Try it with horseradish instead of mustard. You're welcome.
[Food] What do you call this?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Kinda screwed myself on cooking food today as yesterday I found a great deal in the store and had to use the last of my FS to get stuff. It was a big ole split chicken breast marinated then rubbed with spicy southwestern rub in its own little baking pan. $3. I scooped it up. BUT I forgot I had put 2 lbs of ground beef into thaw as today I was going to cook american goulash. doh. I couldn't exactly refreeze the meat as thats unsafe so I just cooked both. Man o man am I stuffed. SO good bother of them. I put two large containers of the goulash in the the freezer to have over the next few weeks or take some to my sister. I still have a large mixing bowl half full to eat alone lol.
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- Smoove_B
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I feel like I mentioned this before, but maybe that was before I slipped through into this dimension.
There's nothing unsafe about refreezing meat. I mean, assuming it was thawing in your refrigerator and not on your counter top for the last 3 days, you just slap it back in the freezer. The only issue would be a potential loss in quality (flavor, texture) but I doubt that would be an issue for most people regardless.
ON TOPIC: Referring to this as "chili mac" is really bothering me. I'd say it's "Hamburger Helper" though maybe you could get away with referring to it as macaroni with meat sauce. I'm not really sure as I never ate it growing up.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I wouldn't call it Hamburger Helper unless it actually is made with Hamburger Helper. Hamburger Helper comes with a packet of powder that is reconstituted to make the sauce, so using it as a generic name saddles the food with an implication of low-effort poor quality.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I did. Mothers in the '60s were all about convenience, and this is one of those stovetop dishes that's super easy to make. It bothers me a little that my mom is the only one who called it slumgullion.
Was thinking about making it this week (with Beyond Beef), but I made mac-n-cheese last week and I try to avoid going to the pasta well too often. Instead I'm making a Mexican meatball soup. Maybe I'll do slumgullion next week.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
The Beyond patties work out pretty well as ground beef if you crumble them up. I bought a case of the Cookout Classic packages and they work out to less than $2/patty. And the packaging is so much less wasteful.Kraken wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 11:35 amWife is nominally a vegetarian who just gave her blessing to Beyond and Impossible burger within the past year. I like Beyond Meat better and have used it to revive many old dishes, such as chili, that I hadn't made in ages. It works just fine when it's an ingredient, rather than front-and-center -- you wouldn't want to make a meat loaf out of it, for example, but it's OK as a burger patty and works great in stews and casseroles. It doesn't *quite* taste like real ground beef, but the texture is right and I've come to like the flavor. And it's been on sale lately. Still costs more than ground beef but not outrageously so.Kasey Chang wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 11:15 am Wonder how it'd taste with "not beef" (those beef substitutes)?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I buy the 1-pound packs and make my own patties (for Wife; I make normal burgers for myself). In its bulk form, it browns up pretty nicely when cooked in oil, but it goes from browned to burnt fairly quickly if you aren't careful.Alefroth wrote: ↑Fri Jan 27, 2023 9:20 pmThe Beyond patties work out pretty well as ground beef if you crumble them up. I bought a case of the Cookout Classic packages and they work out to less than $2/patty. And the packaging is so much less wasteful.Kraken wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 11:35 amWife is nominally a vegetarian who just gave her blessing to Beyond and Impossible burger within the past year. I like Beyond Meat better and have used it to revive many old dishes, such as chili, that I hadn't made in ages. It works just fine when it's an ingredient, rather than front-and-center -- you wouldn't want to make a meat loaf out of it, for example, but it's OK as a burger patty and works great in stews and casseroles. It doesn't *quite* taste like real ground beef, but the texture is right and I've come to like the flavor. And it's been on sale lately. Still costs more than ground beef but not outrageously so.Kasey Chang wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 11:15 am Wonder how it'd taste with "not beef" (those beef substitutes)?
The meatball soup turned out great, but one of the drawbacks of fake meat is that it loses coherence. It doesn't stick to itself the way ground beef does. The meatballs will slowly crumble and dissolve. That's OK; it just makes the broth "meaty," but I'd prefer the balls to stay balled. I've tried a few different binders but haven't found the right mix yet.
Here's the Mexican meatball soup recipe if anyone wants to try it.
Spoiler:
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Meet (pun intended) transglutaminase
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I dont think she was alone as I see that name all over the online world when I Google it.Kraken wrote: ↑Fri Jan 27, 2023 7:48 pmI did. Mothers in the '60s were all about convenience, and this is one of those stovetop dishes that's super easy to make. It bothers me a little that my mom is the only one who called it slumgullion.
Was thinking about making it this week (with Beyond Beef), but I made mac-n-cheese last week and I try to avoid going to the pasta well too often. Instead I'm making a Mexican meatball soup. Maybe I'll do slumgullion next week.
Also.......
A slumgullion is a stew, usually made up of whatever is at hand but containing at least component of meat. The word slumgullion is an American word first seen in print in the 1870s in the story Roughin' It by Mark Twain. However, in the story, slumgullion referred to a nasty, watery beverage.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I like eggs as binders, but they're getting kind of expensive for that use.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Does it say that it has meat in it on the menu?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
It should...
Also, all words are made up...slumgullion
noun
slum·gul·lion ˈsləm-ˌgəl-yən
: a meat stew
Did you know?
Slumgullion may not sound like the most appetizing name for a dish, but that's part of its charm. The word's etymology doesn't necessarily do it any favors: while the origins of slumgullion are somewhat murky, the word is believed to derive from slum, an old word for "slime," and gullion, an English dialectical term for "mud" or "cesspool." The earliest recorded usages of slumgullion, including one from Mark Twain's Roughing It (1872), refer not to a stew but a beverage. The sense referring to the stew debuted a few decades later, and while there is no consensus on exactly what ingredients are found in it, that's the slumgullion that lives on today.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
It's almost as if people are the problem.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Hold up, now. It almost sounds like you’re throwing shade at Hamburger Helper. I’m sure that’s not your intent, so I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt.Max Peck wrote: ↑Fri Jan 27, 2023 7:43 pm I wouldn't call it Hamburger Helper unless it actually is made with Hamburger Helper. Hamburger Helper comes with a packet of powder that is reconstituted to make the sauce, so using it as a generic name saddles the food with an implication of low-effort poor quality.
Hamburger Helper was a staple in my house growing up. Pure comfort food!
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I was just commenting that the photo sure looked like hamburger helper.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Hamburger Stretcher would be more apt.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
I get a generic version of Hamburger Helper. I only like 2 versions though...Cheeseburger mac and also Beef Strog
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Wife's traveling, so I made myself some slumgullion.
First time I've had it since I was a child. Using the open half-jar of spaghetti sauce in the fridge is in the leftovers spirit of slumgullion, but basil isn't the greatest addition. And it needs more salt. It still has that shovel-it-in quality that's essential in comfort food.
This pan will last me the rest of the week.
First time I've had it since I was a child. Using the open half-jar of spaghetti sauce in the fridge is in the leftovers spirit of slumgullion, but basil isn't the greatest addition. And it needs more salt. It still has that shovel-it-in quality that's essential in comfort food.
This pan will last me the rest of the week.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Don't know what that called, but not goulash to me. Goulash is more soup or stew than that.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
In the USN they served that particular variant for midnight rations from leftovers mixed together. (midrats)
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
His is American Goulash. You're thinking Hungarian Goulash.Victoria Raverna wrote: ↑Wed Feb 15, 2023 7:56 am Don't know what that called, but not goulash to me. Goulash is more soup or stew than that.
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
This is the first I've ever heard mention of slumgullion, and I've just come across only the second mention of it I've ever heard as Johnny Cash translates Waltzing Matilda for us 'mericans. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL4v7UrqcF4
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Thanks for that link. I think usage of "slumgullion" mostly died out with the Depression generation, and the word itself will probably be forgotten when us Boomers, who learned it from them, are gone.em2nought wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 9:45 pm This is the first I've ever heard mention of slumgullion, and I've just come across only the second mention of it I've ever heard as Johnny Cash translates Waltzing Matilda for us 'mericans. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL4v7UrqcF4
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Re: [Food] What do you call this?
Come to think of it, my mother's version did smack of depression food, except maybe for the ground cow. The tomato sauce was lifeless (not like spaghetti sauce, which would have improved it 1000 fold). She put raw onion and bell pepper in it, neither which I care for (maybe because of this dish). Now, my mom was born during the depression (1932) and it's not very likely she remembers it from those days, although her mom (b.1917) might have passed it along. Much like Cafe du Monde (among others) still celebrates chicory coffee...chicory is a bitter plant that was used to stretch more expensive coffee. It did not add anything positive to this otherwise essential beverage.Kraken wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 10:14 pmThanks for that link. I think usage of "slumgullion" mostly died out with the Depression generation, and the word itself will probably be forgotten when us Boomers, who learned it from them, are gone.em2nought wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 9:45 pm This is the first I've ever heard mention of slumgullion, and I've just come across only the second mention of it I've ever heard as Johnny Cash translates Waltzing Matilda for us 'mericans. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL4v7UrqcF4
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