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I also want to say how thankful I am for this thread, TC, it really has helped me to figure out how a plant-based diet works and has been a source of real joy for me and my wife. Sorry for negative feelings, you've created a great thread and a great resource!
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# ? Feb 7, 2020 12:05 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 10:57 |
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So on the freezing tofu thing, I'm Vietnamese-American and regularly had tofu that was frozen, thawed, marinated, and then fried either in spring rolls or to accompany rice growing up, and my parents sure aren't white. We mostly ate the tofu like that on buddhist holidays where you're supposed to go vegan. It may also have been in the temple version of a lot of popular dishes too, but we never made those at home so I'm not too sure. I'm also pretty sure koyadofu, which is Japanese, requires freezing.
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# ? Feb 7, 2020 19:27 |
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Mecca-Benghazi posted:So on the freezing tofu thing, I'm Vietnamese-American and regularly had tofu that was frozen, thawed, marinated, and then fried either in spring rolls or to accompany rice growing up, and my parents sure aren't white. We mostly ate the tofu like that on buddhist holidays where you're supposed to go vegan. It may also have been in the temple version of a lot of popular dishes too, but we never made those at home so I'm not too sure. I'm also pretty sure koyadofu, which is Japanese, requires freezing.
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# ? Feb 8, 2020 01:44 |
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Echoing what others have said, this thread is great and has a great OP and thank you for the work you've done TC <3
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# ? Feb 8, 2020 02:20 |
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Also echoing the positive sentiments from the last two dozen posts or so, the thread's been excellent and the OP has helped a lot and it's genuinely, unironically really nice to participate in an environment with other vegans/plant-based food eaters that is primarily positive and supportive and clearly allows the chance to address any conflict that does come up in a healthy mostly drama-free way. On the topic of cooking: This isn't even remotely something I'd even call a "dish" but I thought it was funny so I'm sharing it anyway. I woke up at 5PM after getting way drunker than I meant to last night and was craving salt like a motherfucker, and for neighborhood-children based reasons I didn't want to walk the 5 minutes to the store to pick up any veggies and decided to just make an absurdly simple miso broth instead of the hangover stew/soup I had in mind. Lemme tell you, there's something very funny-sad about standing in front of a stove, nauseous as hell, looking into a saucepan that is currently boiling nothing but 2 cups of water and a few half-crushed thai chilis knowing you're about to squirt some store-bought squeeze-tube miso paste in and call it a meal. Tasted pretty good though. On that same note: Does anyone have any experience with making their own miso paste that might be able to toss some methods or recipes (it feels weird calling it a recipe? I'm not sure why) they prefer? I've been wanting to get into fermenting and pickling stuff a lot lately and figure I might as well start with miso for the former and ginger for the latter. I'm guessing early on it might be a lot of trial and error?
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# ? Feb 8, 2020 03:48 |
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ThePagey posted:On that same note: Does anyone have any experience with making their own miso paste that might be able to toss some methods or recipes (it feels weird calling it a recipe? I'm not sure why) they prefer? I've been wanting to get into fermenting and pickling stuff a lot lately and figure I might as well start with miso for the former and ginger for the latter. I'm guessing early on it might be a lot of trial and error? But, here's Brad doing it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zx8pYMkkKXg As for more specific recipes, the Noma Guide to Fermentation has a bunch of recipes, and there are some recipes in the two Sandor Katz books I've got, both of which are confusingly titled Wild Fermentation. There's also Aoyagi and Shurtleff's book The Book of Miso which has huuuuuuge amounts of information. Most of the recipes (including all the ones in those books) include seed miso, but there are also recipes like this and this which go without (and the Aoyagi + Shurtleff book says it's optional).
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# ? Feb 8, 2020 04:42 |
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I have failed at making sourdough starters twice now, probably because I didn't store it in a sentimental place to get the yeast that is there, like a shocking amount of recipes seemed to suggest.
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# ? Feb 8, 2020 09:28 |
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Yo, does anyone use any particular recipe for a teriyaki-style sauce they happen to like? Preferably something super Americanized that I can just dump on whatever I happen to be making instead of the (also obviously Americanized) marinade. I've been free-wheeling it for a while now to varying degrees of success. I have it down to something, like, comfortable, with soy sauce, mirin, sugar, spice rack ginger, and cornstarch as a thickener. I usually just make enough of it to handle whatever I'm making (which, is usually just some poor-man's fried rice), but I'm thinking I want to make a batch in bulk and see if I can get something I like consistently down. And this is completely unrelated to that--but does anyone have any grocer they like or advice in general on picking up (and, if possible, storing) some kind of versatile mushroom? And, with that, what kind they happen to like? Paying like $5 for 8oz of white mushrooms at Albertsons feels loving bad. If the answer is "Go to your farmers market like you should be doing anyway" that makes a lot of sense, too.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 00:10 |
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ThePagey posted:Yo, does anyone use any particular recipe for a teriyaki-style sauce they happen to like? Preferably something super Americanized that I can just dump on whatever I happen to be making instead of the (also obviously Americanized) marinade. I like this teriyaki sauce
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 00:26 |
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ThePagey posted:Yo, does anyone use any particular recipe for a teriyaki-style sauce they happen to like? Preferably something super Americanized that I can just dump on whatever I happen to be making instead of the (also obviously Americanized) marinade. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BF_h_ShParM No cornstarch but you could easily add some if you want it even thicker. I would save the cornstarch until you are cooking. ThePagey posted:And this is completely unrelated to that--but does anyone have any grocer they like or advice in general on picking up (and, if possible, storing) some kind of versatile mushroom? And, with that, what kind they happen to like? Paying like $5 for 8oz of white mushrooms at Albertsons feels loving bad. If the answer is "Go to your farmers market like you should be doing anyway" that makes a lot of sense, too.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 01:35 |
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I buy mushrooms at the farmer's market from this lady: https://www.instagram.com/kellysgourmetmushrooms/ You could see if you have a similar mushroom lady somewhere in town. Blue oyster are very nice and pretty much an all-rounder; I've never liked button mushrooms. Her lion's mane mushrooms are also nice. She sells straw logs inoculated with spores for $20 or something, apparently they produce for 2 months with "no smell or mess" but I would kill them in a week, if that, so. Might be fun if you have kids and a green thumb.
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# ? Feb 11, 2020 02:36 |
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Bryant Terry, author of several solid vegan cookbooks has just released a new book, Vegetable Kingdom. Looks really good and I'll be trying some recipes of the coming weeks.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 09:12 |
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Zenithe posted:Bryant Terry, author of several solid vegan cookbooks has just released a new book, Vegetable Kingdom. Looks really good and I'll be trying some recipes of the coming weeks.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 18:38 |
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What’s everyone’s favorite vegan junk food? I got spoiled by $1 rice balls at all the corner stores in Japan when I visited recently. I make my own sometimes but it feels like more effort than it’s worth when I can just throw something more substantive over rice when I’m at home. I miss the convenience when I’m out and about.
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 00:14 |
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AverySpecialfriend posted:What’s everyone’s favorite vegan junk food? I got spoiled by $1 rice balls at all the corner stores in Japan when I visited recently. I make my own sometimes but it feels like more effort than it’s worth when I can just throw something more substantive over rice when I’m at home. I miss the convenience when I’m out and about.
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 03:36 |
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https://www.vegrecipesofindia.com/vengaya-bajji-recipe-onion-bajji/ Not sure on the definition of junk food, but this probably.
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# ? Feb 14, 2020 05:27 |
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Getting into the shelf dried veg meats has been a game changer. I can pick up a pound of dried soy /wheat meats for under $5. They come in a decent assortment of sizes and shapes. You rehydrate them to a much larger volume and weight. Versatile for cooking. It's there waiting until you prep it and you can have the meat prepped in 20 minutes Not just soy curls, which are great (but rather high fat). I get these from the Asian markets or the dedicated Asian vegetarian market. Used these little steak strip ones in chili and my god The nice thing is by dry weight it's 50% protein 15% fiber so it's really a cheap fast protein option to give variety
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# ? Feb 17, 2020 20:12 |
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AverySpecialfriend posted:What’s everyone’s favorite vegan junk food? I got spoiled by $1 rice balls at all the corner stores in Japan when I visited recently. I make my own sometimes but it feels like more effort than it’s worth when I can just throw something more substantive over rice when I’m at home. I miss the convenience when I’m out and about. Huge fan of samosas. I'm too lazy to make them myself so I just buy the big pack at the indian store.
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# ? Feb 17, 2020 20:42 |
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AverySpecialfriend posted:What’s everyone’s favorite vegan junk food? I got spoiled by $1 rice balls at all the corner stores in Japan when I visited recently. I make my own sometimes but it feels like more effort than it’s worth when I can just throw something more substantive over rice when I’m at home. I miss the convenience when I’m out and about. I don't know if it counts as junk food because if you make them yourself they're not really bad for you, the shop bought ones are full of salt. But anyway: sage and onion stuffing balls. I like to cook them in the microwave (shop bought) then flatten them with my bare hands like an animal, smoosh a couple together and fry them to crisp them up a bit. You need to use quite a bit of oil as they're very dry. Wrap them in a tortilla with lettuce, fried onions, sweet chilli sauce. Or whatever you want. edit: Just looked at the nutrition info and a wrap (wholemeal) and 6 stuffing balls (155g) is: 623 calories 16.7g fat (6.1g saturated) 95g carbs (1.4g sugar) 14.9g protein Which is actually a fairly decent lunch... duckmaster fucked around with this message at 23:05 on Feb 17, 2020 |
# ? Feb 17, 2020 23:01 |
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My fave local burrito joint makes this stuff they call poblano pepitas pesto. I guess it's as fair to call it a pesto as it is to call a lot of other things "pesto". But I believe it should be thought of as a pipian mole variant. Anyway, I recently saw that they had posted the process to make it (not a recipe; just some snapshots of the cooking process and a brief description of how it's put together), and I decided to steal it. It's not gonna make me eat there any less -- it actually made me like them more, so shout out to Illegal Pete's. I don't have a recipe yet either, because I just winged this, and it does need some adjustments, but here's my first attempt. Start with some poblanos. I don't have a gas cooktop, so it's oven roasting for me. Put 'em on a lightly oiled sheet pan. 20 minutes on 400. Flip with tongs and give 'em another 20 minutes. While that's going on, peel yourself about 2 bulbs ofgarlic. Some of the cloves in mine were huge, so I stopped at 1 1/2 bulbs. And wash a whole bunch of cilantro. This is actually two bunches. Take your peppers out of the oven and let them self-steam under a bowl for 10-ish minutes. I erred a little too far on the -ish side. Now get your garlic toasty. You want enough oil to cover the smallest cloves, but not enough to cover the biggest ones. Cook them at a temperature that's higher than a confit, but is lower than a full-on, fast-cooking deep fry. When you've got nice color on the garlic, but also before it gets anywhere close to "burned", add your pepitas. Let them sizzle a bit in the garlicky oil and maybe get a little color. Take off the heat and let cool down. While that's happening, prep your peppers (seed, stem, rough chop, blah, blah). Then everything (plus some salt) goes in the blender. I hope you have a Vitamix or Blendtec, because this stuff is thick and chunky. I added a little extra oil to loosen things up during blending, but it's supposed to come out scoopable/spreadable, not ladle-able. It's not a pouring sauce. Adds a mildly peppery, curiously savory/cheesy flavor to anything you think would go well with cilantro and poblano. Look for it in my upcoming Cook or Die entry. mdxi fucked around with this message at 00:35 on Feb 18, 2020 |
# ? Feb 18, 2020 00:32 |
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Love the thread! I'm finally trying to make the jump and this is a great resource.AverySpecialfriend posted:Whats everyones favorite vegan junk food? I got spoiled by $1 rice balls at all the corner stores in Japan when I visited recently. I make my own sometimes but it feels like more effort than its worth when I can just throw something more substantive over rice when Im at home. I miss the convenience when Im out and about. Crispbread with anything you can spread. Tabbouli, hummus, harissa, duxelle, peanut butter, etc. They don't break up. Minimal crumbs. ~35 cal ea. I've been buying Wasa's. At my local grocer, it's $3.50 per pack of 20, or, $0.17 each.
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# ? Feb 18, 2020 06:43 |
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mdxi posted:It's not gonna make me eat there any less -- it actually made me like them more, so shout out to Illegal Pete's.
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# ? Feb 18, 2020 07:23 |
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mdxi posted:
Toasted pepitas are so goddamn tasty. I added them to my latest batch of tacos, and now I add them to basically everything.
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# ? Feb 18, 2020 08:05 |
Hey peeps. New to the thread, just been through the whole thing and picked out like 20 recipes I'll be trying at some point. Been vegetarian my whole life (parents are veggie) and looking to move to being more vegan. Don't know if I'll fully give up dairy. Thought I'd share a reeeeeally simple and tasty recipe I've made recently: https://smittenkitchen.com/2017/10/quick-pasta-and-chickpeas-pasta-e-ceci/ Pasta e ceci. Apparently it's a really common recipe in Rome, authentically Italian. It's mostly just sautéed garlic, tomato paste, chickpeas, pasta and seasoning. It's very much more than the sum of its parts though, very satisfying. If you make the "finishing oil" it recommends (just red pepper flakes, rosemary, garlic and oil) it also adds interest. Have also found this one: https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/vegan-coconut-lentil-soup for a lentil soup which looks great, but haven't tried it yet.
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# ? Feb 19, 2020 22:00 |
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Accretionist posted:Love the thread! I'm finally trying to make the jump and this is a great resource. As a swede I eat 100kg crisp bread a year and I couldn’t stand peanut butter on it.
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# ? Feb 20, 2020 22:46 |
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quote:Arrange the bread on a baking sheet and broil until golden brown. Flip the bread and broil for about 30 seconds on the second side; take it out of the oven quickly so it doesn’t burn. Lmao The recipe it is from is amazing though, mushroom, leek and pine nut/ mustard spread on toast.
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# ? Feb 21, 2020 22:30 |
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Zenithe posted:Lmao
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 01:30 |
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Toasting a slice of bread in a toaster takes 1 minute with no flipping needed.
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 02:53 |
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TychoCelchuuu posted:You're making me feel dumb because I don't get the joke. Are we laughing because he doesn't just tell people to use a toaster? If the recipe uses the oven for anything else then I think he's got the right idea. You have to be careful not to burn it (like he says) but the oven is way faster for toasting than a toaster. It doesn't, but the joke is it's a recipe for toast.
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 02:58 |
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Well, since the recipe doesn't use an oven, that's a joke - that's even worse than my previous winner for "stupidest recipe," which is from Decolonize Your Diet (a great book linked in OP), and which is a recipe for papaya which just amounts to "put lime juice on papaya." At least that recipe doesn't make you heat up an oven! But, I still stand behind my "if the oven is already on, it's the best option for toasting" view. I might be biased since I never use a toaster in the first place, just a toaster oven, but whatever.
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 05:03 |
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I have come upon an abundance of limes. I use them quite often just for juice but I've got like 20 and I won't get through it. Any recommendations that use them in bulk?
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 09:51 |
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Zenithe posted:I have come upon an abundance of limes. I use them quite often just for juice but I've got like 20 and I won't get through it. Any recommendations that use them in bulk? I made preserved lemons last season (suggested after asking the same q), really versatile in creating 'lighter' feeling dishes. Giant jar still sitting in my fridge getting dipped into occasionally. I would imagine limes would be much the same. https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/03/how-to-make-preserved-lemons.html Perpetual Hiatus fucked around with this message at 10:23 on Feb 22, 2020 |
# ? Feb 22, 2020 10:21 |
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I'm having a weird thing happen with some black beans I'm rehydrating, I soaked them for 12hr+ overnight and started simmering only for them to start losing their colour. They've gone from black to a pale grey, some are still black but the majority have changed? Have I literally been sold painted beans, pls help.
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 14:29 |
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Zenithe posted:I have come upon an abundance of limes. I use them quite often just for juice but I've got like 20 and I won't get through it. Any recommendations that use them in bulk? Papaya apparently
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 14:45 |
Zenithe posted:I have come upon an abundance of limes. I use them quite often just for juice but I've got like 20 and I won't get through it. Any recommendations that use them in bulk? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hq680ITf0nY
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# ? Feb 22, 2020 19:11 |
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zentigeist posted:I'm having a weird thing happen with some black beans I'm rehydrating, I soaked them for 12hr+ overnight and started simmering only for them to start losing their colour. As for limes, you can make a lime pickle, like this one.
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# ? Feb 23, 2020 01:52 |
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zentigeist posted:I'm having a weird thing happen with some black beans I'm rehydrating, I soaked them for 12hr+ overnight and started simmering only for them to start losing their colour. It can be a problem if the "pale grey" is literally like, SA Forums Grey, but even then, not always. Are they like, special beans in any way, or are they just some grocery store Black Beans In A Bag
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# ? Feb 23, 2020 02:23 |
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Perpetual Hiatus posted:I made preserved lemons last season (suggested after asking the same q), really versatile in creating 'lighter' feeling dishes. Giant jar still sitting in my fridge getting dipped into occasionally. I would imagine limes would be much the same. I did this, thank you I did not do this. (why would you do this). Also, the recipe I posted from the new book has been published online here: https://food52.com/recipes/82584-caramelized-leek-and-seared-mushroom-toast-recipe
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# ? Feb 23, 2020 04:18 |
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Zenithe posted:Also, the recipe I posted from the new book has been published online here:
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# ? Feb 23, 2020 04:52 |
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# ? May 22, 2024 10:57 |
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Zenithe posted:I have come upon an abundance of limes. I use them quite often just for juice but I've got like 20 and I won't get through it. Any recommendations that use them in bulk? You could just juice them and freeze the juice in ice cube trays. Or cook it up with sugar to make limeade concentrate then do the same.
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# ? Feb 23, 2020 16:30 |