Anonymous wrote:How do I keep shallots fresh? I only buy them when i need them.
Buckwheat ofcourse. Lasts forever.
Anonymous wrote:I will give you the bottarga and pickled watermelon rinds. And maybe the Marmite (I have Vegemite, used to live down under). Most other things are fairly common, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep Turkish ingredients on hand at all times because that’s our primary food culture:
Pepper paste (we bring this back in bulk but get the rest of these locally)
Tomato paste
Bulgur — both fine and full size
Red lentils
Tahini
Pomegranate molasses
Sumac
Other items I usually have but aren’t common:
Curry paste (locally made Malaysian style)
Palm sugar
Flavacol popcorn seasoning
Black bean garlic sauce (need this for one recipe in my rotation I make about once a quarter)
Is there a particular brand of the pomegranate molasses you recommend? I have several recipes I’ve saved but haven’t made because they call for it and I don’t know what to get.
Same question for the black bean garlic sauce. It sounds delicious. I love blank bean sauce, I love garlic, I would like to try this sauce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bulk buy fresh ginger and keep it in the freezer. Same for garlic.
I do this too. Grate ginger and freeze in 1 tsp cubes, peel garlic cloves (or buy pre-peeled) and freeze, wash and cut lemons and limes into wedges and freeze. Plus all number of fresh herbs that I don't get around to finishing in time. Is it slightly less fresh flavorful than prepping fresh? Maybe, but the time saver is well worth it.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think I would consider anything from the produce aisle to be staples. We meal plan for the week and buy what we need.
One thing that’s pretty uncommon I always have is pasties. We buy a bunch at once from The Perfect Pasty in Vienna and keep them in our deep freezer for random nights we’re running late or don’t feel like cooking.
Anonymous wrote:I bulk buy fresh ginger and keep it in the freezer. Same for garlic.
Anonymous wrote:Marmite. Always, and many extra jars.