If you are interested in Asian cooking these are my two fav places to shop:99ranch and Hmart are nicer and are a bit easier for non-Asians to go to.
Hong Kong Food Market 11205 Bellaire Blvd
Viet Hoa International Foods 8300 W Sam Houston Pkwy
I've run into several Asian providers and Amp ladies at both places. Originally Posted by tbone2u
Buttermilk Pie
½ cup butter, melted
1 ½ cups pure cane sugar
3 eggs beaten at room temp.
3 tablespoons white flour
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 pinch of salt
1 cup regular buttermilk (not low fat) cold.
1 deep dish frozen pie shell, I usually use Pillsbury.
Since those frozen pie shells come in pairs, I usually make two pies at the same time.
So have double the ingredients above ready. The buttermilk I get easily has more than two cups in it as well. Since most don’t appreciate the goodness of a cold glass before bed, it’s less to toss out if you make two pies. (BTW, the dogs love buttermilk) Keep one and give the other away. Surprised the elderly widow neighbor on a few occasions with one.
First, preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
In a blender (known as a margarita machine to some) beat the butter and sugar on low to medium speed.
Slowly add the eggs.
Next alternate adding about a ¼ cup of the buttermilk, then 1 tablespoon flour. Do this until you’ve added all of each..
While the blender is still running add a pinch of salt and the vanilla. Pulse to a higher speed to thoroughly mix.
If you are making a second pie, pour mixture into a bowl and set aside. Then do the same thing again for the second pie.
When you got the ingredients ready, open the oven, pull out the middle shelf and put both pie shells on it. Pour the ingredients out of the blender directly into the pie shells, gently push the shelf back into the oven.
Bake at 400 for 10 minutes.
After 10 minutes drop the temp to 350 and let bake for another 50-60 minutes.
When the crust is brown and the top is a deep golden brown with lighter golden in the cracks remove and let cool.
This is when you take the pictures of it, don’t wait because it will never look this good again. The big beautiful pie that resembles a soufflé will crash as it cools.
Serve either warm or chilled. Whipped cream is an option on top.
I love it out of the refrigerator for breakfast with a good cup of coffee.
For the adventurous, you can experiment and add some cinnamon or powdered chocolate to the mix.
Refrigerate it and it will keep for a few days.
About 12 years ago I started learning about Chinese cooking then moved more to Vietnamese. ,,, Originally Posted by tbone2uMy wife is finally convinced to go spend $8 at a restaurant for a bowl of pho instead of spending two days and $30 making a crappy bowl of pho herself.
..This is the key. There are tons of youtube videos on pralines. I don't understand how most of these Mexican restraurants change $2 for a praline that tastes like wax.
If they don’t harden then you didn’t bring them to temperature slowly (238 to 240 degrees)
... Originally Posted by tbone2u
If you are interested in Asian cooking these are my two fav places to shop:Hong Kong Food Market is amazing. The fish case is spectacular.
Hong Kong Food Market 11205 Bellaire Blvd
Viet Hoa International Foods 8300 W Sam Houston Pkwy
I've run into several Asian providers and Amp ladies at both places. Originally Posted by tbone2u