Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Haha. Sure.
I bake sourdough every week and have two 4.5 quart ovens that I use for bread (and other small batch stuff). I have two so I can bake both loaves at once.
Also this week:
- duck fat fried potatoes last night in big Dutch oven
- poaching chicken breasts for Caesar salads tonight
- also tonight making an apple crisp that I’ll bake in one of the smaller ovens (cast iron is great for baking because it holds heat really consistently, is easier to pull from the oven than a baking dish because of the side handles, and I love having a lid for leftovers storage!)
- tomorrow night making dal and rice. I’ll use one oven for the dal, another for the rice. And my cast iron LC pan to heat up my naan.
- Thursday making homemade gnocchi and will boil the pasta and then toss with pesto in my Dutch oven.
- Friday pot stickers, again in my cast iron pan.
- Saturday I’m baking braised short ribs, polenta, and roasted green beans. I’ll probably use three for just the meal, although may do the green beans on a sheet pan.
- Sunday I’ll make stock and then soup, so that’s two more uses…
It goes on and on and on
Wow!! Your family is lucky. That's an amazing plan for the week. Can you list some of your other go tos and favorites? I tend to like healthy (lean meats and fish) and lots of vegetables or legumes etc. I bet the duck fat potatoes were delicious.
Wow. Thanks. I feel so *seen.* I love to cook and recently switched to a much more plant-based diet so I only cook with animal protein twice a week. It’s made me much more adventurous. I usually do a big soup once a week - my favorites are an Asian-flavored noodle with tons of vegetables, red lentil-butternut squash, green lentils with sweet potatoes and spinach, simple white beans with pesto… I also make grain bowls once a week - some type of whole grain + homemade sauce + tons of fresh cut vegetables and maybe something roasted or crispy chickpeas. My family makes their own bowls with whatever they want. I also cook a lot of Indian - veg-based curries or dal, and do Italian once a week to keep everyone else happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious if anyone had a comparison between Le Creuset brand and a non Le Creuset brand dutch oven (Lodge, for example). Is it worth it to spring for Le Creuset?
I have a Le Creuset and a Staub and slightly prefer my Staub. I don't think it's that much (if at all) cheaper though. I have a Lodge cast iron pan and it seems to require a bit more care than the 2 other brands but I can be a little sloppy with care.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious if anyone had a comparison between Le Creuset brand and a non Le Creuset brand dutch oven (Lodge, for example). Is it worth it to spring for Le Creuset?
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious if anyone had a comparison between Le Creuset brand and a non Le Creuset brand dutch oven (Lodge, for example). Is it worth it to spring for Le Creuset?