101 things in 1001 days

2009 October 8
by Tracy

I stumbled onto a blog about this. And now I’m hooked, motivated, inspired, and I got a list! Took me a good 2 days to compile. Find it here –>

 

**ETA fixed the broken link!

4 Responses leave one →
  1. 2009 October 8
    taraSG permalink

    Congrats on getting your 101 list up!

    A fellow 101er and I started online community for those doing the 101/1001 challenge. We have groups, forums and blog awards. You can check it out at http://dayzero.ning.com if you’re interested!

    Good luck with your list!
    Tara SG
    http://101.taraSG.com

  2. 2009 October 14
    Tracy permalink

    Yup yup, i joined and it looks like a great group of people! Thanks for the links

  3. 2009 November 3
    jeremy1 permalink

    Awsome list

    Here’s help with a recipe

    Basic Soufflé Recipe
    I have a particular fondness for foods that are (relatively) easy to cook, but appear to most people as difficult and fancy. The soufflé belongs at the head of this category. Everyone seems terrified of soufflés. Fact is: the soufflé can be forgiving and easy to adapt to your needs. Below I’ve provided ingredients for a 2, 3 or 4-egg soufflé. Here’s a perfect rule of thumb: 1 egg per person/serving. If you are cooking for 3 people, make a 3-egg soufflé! I have a pretty nice Krab soufflé recipe in my cooking pages, with more to follow.

    Ingredients (2 egg)
    2 eggs (white and yolks seperated)
    1/2 cups milk
    2 tbsp flour
    2 tbsp butter
    3/4 cup cheese
    1/8 tsp creme of tartar (optional)
    Ingredients (3 egg)
    3 eggs (white and yolks seperated)
    3/4 cups milk
    3 tbsp flour
    3 tbsp butter
    1 1/4 cup cheese
    1/8 tsp creme of tartar (optional)
    Ingredients (4 egg)
    4 eggs (white and yolks seperated)
    1 cups milk
    1/4 cup flour
    1/4 cup butter
    1 1/2 cup cheese
    1/4 tsp creme of tartar (optional)
    Pre-heat oven to 350°
    Butter and flour a large baking dish.
    Prepare your basic roux. (Ie. melt butter in a pan, add flour and cook—whisking constantly—until it just begins to turn a light brown color.)
    Heat milk (in microwave) until hot, but not boiling.
    Add a small amount of roux into the milk and mix, then add the milk mixture back into the roux. Surprise! You now have the basic foundation to a simple white-sauce.
    Reduce heat. Whisk a small amount of this hot sauce mixture into the egg yolks, then add the yolks back into the sauce, whisking well.
    Warning #1: Once you have mixed in the egg yolk, you must be very carefull to keep the overall mixture at a low temperature! Otherwise the egg yolks will temper and your sause will either have a mottled texture or the consistency of a mysterious plastic petrolium product. Reduce heat to the lowest setting and keep the sause only warm enough to continue melting cheesese or other items.
    Slowly add cheese and mix until it is melted into the sauce. Surprise! You now have a basic cheese sauce!
    Warning #2: Before the next step (beating the egg whites) it is worthwhile to note how important it is that you didn’t accidentally get any egg yolk into the whites. SERIOUSLY! A couple drops of the yellow stuff with screw your egg whites badly. If you accidentally get a drop of a broken yolk into the whites, carefully and surgically remove it with a spoon. Consider the egg yolk to be KRYPTONITE at this stage!
    Now use a mixer at medium or high speed to beat the egg whites with the cream of tartar until they are “stiff but not dry”. (Once they peak, they’re done. If you don’t stop immediately they’ll resemble a merange.)
    Add 1/4 of the egg white to the sauce and mix.
    FOLD the sauce into the egg whites. FOLD does not mean mix! This is important: you just barely mix the two together. It is perfectly okay that you see bits of white. The mixture does not need to be homogenous.
    Place mixture in baking dish and bake for 30-35 minutes.
    Serve IMMEDIATELY. When souffles cool, they begin to collapse. Don’t worry, it’s perfectly normal. ALL crepes start to fall the moment they are pulled out of the over. If you serve immediately though, nobody will notice.

    O buy the way you have to add the following to your list.

    Watch a Gian Groen show…… (only joking)

    Nice day
    Jeremy

  4. 2009 November 3
    Tracy permalink

    Cheers Jeremy!
    Kudo’s for the recipe, Of course I’ll try it out – it’s on the list.

    I do one up on watching a Gian Groen show, It’ll be part of my #90.

    P.S Where’d u get the recipe from? (typo in there crepes VS Soufflé). want to know cause I want to link it.

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