jimgoose wrote: » I cook croquettes regularly - very handy, tasty spud when you're feeling lazy, which come to think of it happens a fair bit around here.
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » Why croquettes and not regular spuds, which are just as easy? Often thought there should be a boards.ie Come Dine With Me.
Statutory Ape wrote: » A girl i used to hang around with in college used to cook rashers in the microwave. I still get vietnam flashbacks when i think of her tucking into the pasty, stringy post pints bacon sammich.
jimgoose wrote: » That's just monstrous!! :eek:
CalamariFritti wrote: » Toaster is for toast. Anything else you're just looking for trouble. Add community toaster and it becomes a hanging offence. Did someone say they do rashers in a microwave? <shivers/>
jimgoose wrote: » I like croquettes, and you just sling them on a baking tray for fifteen minutes. By "regularly", I mean once a week or so - I also like potato waffles, boiled Maris Pipers, and the potato gratin they do in the local Centra for 2 Euro - couldn't beat that.
A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » Maris Piper in the most useful potato you can keep in your kitchen, I can't understand why it never made inroads here. Seems more of a Brit thing, we cling on this false belief that Roosters are a nice, or edible, potato.
Deleted User wrote: » Not as bad as coke with a fry..
king_of_mayo wrote: » Yeah, they're pretty good for you and see lots of diets recommend healthy meals built around them.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Have to say, I’m surprised to hear that. I would associate fish fingers with those, horrible, Findus “pancakes”. Both eaten by the same “type” who’d devour one of those flat tins of Fray Bento’s steak and kidney pie. Absolute dog food.
jimgoose wrote: » No, no, no... fish fingers aren't on the same planet as those scuttery "pancakes". Back in the '70s and '80s the fish fingers gave many a youngster the taste for fish, which would eventually translate into a craving for sea-trout, sole and hake.
cml387 wrote: » I used to quite like the Fray Bentos S&K pud. Don't hate me. And Findus crispy pancakes. But I was a poor student at the time. Back a while now.
king_of_mayo wrote: » I'm 32 years of age and thought I'd heard it all. But I was on a work call yesterday and was telling the guy that I had a fish finger sandwich for lunch. As I described it (bread, butter, fried egg, beans and a layer of fish fingers) he was well into it. He said he couldn't resist and that he'd stuck some on... in the toaster! I had no idea that was a thing. Seems wrong. We were then talking to another work person in a following meeting, she agreed that fish fingers in there was weird but said she often uses it for potato waffles. Again, never heard of that. I wonder what am I missing out on? Do you use the toaster to cook anything unusual? Have you heard of fish fingers in them?
Rodney Bathgate wrote: » I’ve been cooking my potato waffles in the air fryer recently, very nice.
jester77 wrote: » I've been debating whether to get one of those. Have you done fried chicken in it? I don't want to mess around with a deep fat fryer
dmc17 wrote: » https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6p9i60 This is interesting to see how they are made
Sam Hain wrote: » You are not 32.
o1s1n wrote: » Feck the toaster, you lads ever try fish in the dishwasher? https://www.food.com/recipe/dishwasher-salmon-13246
Mr. CooL ICE wrote: » I'm both disgusted and curious
king_of_mayo wrote: » Rashers? I really don't know where the limits are.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Do people still eat “fish fingers”? I don’t think I’ve even seen one of those since the late 80s. Either way, I don’t think a toaster is the way to “prepare” them. Fine for waffles but I think only the Bird Eye ones actually have toaster “instructions” on the box. The cheap ones could cause an oil fire.