Rocklobster
Legendary Member
No idea....I think he has retired....My comment still stands. Where is Yan now!?
No idea....I think he has retired....My comment still stands. Where is Yan now!?
Messaged you.Cinisajoy: "I have a couple by JC"... were there 4 of them? (kidding... the bible...)
I had to double check all of those initials to see what you meant...
What network did your friend's dad found, Cin?
...Ken Hom, who was born in the USA, but became famous in the UK and who is still cooking up a storm. He was live on TV a few weeks ago.
I cook stuff based on recipes I have seen on TV all the time. Some of my well-established dishes come from things I first saw on TV. Let me see, off the top of my head – I do a meatballs and pasta based very strongly on something I saw John Torode demonstrate on Masterchef. And the other John Torode / Masterchef based dish I have cooked several times is a chicken and ham pie. From Marcus Wearing on Masterchef professionals I learned how to make a cracking Welsh Rarebit, and from the last series I picked up how to do a classic Steak Diane and a great way to do a pork chop. The Steak Diane I have cooked three or four times since I saw it. My wife does a wonderful lamb shank dish we first saw demonstrated by Nigel Slater and I recently cooked a sweet and sour chicken dish he demonstrated – that’s the very dish I needed the preserved lemons for. Oh, and a great staple for our two younger kids that I have cooked more times than I can remember since I first saw it demonstrated on TV, is marmite spaghetti. Marmite spaghetti?!!! Which TV chef demonstrated marmite spaghetti?! Well it was Nigella Lawson as it happens. She said she has never met a kid who doesn’t love it, and I can say, mine certainly do.
I make Nigella's Marmite spaghetti too!
Ha!. It's a little bit like how, before you can admit as an adult to having seen and perhaps even enjoyed a children's film you have to have the excuse that you only went to see it for the kids' sake. So of course, I only cook Marmite spaghetti because the kids want it. But - hey ho - I have to have a few forkfuls of it because, somehow, I always cook a bit too much of it. Funny that isn't it?
Sadly, I don't even have that excuse! My kids have left home but they wouldn't eat anything with Marmite on, once they could talk. They were both given Marmite soldiers when they were tiny.
I'll try it next time my youngest is home.But there you go, that's the thing with Marmite spaghetti, you shouldn't pre-judge it as something you wouldn't like because you don't like Marmite. I mean, I am firmly in the love camp, I've eaten it since I was very young and still love a Marmite sandwich when the timing is right. But my kids won't eat it on toast or as a sandwich but they love Marmite spaghetti. You should serve the spaghetti dish to someone just as savoury flavoured spaghetti and after they have said how much they liked it, only then tell 'em that the flavour is Marmite. I mean, clearly it doesn't have that bite that Marmite spread straight on bread or toast has. It is just a lovely savoury flavoured spaghetti dish.
I'll try it next time my youngest is home.
We had Marmite as the Recipe Challenge ingredient a while back (before you joined, I think). If you put 'marmite' into the search box top right you will see the recipes.You've provoked another memory from years ago, I'm pretty sure it is further back than whenever I saw Nigella do Marmite spaghetti. Anyway, a friend of mine did a Sunday roast pork, and before he roasted the pork joint, he smeared it with a thin layer of Marmite. The result was amazing. It gave the meat a wonderful deep flavour.
Similar yes. But people will hotly debate which is superior! I love it - a little goes a long way. Its the umame taste - yeasty, salty, tangy and a liittle like beef extract.Ok, so I've heard of marmite, and vegemite. Are they similar?
From what I understand, they are very strongly flavoured, very salty? An acquired taste?
Ok, so I've heard of marmite, and vegemite. Are they similar?
From what I understand, they are very strongly flavoured, very salty? An acquired taste?