[Misunderstanding Avoidance Dept.: Intended as
HUMOR!
Didn't actually make the recipe. Just imagining
how it would most likely go for me if I tried.
You can skim the recipe part if you wish. —Mike]
-
Quinoa and Broccoli Spoon Salad from the NY Times
This easy chopped salad fits loads of texture and flavor onto a spoon by combining finely chopped raw broccoli with chewy dried cranberries, crunchy pecans, fluffy quinoa and chunks of sharp Cheddar cheese. The mixture is tossed in a punchy mustard vinaigrette that soaks into the florets, only getting better as it sits.
Prep Time: 30 minutes [but see below]
Yield: 4 to 6 servings
Ingredients
- Kosher salt
- 1 cup quinoa, rinsed
- 1 lemon
- 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 3 tablespoons Dijon mustard
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 1 large bunch broccoli (about 1½ pounds)
- 1 medium tart and crisp apple
- 4 ounces sharp Cheddar
- ¾ cup toasted pecans, roughly chopped
- ½ cup dried cranberries
Preparation
Step 1
Bring a medium pot of water to a boil on high and season aggressively with salt. Add the quinoa, then reduce the heat to maintain a simmer; cook until plump and tender, about 15 minutes. Transfer to a fine-mesh sieve; rinse with cool water and drain well.
Step 2
While the quinoa cooks, finely grate the zest of the lemon into a large bowl then cut the lemon in half. Add the olive oil, mustard, honey and apple cider vinegar, plus the juice of ½ lemon; whisk together. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Step 3
Peel the stem of the broccoli and trim off the dry end. Finely chop the entire broccoli and add to the dressing. Core the apple then finely chop the apple and the cheese; add to the broccoli and toss to combine.
Step 4
Add the cooked quinoa, nuts and cranberries and toss to combine. Taste and add more salt, pepper and lemon juice, as needed. Store, refrigerated, for up to 3 days.
Single bachelor's (SB's) first reaction: SB doesn't eat cheese. (This is a "position," meaning, sometimes I do eat cheese, I just disapprove of myself doing it.) And, raw broccoli?! I think not, having stood directly behind Ashley N. Titled at the grocery story the other day as she trawled through every single head of broccoli on her way to finding The One. But then, I find the first featured comment by Sue, from two years ago, which reads:
"Although this salad sounds great (with the exception of the cheddar, which I cannot eat) raw broccoli is not appealing. I always briefly parboil chopped broccoli then plunge in ice water to stop the cooking if I plan to use it in a salad. Not only does this improve the flavor, it brightens the color to a very pretty and palatable bright green."
SB identifies with two-years-ago Sue. Crisis averted; forge on. Edit cheese, blanche broccoli.
End of published clues in NY Times. Leg up: Already know what "quinoa" is, and even how to pronounce it (KEEN-wah). This forecasts streamlined efficiency finding it at the grocery store, as it eliminates blank-faced employees staring at you as you plead for the location of "kwin-oh-ah." Also, already know what "zest of the lemon" means. And the decision to substitute salt for things like "Kosher salt" and "sea salt" and "pink salt" is already a standing policy. On the other hand: pro'ly gonna hafta figure out what "toasted" means with respect to pecans. I would not know a toasted pecan from a cockroach carcass.
SB actual Prep Time and result
Google what the hell "parboiled" means: 4 minutes. Attempt to guess what "briefly" means in respect to parboiling, before giving up: 1 minute. Total: 5 minutes
Decide to give up on "toasted pecans" question and just settle for pecans: 0 minutes
Drive to Wegman's (nearest good grocery store): 30 minutes
Wander around semi-lost, intermittently waylaying swiftly passing employees for help while slowly gathering ingredients. Add checkout time, including long wait for stout but energetic woman to bag own groceries for family of 16, and game, but lame, joke, which does not bestir vaguely cute young checkout girl with her brain on "idle" from her torpor: 30 minutes
Drive home: an unpleasant 30 minutes, fighting drowsiness. Did you know sleepiness behind the wheel is as dangerous as drunkenness?
Meditate on phrase "season aggressively with salt": ongoing (still—I mean, till right now). End up amusing self but scaring dog.
"Peel the stem of the broccoli"? YouTube, 10 minutes, and got flustered in the process, which I shouldn't have, but I'm tired.
Finding second large pot in which to parboil broccoli, used to "plunge in icewater" as per Sue, except my icemaker hasn't worked since 2016 and I forgot to buy ice at the store, so we go with cold water from the tap: 5 minutes
Inscrutable sentence: "Taste and add more salt, pepper and lemon juice, as needed. Store, refrigerated, for up to 3 days." They say that as if "taste" and "add more salt, pepper, and lemon juice as needed," are connected; not for me. I don't know how anything is supposed to taste. In fact, I taste poorly; I mean my taste buds and their connection to my brain don't physically work very well. I also come to and realize, after a momentary brain freeze-up, that "storing refrigerated for up to 3 days" is not part of the recipe, but that I can probably eat some of the salad right after it's finished; it means to store whatever you don't eat. Think to self (which is how I think): maybe your brain is kinda on idle, too, smartass.
Conclude preparation of salad + cleanup: 20 minutes
Total prep time: 2 hours, 10 minutes (433.333% of published estimate)
Cost: $37 (including gasoline a.k.a. petrol)
Wastage: most of a jar of Dijon mustard which I do not need and will never use again, most of a container of honey in a plastic container shaped like a bear, most of a bag of dried cranberries, almost all of a bottle of apple cider vinegar which will sit in the door of the fridge for the next 9 years, because, in a flurry of food safety virtuousness, I threw away the one which had been there for the last 9 years and bought a new one for this project. On the good side, SB will actually likely consume the leftover half lemon, pecans, and quinoa. And actually, dried cranberries taste pretty good in salads.
Result: Won't really like it. But it'll be okay. Looks like a mix they used to sell at the deli counter called "Detox Salad" which was hastily discontinued right after the deli counter employees detected that I liked it. Other things that have been discontinued just recently (unlike some of the above, this is all totally 100% true): the food my dog has been eating since we moved here in 2015; the one salad dressing I've ever found that I actually like, and had been buying for years and years; my favorite soap; and the packaged TastyBite "Spinach Dal" I used to eat with rice and chickpeas at least once a week. Discontinuation is the downside of packaged food: everything you find that you like will one day abruptly vanish forever, leaving you adrift and rudderless. The discontinuation of my salad dressing is actually more of a crisis, albeit a tiny one, than I can appropriately convey in words. I try not to eat candy, but I still mourn the discontinuation of my favorite-ever candy 30 years ago now; I will never taste it again from now until I shuffle off to Buffalo, and that saddens me with a now-calcified forever sort of sadness.
Remaining question: Will sad-sack SB eat the rest of the Quinoa and Broccoli Spoon Salad, flagrantly expensive in terms of time, dollars, mental energy, and self-endangerment, or will it reside in the refrigerator, sometimes referred to as "the Rotter," for the next four weeks or until it grows mold and we scrape it into the garbage?
Only time shall tell, only time shall tell.
Mike
Original contents copyright 2025 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved. Links in this post may be to our affiliates; sales through affiliate links may benefit this site. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. (To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below or on the title of this post.)
Featured Comments from:
Dave G.: "A few random thoughts. The recipe you tried was just some raw and partially cooked veggies, in a Dijon mustard dressing. Don’t overthink this. Pick the fruits, veggies, seeds, nuts, and whatever other solid ingredients that you like, mix them together, and douse in dressing, also of your choice. Feel completely free to use commercial or homemade dressing, and salt, pepper and season to your taste. If mustard is not to your liking, there is no reason to put it in your dressing. Sneak up on the salt. It can always be added, but is impossible to remove.
"The parboil thing is just meant to tenderize and brighten the broccoli, without turning it mush. If you like it raw, that is fine too. Like everything else, texture is a personal preference.
"As for salt—Kosher does not equal table salt, although they are both sodium chloride, and neither are 'pink' salt, which until recently, has referred to either a combination of sodium nitrite + sodium chloride, or sodium nitrite + sodium nitrate + sodium chloride. That pink salt is used for curing meat (ham, bacon, corned beef, etc.) and making sausage, and has been falling out of favor due to health consequences if over-consumed. Today, pink salt may also refer to the mined salt from Pakistan with a pink hue due to trace elements. As for Kosher salt, the large flat grain makes it far less dense than common table salt. The flat grain sticks better to the surface of food, and I find myself using less of it.
"Your no-longer-made dressing note touched a nerve. I’m fond of 1000 Island dressing, but tend to avoid it, due to being high in fat and calorically dense. A few years back, Bolthouse started selling a Greek-yogurt-based 1000 Island that I thought was great. Of course, as soon as I was hooked, they pulled the plug and I haven’t found anything equivalent. However, a recent Googlefoo pointed me towards a couple recipes. Consider trying the equivalent exercise for your lost favorite. Likely someone has developed a clone.
"As for salads, I came to love traditional Greek salads, when traveling in Greece a couple of years back. Sliced cucumbers (I like the thin-skinned ‘hothouse’ type) and tomatoes, slivered red onion, fresh feta cheese (the stuff in brine), a couple tablespoons of good quality EVO, and a pinch of Kosher salt and oregano. For acid, you can either go with wine or apple vinegar, or my favorite, which is balsamic."
Mike replies: I've tried twice so far to make my own miso-ginger dressing. Pretty bad fails both times...they tasted nothing like Organicville's.
JimF: "I watch some cooking shows on PBS but never cook any of it. If you notice most recipes have 20 or more ingredients. On TV they are all pre-measured in cute little containers and dumped in in quick succession. Getting all the stuff out (if you have it), measuring it, and cleaning all those containers takes a lot of time. That's why sous-chef is a full time job."
Mike replies: That's funny. I started watching a video series called something like "Fifteen Minute Meals," and the idea was the same. The entire counter covered in pre-measured ingredients in various containers—minimum three dozen of them, quite possibly more—and when the timer started, the chef started whirling like a dervish, with complex timings, choreographed maneuvers, and specialized skills deployed left and right. Everything he needed was laid out strategically for him. He was cooking three separate complicated dishes concurrently. All the while, he kept up a patter about where the ingredients could be procured, one thing from an Asian grocery, another from a website, a third that he got directly from an organic farmer, etc. I estimated the prep, for me, at no less than a solid eight-hour day, at least an hour for cleanup, and the cooking—well, the cooking was beyond my abilities, full stop. Fifteen-minute meal my eye!
What I need is a remedial WFPB cookbook for clueless single non-cooks, starting with "Peanut-Butter Sandwich: Find a kind of bread with whole wheat as the first ingredient and two or less grams of sugar per slice. Find a brand of peanut butter that consists of only peanuts and no added sugar. Smear the peanut butter on the bread with a table knife." Then move on to recipe No. 2.
I'm only partly kidding.
Joe Kashi: "Talk about synchronicity! I opened today's post while eating the day-old remnants of that very same quinoa-broccoli salad. Actually, I like it, as did our two German Shepherds, who competed licking the bowl. We also eliminated the sharp cheddar and a lot of the salt but substituted skim-milk Italian Parmesan. I did wonder if perhaps adding some sharp cheddar might help the flavor."
James Weekes: "Sounds like you avoided a monumentally bland meal. You need to lay in some spices. I recommend Penzey's."
Mike replies: You'll laugh, but I really can't tell much difference between spices. Whenever I cook something I add spices because I know they're good for you (concentrated dried plants) but I don't really know what to add so I usually just pick a few at random and add what feels like a reasonable amount to the dish.
Ed Hawco: "Oh, Mike. In the software world we refer to people like you as an 'edge case' in that cooking and eating are not high on your list of interests or priorities. Most recipes are written on the assumption that the reader has a certain mid-level set of skills and corresponding experience and interest in the kitchen.
"That said, I will add that I have never seen a recipe that did not need a total re-write. I say this as someone who has been writing instructions professionally for more than than 30 years. Every online recipe I use gets sent into my recipe app ('Paprika'; highly recommended), where I can rewrite it to my liking, which I do 100% of the time. I often think I should give up on software and offer myself as a professional recipe re-writer, but there’s the small problem of needing to make a living.
"You did well substituting ice water with cold tap water—99.9% of recipes involving par-boiling of vegetables (referred to as 'blanching' by pros) call for an ice water bath, which is completely unnecessary. It’s one of those self-perpetuating tropes that started off in a professional kitchen where of course they have endless supplies of ice on hand at all times. They filter down to home cooking where the recipe writers (food bloggers in particular, who are the worst) just parrot the received wisdom without ever questioning it. I blanch vegetables all the time—broccoli in particular—and I never use ice water.
"Two other things for anyone else who might want to give this recipe a crack (or if you want to try again); generally one minute in the boiling water is sufficient for broccoli. Beyond that and you’re not blanching it; you’re cooking it. One minute gives you the cleaning you want, tender florets, crisp almost-raw stems, and a nice green color. Pro-tip: after draining, give each floret a flick to get some of the water out of the bushy part. It will stay good in the fridge (in a container) for a few days.
"Toasting nuts can be done in a toaster oven (keep an eye on it!) or in a dry medium-hot skillet, where you keep the nuts moving for a couple of minutes until they are a bit darker, smell nice, and are not burned. (Do not turn away from the pan!)"
Mike replies: It's actually high on my list of priorities to eat somewhat self-defensively, because I have had such poor food instincts all of my life. I have only partly succeeded. The problem, and you may quote me, is that WFPB (whole food plant-based) is a good diet, but not a very good menu.
Richard John Tugwell: "I find that following 'recipes' rarely leads anywhere useful. Learn how to prepare and cook food, make your own selection, adapt according to season, availablity and cost. Eat. Read good food writers, rather than recipes books. The best food writers are good at giving you ideas, rather than recipes. For example, Nigel Slater in the UK Guardian, or Claudia Roden. But detailed ingredients and instructions? Never worked for me."
Dave B: "I’m sorry if this is OT but this was the best post you have ever written. It (and the comments) took me half an hour to read thru my laughing and tear-drying. More of these and fewer on photography please. This is exactly what the world needs these days. Thank You!"
Mike replies: I'm glad you liked it!
Thirteen ingredients? Ouch!
The first thing I check when looking at a new recipe is if I would have to buy any ingredients that I would not completely finish in a reasonable time, i.e., well before the "best by" date. I hate throwing food away.
People writing recipes for publication have to include exotic ingredients if they are to have any chance of getting past the editor or publisher. I prefer to do an online search for "5-ingredient recipes."
Posted by: Doug Anderson | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 10:17 AM
True about the salad, but what candy do you mourn?
Posted by: Richard Alan Fox | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 10:27 AM
For healthy living, this professor is worth reading (includes recipes).
https://tim-spector.co.uk
NB: I also struggle cooking Keen-wah. Wretched stuff. I prefer Freekeh.
Posted by: Andrew Lamb | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 11:01 AM
This post is deep into grumpy old guy territory.
Posted by: Andrew | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 11:26 AM
"Toasted pecans" is where (and ditto for other nuts) you toast the pecans! You can either do this in a (dry) frying pan on the hob or in the oven. It just brings out a bit more flavour.
Posted by: Chris Bertram | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 12:12 PM
Sounds like a recipe for making life feel longer
Posted by: Sean | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 12:48 PM
As someone who prepares/eats for one, I have The Twenty Minute Rule. If it takes more than about 20 minutes to go from deciding to make it to eating it, it is not done. The 20 minutes can be spread out over time, as when cooking a pot of soup that needs to be checked and stirred for 2-3 minutes every hour.
Posted by: Keith B. | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 01:38 PM
Just don't forget how long it took you to develop your very first roll of film, and what the results were like..
Posted by: Andrew B | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 03:07 PM
I would use feta (or goat cheese) instead of cheddar...
Posted by: Yonatan Katznelson | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 03:53 PM
One of my favorite SB time savers is to buy a rotisserie chicken at the grocery store, shred the meat and then store it in a plastic bag for use in tacos, burritos, chicken/rice, BBQ chicken sandwiches, chicken salad, etc. You mentioned your favorite old candy at the end of the post and I recently found Necco Wafers in the candy rack at the grocery store. When I checked Wikipedia I learned that Necco Wafers were introduced in 1847, they are the oldest American candy brand still in production, they were carried by Union soldiers in the Civil War and the purple ones are clove flavored.
Posted by: Jim Arthur | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 04:39 PM
I have it on good authority that "quinoa" is the Sanskrit word for "tastes like cardboard."
Posted by: Charlie Ewers | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 06:45 PM
Mike, you poor soul. Could it be that you just don't LIKE to cook?
I have a sister-in-law who doesn't like to cook. She is baffled and befuddled by my saying, Well, I just eyeball it, or, You develop a feel for just how much, etc. Her husband does the cooking.
You've mastered darkroom work, have a keen interest in cars, seem to be somewhat of an audiophile. And you review cameras, and understand what they're doing. All of these require a certain grasp of complexity. But that's okay. You LIKE these things, so you put in the effort to understand and work with them. You have the innate capability. So, if you don't like cooking, well ... there you are.
Posted by: MikeR | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 08:41 PM
Have you ever read Will Cuppy's _How To Be A Hermit: or, a Bachelor Keeps House_? I think you would find it enjoyable. Not _useful_, necessarily, but enjoyable.
If you google the title, it's available for free on Gutenberg Australia, but for some reason not on the US Gutenberg site. Or I can send you the link.
Cuppy is one of my favorite humorists. Sometimes I go off and start quoting extensive sections of _The Decline And Fall Of Practically Everybody_.
Posted by: Ed G. | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 10:09 PM
"...everything you find that you like will one day abruptly vanish forever, leaving you adrift and rudderless."
Man - exceptional, even for your very high level of articulation and perception!
Posted by: bob palmieri | Monday, 07 April 2025 at 11:41 PM
Jamie Olivers 30 minute meals.
I'm amazing in the kitchen. A fact, not hubris. False modesty is without value.
But even if I am utterly prepared, with the occasional set of extra (wife) hands, my standing best is 38 minutes for one of Jamies 30 minute meals.
That 38 minute meal was delicious, with wonderfully balanced flavours and textures and could have been served to anyone, anywhere and been a hit. But after those nerve wracking 38 minutes, I needed another 30 minutes just to collect myself and be calm enough to actually enjoy eating the meal.
And the DVD (I know, how quaint a DVD is) has different directions to the written recipe that comes with the DVD set. Because well of course it does.
Bon Appétit!
Posted by: Kye Wood | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 12:44 AM
Oh my! I've been the cook for various folks for ovr 50 years, from one, me, to five people, including kids.
If I try something, think it should be good, but, meh, I make up my version. Several things I make regularly are of my own creation, or riffs on someone else's.
I just had an epiphany the other day. My wife loves Marcella Hazen's red sauce for pasta:
1 can peeled tomatoes (San Marzano preferred)
1 medium onion, halved
1 stick butter
Simmer for about 45 minutes.
Remove, discard onion.
I've never liked it as much as she does. My epiphany? It's too easy! I prefer red clam sauce, more ingredients, more steps (More flavor) and other alternatives.
Does this at least partially make up for my distaste for wet film/paper chemistry?
Posted by: Moose | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 01:00 AM
I think the main reason I still pay for the NYT is their cooking section. My recipe box there is full of many nice things and I love cooking them. Spending two hours in the kitchen, listening to music and having a glass of wine is almost as good as reading the comments of the people that changed a good part of the ingredients for others and modified the cooking times and then complained that the end result was not good at all.
Posted by: David Lee | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 01:21 AM
I have difficulties digesting raw vegetables- I often simply boil the kettle and pour over and let sit. The reason recipes use ice water after par boiling is that it preserves colour and slightly more ‘snap’ or texture. Although I might use ice if I’m cooking for guests, the difference is not important enough for me for my own meals. The real point is that if the water is hot enough to cook when you pour it on, it ceases to do so as it cools…
I suspect you just don’t care enough about flavour or texture to ever be a decent cook - there is almost no pre-packaged meal I will eat- I’d rather go hungry and sometimes do…. My father was like you- it took him 80 odd years to learn 6 dishes he did well - 2 for breakfast, 2 for lunch and 2 for dinner. But since he didn’t care, and they were healthy meals, it didn’t matter.
Posted by: Bear. | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 07:55 AM
I suggest, if you can find it, "The Impoverished Students' Book of Cookery, Drinkery and House Keepery," Jay F. Rosenberg. It's aimed at those with minimal cooking skills and starts more or less at the beginning. Its focus is on eating cheaply, though, instead of getting balanced nutrition. Also, it's out of date (my edition 1971).
Posted by: Alan Whiting | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 08:21 AM
Your past musings on nutrition and your willingness to drive miles for a snack primed me. So, like rushing through a meal, I wasn’t very mindful.
My bad.
Posted by: Sean | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 09:08 AM
I have found a couple of you tube cooking channels that don’t have those bazillion little containers, and often have very straight forward recipes. One is spainonafork (particularly like the Spanish Red Bean and Sausage Stew and The Ultimate Breakfast Skillet with Roasted Potatoes and Eggs - which we have for dinner) and the other is Brian Lagerstrom (got me into baking bread)
Posted by: Steven Ralser | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 09:21 AM
The wonder of Italian cooking is the shortness of the ingredient list in most of their recipes. They let the veggies or meat do most of the talking.
Posted by: James Weekes | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 09:46 AM
I marvel at how people like to complicate eating and cooking.
Posted by: Robert Roaldi | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 12:26 PM
A few notes that turned into a long rumination.
There have been a few recent cookbooks that concentrate on _technique_ rather than _recipe_ much like good darkroom books concentrate on technique and process rather than a rote combination of steps to take blank film to pictures.
One such was "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" which ultimately gives in and gives you recipes for things. Another was Julia Child's last book, "A Way To Cook", which is broken up into many different categories, with master techniques for each kind of food.
For me, Chinese Food has always been organized this way, which is nice because you only have to learn one "recipe" for a wide range of dishes... which is why those Chinese takeout menus always have hundreds of dishes on them.
I think people who like cooking and cook a lot inherently get into a state where they don't really need recipes for most things, and also have most of the ingredients they use a lot on hand and don't need to worry about the cost/waste of obtaining them just to cook one thing.
I think the hardest thing for cooks to understand is that people who don't cook don't end up in this kind of state. And the hardest thing for people who don't cook to understand is that when people who cook say something like "oh that's an easy dish you just X, Y, Z, W" there are a lot of assumptions in there about the state of your world that the cook is making and might not be true.
For me most recipes are too complicated and fussy because they are trying to ride a line between the enthusiasts and the not interested/beginner and so tend to have too much information for the former group and not enough for the latter, while also giving everyone too much work to do and too many ingredients to buy. Almost everything in the NYT is this way in my experience.
Ultimately, really, the secret to getting good at cooking is the following very unsatisfying piece of advice: you have to cook a lot. Then you'll get good at it. But that's hardly helpful for people without the interest.
I have occasionally been guilty of unfairly making fun of people who don't like to cook for not liking to cook and complaining about recipes. It's one life regret that I have. I should have known better.
Also random notes from skimming the comments: Peruvian food knows how to make quinoa delicious. Interestingly there is also a fantastic genre of Peruvian/Chinese crossover food that is incredible.
Parboil just means to drop the thing in boiling water for a small amount of time so that it soaks a bit of the water in but doesn't actually cook. IMHO vegetables taste better this way than raw or overcooked. A lot of Chinese vegetable dishes are really just lightly steamed/parboiled. That's why they are better than both raw vegetables (salad) and other vegetable dishes that cook the vegetables to death.
Posted by: psu | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 12:36 PM
Take heart from Edward Lear's recipe for Amblongus pie, which ends "Serve up in a clean dish, and throw the whole out of the window as fast as possible."
I remember another Lear recipe that involved setting fire to a shag and burying it, digging it and throwing it away - but the interweb cannot find it.
Posted by: David | Tuesday, 08 April 2025 at 04:20 PM
The title of this article is "Single Bachelor ...".
Question: Aren't all bachelors single?
Posted by: roger kobayashi | Wednesday, 09 April 2025 at 05:19 PM
The ice in the water for stopping the cooking of the broccoli might, possibly, be important in Florida or Arizona. Not in MN, where the cold water comes out of the tap fairly cold (45-50F). It's probably roughly the same where you are (it gets cold enough at some times of year that the outside feed pipes have to be buried about 6 feet under to make sure they never freeze, which means the water is about the same temp all year).
[I've a bad memory for numbers, but I believe the pipes in Chicago are 15 feet down. The reason I remember is that during an epic deep-freeze in Chicago, with many days in a row reaching –15°F or lower, the radio reported every day how close the freeze was getting to the pipes. I think the ground froze to 11 feet before relief arrived. --Mike]
Posted by: David Dyer-Bennet | Saturday, 12 April 2025 at 05:23 PM
I watched a friend learn to cook, in particular, from The impoverished students' book of cookery, drinkery, & housekeepery (which is still available on Amazon, looks like). (And ate the meals along the way.)
It had the right level of instructions for him. Following the book, he made a successful souffle, which is not completely trivial.
The complexity level tended towards the low end (despite the example I gave).
Dunno if you would find it either useful or interesting, but seems worth mentioning in general.
Posted by: David Dyer-Bennet | Saturday, 12 April 2025 at 05:27 PM
"I still mourn the discontinuation of my favorite-ever candy 30 years ago"
I notice lots of places now sell "retro candy", by which they mean both older candies still being made and generic recreations of discontinued ones. Google "retro candy" or "vintage candy" if curious.
Posted by: robert e | Sunday, 13 April 2025 at 09:20 PM