #30 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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jmcquown wrote:
> > wrote in message
> ups.com...
> > Thanks for all that - very entertaining stuff! The gist does seem to
> > be to do something that I'm used to doing (and yes I am a dab hand in
> > the kitchen), rather than to try something complicated and make a pig's
> > ear of it. I have one or two thoughts that I'll run by the lady
> > concerned, and then I'll take it from there. But thanks for all your
> > contributions so far folks - and do keep them coming. I can try the
> > more complicated examples later in the relationship - if that's how it
> > pans out. Alan S - you've definitely given me some "food for thought"
> > there!! Cheers all.
> >

> Absolutely go with what you know and are comfortable with. Don't worry
> about if it's "just pasta" - you can do some pretty fantastic things simply
> with pasta and not spend all the time fussing over a stove or a grill or
> whatever. If she likes seafood, you might think of a shrimp and crab
> linguini dish with a cream sauce topped with grated Parmesan. Serve it with
> some hot crusty bread, warmed olive oil with some dried herbs (oregano or
> marjoram, basil) in it and cracked black pepper for dipping the bread in and
> a crisp chilled white wine.
>
> Atmosphere is everything and it sounds like you would like to impress this
> lady. Have a vase of flowers on the table and candles. Music in the
> background... something subtle; we aren't talking Metallica here! Good
> luck!


All's really necessary is a big ole slab o' colby, a box of Ritz,
Champagne... and a bath. Good idea to put on fresh undies and fresh
linens on the bed too... those raunchy shit-stained rags you've been
sleeping in for three weeks will negate even the fanciest schmanciest
dinner. Decent gals are impressed with cleanliness... dust, vacuum,
polish your furniture, windex all glass. Disinfect yer terlit and
scrub the tar stains off your bath tub, have clean fluffy towels, fresh
soap, a new in-the-box toothbrush, last thing you want displayed is an
extra used toothbrush (even if it's yours, she'll never believe you use
two)... which reminds me, make sure you've been to the dentist within
the last four months... decent wimmen aren't impressed that you rely on
sanitizing your mouth daily with dago red.

Get rid of all the pictures of your exes... shoulda been burned a long
time ago... 'specially those you snuck of them sleeping nekid... and
about that 8 x 10 on top of the TV you took through the glass shower
door of your sister... you'd be far better off with serving a fistful
of slim jims and a six pack... but she is cute all pressed up against
the glass. hehe

Sheldon



  #31 (permalink)   Report Post  
Shaun aRe
 
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> wrote in message
oups.com...
> I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
> shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
> The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
> about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
> will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
> my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
> like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
> any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
> to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
> way of doing it!


Pasta uninteresting? Only if the imagination is also.

How about a stir fry, with egg noodles, choose your veggies well - make it
/colourful/ as well as flavourful (like if using sweet peppers, don't use
all one colour etc.), use a VERY hot wok (smoking oil!) and don't over-do
the veggies, for meat I'd go with good, large prawns, fresh if at all
possible. Pick your sauce - plain soy, oyster sauce, black bean, invent a
mixture - whatever boats your float. Quite quick and simple to make, vibrant
to look at, and delicious (if you don't cook the veggies to limpness and/or
the prawn/shrimp to rubber).



I can't be bothered thinking any more!



Shaun aRe



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Shaun aRe
 
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> wrote in message
ups.com...
> Thanks for all that - very entertaining stuff! The gist does seem to
> be to do something that I'm used to doing (and yes I am a dab hand in
> the kitchen), rather than to try something complicated and make a pig's
> ear of it. I have one or two thoughts that I'll run by the lady
> concerned, and then I'll take it from there. But thanks for all your
> contributions so far folks - and do keep them coming. I can try the
> more complicated examples later in the relationship - if that's how it
> pans out. Alan S - you've definitely given me some "food for thought"
> there!! Cheers all.



Here's a good idea for pasta if you both like hot/spicy food - goes great
after a cool salad starter and before an iced desert: -

Just a pasta with a spiced tomato sauce, well herbed with oregano and plenty
of FRESH basil (reserve some for garnish). For the sauce I'd start with
plenty of finely diced red onion and garlic sautéed with finely sliced
(whole rings) hot chiles to your taste (if you can find red and green, a
mixture looks good), juliennes of yellow capsicum, sliced Italian raw cured
spicy sausage of some sort but good stuff, add that for a couple minutes
before adding the tomato, when the peppers are still not quite cooked (I'd
make this with a smooth sieved tomato paste - passata - I ain't gonna spend
hours cooking down fresh tomatoes to have it taste no where near as good)
lots of fresh cracked black pepper, 1/4tsp ground ginger or if you have
fresh, about 1/2 tsp finely grated, give it a few minutes to cook all
through but don't make the peppers etc. cook until all soft. Serve that over
your preferred pasta - I like this with shell types that hold the sauce.
garnish with ripped fresh basil. Grate a bunch fresh Parmesan into a bowl
and bring to the table with the pepper etc. Wine is your choice, but I'd go
with something well tannined and robust for my tastes.



Shaun aRe - sorry I don't have a recipe because I almost never use them.





  #33 (permalink)   Report Post  
Shaun aRe
 
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"~patches~" > wrote in message
...

> err, a little slip of the tongue.


Harlot ',;~}~






Shaun aRe


  #34 (permalink)   Report Post  
jake
 
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OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote:
> In article >,
> jake > wrote:
>
>
wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near future, I
>>>shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a very special lady.
>>>The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have no idea
>>>about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not fussy" and
>>>will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very firmly in
>>>my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something uninteresting
>>>like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any of you
>>>any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more importantly what not
>>>to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but sadly I'm used to the bachelor
>>>way of doing it!
>>>

>>
>>Whatever you dom, chocolate mousse for dessert. store bought is fine as
>>long as you get a qualtiy brand (maybe try it first). Do serve it such a
>>way that you can't tell it was fro the store.
>>
>>Do keep things easy for yourself. I've been known to get tto ambitious
>>and awanting to impress through my cooking that I became bvad at
>>conversation and being attentive (which is they key, really).
>>
>>
>>And I'd stay away for very heavy meals, she might be watching het diet
>>(,lotsa women do). So maybe an easy salad with vainaigrette (oil +
>>vingar+ a touch of mustard), steak and bread or potatoes. I'd get easy
>>starters form the storem, too. Marinated artichoeks, olives, sun blushed
>>tomatoes, things like that.
>>
>>If you find getting all the foods reay at the same time complivated,
>>consider baked dishes. Maybe lasagne and salad?

>
>
> Chocolate is an aphrodesiac..... (sp?)


or a substitute. Or so I'm told.
  #35 (permalink)   Report Post  
kilikini
 
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"Dog3" > wrote in message
1...
> "kilikini" > wrote in
> m:
>
> >
> > "Sheldon" > wrote in message
> > ups.com...
> >>
> >> kilikini wrote:
> >> > "Sheldon" > wrote in message
> >> > ups.com...
> >> > >
> >> > > wrote:
> >> > > > I was wondering whether anybody can help me. In the near
> >> > > > future, I shall be cooking a meal (for the first time) for a
> >> > > > very special

> > lady.
> >> > > > The thing is, I am no expert at this type of thing, and I have
> >> > > > no

> > idea
> >> > > > about what to cook for her. She tells me that she is "not
> >> > > > fussy"

> > and
> >> > > > will eat "just about anything" - which leaves the ball very
> >> > > > firmly

> > in
> >> > > > my court. However, I'm sure that if I provide something

> > uninteresting
> >> > > > like pasta, she'll think I'm devoid of originality. Have any
> >> > > > of you any suggestions as to what I can cook - or more
> >> > > > importantly what not to? I can do my bit in the kitchen, but
> >> > > > sadly I'm used to the

> > bachelor
> >> > > > way of doing it!
> >> > >
> >> > > Champagne
> >> > > Salad
> >> > > Champagne
> >> > > Porterhouse
> >> > > Baked potato
> >> > > Champagne
> >> > > Pistachios
> >> > > Chocolate
> >> > > Champagne
> >> > >
> >> > >
> >> > > Sheldon
> >> > >
> >> >
> >> > I like your menu Sheldon, but somewhere in there you should open up
> >> > a

> > bottle
> >> > of champagne!
> >> >
> >> > kili
> >>
> >> Hehe, you gotta pop my cork.
> >>
> >> Sheldon
> >>

> >
> > ROFL - Damn, I should have thought of that first! :~)
> >
> > kili
> >
> >

>
> Lard woman! What is with you these days? First it's heat and stamina in

abf
> and now cork popping in rfc. What's the world coming to
>
> Michael
>


I have no idea! :~)

kili




  #36 (permalink)   Report Post  
OmManiPadmeOmelet
 
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In article >,
jake > wrote:

> > Chocolate is an aphrodesiac..... (sp?)

>
> or a substitute. Or so I'm told.


If you get the right brand, Lindts for instance, it's better. ;-)
--
Om.

"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson
  #38 (permalink)   Report Post  
Bob Terwilliger
 
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Om quipped:

>>> Chocolate is an aphrodesiac..... (sp?)

>>
>> or a substitute. Or so I'm told.

>
> If you get the right brand, Lindts for instance, it's better. ;-)



Then you're not doing the other thing right.

Bob


  #39 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheldon
 
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Bob Terwilliger wrote:
> Om quipped:
>
> >>> Chocolate is an aphrodesiac..... (sp?)
> >>
> >> or a substitute. Or so I'm told.

> >
> > If you get the right brand, Lindts for instance, it's better. ;-)

>
>
> Then you're not doing the other thing right.


Knowing her she'll be doing both, probably together...!

Sheldon

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