Soup dumplings. The broth for the soup has to be make in a specific way to solidify and I think there's also a complex method of incorporating the soup into the meat and veggies in the dumplings. It's just a very time consuming process all around. It's sucks tho because I love soup dumplings and being able to make a huge portion of them would be amazing.
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Homemade pizza. Making the dough creates a mess and requires delicate manual labor in several steps at precise times over more than 24 hours. Looks great on YouTube but that's just not me.
Edit: thanks for the suggestions, guys. Who knows, maybe one day... π
It takes me an hour to make pizza from scratch at home. I'll grant it's messy but it's pretty easy!
- Prepare dough following steps 1-8 in the dough recipe above
- While your dough is rising, prepare the pizza sauce
- Liberally dust your pizza peel with corn meal (use more than you think you need!)
- Transfer the rolled-out dough onto the pizza peel and pinch the edges to form a crust
- Assemble and cook the pizza following steps 10-12 in the dough recipe above. I tend to use about 1/2 cup of pizza sauce, 4oz grated mozzarella, fresh basil leaves, and pepperoni, but the sky's the limit really
- Enjoy!
Well it depends on what you want to achieve. Because there is also the oven, which os important, and your ingredient.
I love making pizza since I was a teenager and I learned slowly. Internet was great for learning cold fermentation or about different type of pizza.
But you can make a decent pizza quite easily.
Maybe try focaccia first it's super fun. This is the recipe I use.
A ceramic stone in the oven has been a gamechanger for my pizzas.
Yep, if you make pizza in a home oven it's really important to have a stone plate.
Beef Wellington.
I was thinking about making this to surprise ans impress my wife. Watched a video on how to make it and decided that there are easier ways to impress her.
As much as I love barbecue I don't and won't own a smoker.
Demiglace. Way too much work.
Ramen. Like true, 14+ hrs of effort tonkotsu broth.
It's been a dream of mine for a long time, but fuck is that a long time.
It's not 14 hours of effort. It's 14 hours of letting shit boil.
I highly recommend getting slow cooker if you don't have one. You can do stocks and broths without having to keep an eye on them. I let my bone broths go for two days.
Khao soi
My mom makes these cottege cheese and bread crumbs dumplings that she boils until they float and then you cut them in half and drizzle melted butter and brown sugar on them.
I could never pronounce or spell the name of the dish but she claims it's a traditional German dessert.
I tried explain it to chat gpt and it had no clue what the hell I was talking about. It kept telling me about Turkish dishes that have the right ingredients but look nothing like the baseball sized dumplings she would make.
It could easily be a family recipe. It looks like riffs on this theme are pretty common. Maybe it was a Hungarian recipe? Sounds like a great mystery!
She responded immediately. It's called "Quark KlΓΆΓe" according to her.
Looks like the specific ingredients and prep are a family thing, but that's definitely what it's based on.
Now I can rest easy. It was gonna drive me crazy if I couldn't remember the name of the food. Haha
This seems pretty close to what you described: https://www.chefkoch.de/rezepte/166041072019596/Suesse-Quarkkloesse.html
It sounds good / I'm thinking about giving them a go. If you find a better recipe let me know.
That Hungarian dish looks visually the closest but it was definitely made with wet cottage cheese.
I am absolutely going to butcher the name/spelling but it was called "cvlockclusa" in my house. I'll ask my mom how it's spelt.
I have made some fussy dishes, including sourdough puff pastry. I'm pretty motivated to make food homemade.
Baklava is the one I'd like to make but never will, even if I bought the dough - layering phyllo sheets one by one would kill me.
I live in a different city and often find myself wishing for my mother's Portuguese Salted Cod Casserole. It was out typical sunday family dinner when I still lived in the same city as them. Not a cultural tradition, just because it was my favourite dish.
But the nature of it ensures that I'll never ever ever have the patience to do it myself, considering that step one is soaking the dried salted cod in cold water that you repeatedly replace for up to 48 hours in order to get the salt out.
Thanks for mentioning this. Just found a recipe!
This is the one I found closest to my mothers. She herself doesn't ever write down HER particular measurements.
So it's... unsalted?
Nope. It retains enough salt to add to the unique taste. It just has to be dried and preserved in salt that then has to be removed. It gives the cod it's ability to break apart into the casserole.
Sourdough
Sourdough is super easy though! Probably barely an hour of actual hands-on time from start to finish with no-knead methods.
Saaaaame.
Ice cream
There are some really simple recipes and some cheap machines available though, the ones that use a drum you pre-freeze are like $60-80 new and really cheap used. You can make ice cream with milk, cream, sugar, a flavor of choice and a bit of something alcoholic and it's fantastic. I never buy ice cream anymore, and it's so much better (and cheaper) than store bought.
My dad bought me a $300 ice cream maker - it actually churns out really delicious soft serve style ice cream with barely any work. The issue is it's about 100 lbs, the size of a small HVAC unit, and I put it away in our basement storage area. At this point it's less effort to just buy the damn ice cream.
Croissant
This, I love, LOVE croissants, and have basically baked and made every other thing I love that much at some point or another. Flattening a giant sheet of butter again and again into a dough sheet? Ain't nobody got time for that