One of mine is underbaked pastry, why spend hundreds not including man hours making it for some numpty doing this at point of sale, the answer is turn your oven down so it bakes the side as well as top and bottom
Hi Baron, this is a well known bakery near Boltons football ground, it not the bakery who is at fault it's shop staff who have no baking skills, this is a pre cooked filling so will not make you ill but raw fillings will be baked before they leave the bakery not on site, that's how we did it the only compliants were from shop baked goods, one manager spent 2 weeks training shop staff how to bake pie's it was futile with the high turnover of staffLooks vile that Rod
That's never pleasant.It reminds me of being Microwaved
Not the first time I've heard that.if it can get eggs right is a pretty good test.
Your comment about precooking and then just reheating poached eggs fills me with horror. As for bacon generally when I (or most Brits) say bacon it means back bacon (not sure if this has a different name in the USA).Not the first time I've heard that.
When you say "bacon," is that like regular, strip bacon or peameal bacon? Either would be delicious.
I worked at a chain restaurant (above middle quality for a medium-priced place) and the poached eggs would be cooked in a deep pot, when they floated up they were done. Here's the problem: They were then placed in ice water as sort of a holding pattern and then put in boiling water prior to serving.
I've had solid results with scrambled by using equal parts butter and olive oil in the steel pan, some milk in the whisked eggs.
Just like talking about food.
On topic: I have "peeves" but no "hates" unless we're talking about people getting bodily fluids in the food, handling food after going the bathroom without washing hands. Both instances actually observed.
You can prep some items with no loss of quality but others suffer. In that gray area, decisions are made to cut corners because of labor costs (lack of cooks to satisfy the demand) and so you get poached eggs in an ice bath unfortunately.Your comment about precooking and then just reheating poached eggs fills me with horror. As for bacon generally when I (or most Brits) say bacon it means back bacon (not sure if this has a different name in the USA).
I’ve probably too traumatised by overcooked rubbery scrabbled egg to be willing to risk doing it on a high heat, if it tastes good then fair enough but I find it is very difficult to screw up scrabbled egg doing it on a low heat while the poor results I’ve had at higher temperatures suggests that their is a very fine line between perfectly cooked and ruined, scrabbled egg tends to be a weekend breakfast and has a high risk of me being temporarily distracted by conversation, which probably doesn’t help the matter, As for sticking I just resign myself to using a stainless steel pot and having to scrub it clean afterwards, I hate that thin egg layer.You can prep some items with no loss of quality but others suffer. In that gray area, decisions are made to cut corners because of labor costs (lack of cooks to satisfy the demand) and so you get poached eggs in an ice bath unfortunately.
That meat fanned out looks really nice. There are different labels here which I'm not very knowledgeable about, relatively speaking.
I'm sure scrambled can be done on low with great results. Since I don't use non-stick I cook them on medium-high or high until they are just done and no more. However, since I'm 100% working the pan the entire time, there's no sitting and getting burned and so the high temperature doesn't reflect exactly what the scrambled eggs are experiencing.
I'll try low in the stainless steel pan to see if there will be no sticking (that thin egg coating on the pan bottom).
Not the first time I've heard that.
When you say "bacon," is that like regular, strip bacon or peameal bacon? Either would be delicious.
I worked at a chain restaurant (above middle quality for a medium-priced place) and the poached eggs would be cooked in a deep pot, when they floated up they were done. Here's the problem: They were then placed in ice water as sort of a holding pattern and then put in boiling water prior to serving.
I've had solid results with scrambled by using equal parts butter and olive oil in the steel pan, some milk in the whisked eggs.
Just like talking about food.
On topic: I have "peeves" but no "hates" unless we're talking about people getting bodily fluids in the food, handling food after going the bathroom without washing hands. Both instances actually observed.
“On topic: I have "peeves" but no "hates" unless we're talking about people getting bodily fluids in the food, handling food after going the bathroom without washing hands. Both instances actually observed.”Not the first time I've heard that.
When you say "bacon," is that like regular, strip bacon or peameal bacon? Either would be delicious.
I worked at a chain restaurant (above middle quality for a medium-priced place) and the poached eggs would be cooked in a deep pot, when they floated up they were done. Here's the problem: They were then placed in ice water as sort of a holding pattern and then put in boiling water prior to serving.
I've had solid results with scrambled by using equal parts butter and olive oil in the steel pan, some milk in the whisked eggs.
Just like talking about food.
On topic: I have "peeves" but no "hates" unless we're talking about people getting bodily fluids in the food, handling food after going the bathroom without washing hands. Both instances actually observed.
I have been in turkey on holiday and spent 2 days in an un airconditioned bathroom doing the Turkish trots oh and you can’t flush your toilet paper it has to go in the bin and the maid comes every 2nd day@Donegal john
Yeah, I've seen a lot, dozens if not hundreds of blatant health code violations. I have to turn off what I know about what really goes on. One guy's nose was always dripping and to make it worse, he worked pantry (salads and sandwiches--all the uncooked stuff). I said something to a manager and got nothing in response.
Had fast food years ago from a place and I got so sick I was inches from going to the hospital--coming out violently from both ends. Incidentally, If one's bathtub is situated near the toilet, I can't say how much intrinsic value that has.
I am convinced I consumed feces or worse (if there is worse). Obviously, I've never been back.
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