Could be something you grew up with, something you learned, etc.

  • baruchin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    In Mazatlan, Mexico, a beach in the mexican northern pacific, when it’s rainy, we eat a sort of thin pancakes, a bit thicker than a crepe, called kekis, a short term for pancakes, that instead of being presented as a normal pancake, they are rolled like a burrito. We put some honey, maple syrup, or plenty of sugar on top.

      • jak@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        What a horrifying name, when viewed as a compound word. Thankfully, it seems to be a germanicization of palačinka.

    • gwkt@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      that’s interesting, I wonder if it would be good with oatmeal inside. Like a sweet oatmeal burrito

  • Shotgun_Alice@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Beans and rice, or a fried egg over rice. Good filling add a few cheap veggies and you have a pretty banger meal. The egg and rice is a go to lunch for me tbh because I just like it that much.

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Any soup and any bread - both homemade. I cant stomach canned soup, but I make my own, prodigiously, and freeze it.

    My favorite is broccoli cheddar soup, followed by a spicy tomato bisque which somehow seems it gets spicier the longer it stays in the fridge, then ham bone soup, then caldo verde portugese soup, then potato leek, and my most recent one was a red cabbage bisque which I have mixed feelings about, but I love to see the horror on my colleagues faces as I tuck into a weird, dark purple goopy monster blood lunch.

    I like to make a skillet flatbread, the same kind i make when im camping. Water, flour, yeast, salt, olive oil, half a day of hanging out in my backpack while im hiking, punched down and pasted to the inside of a frying pan, smothered in dried herbs or maybe crushed pepitas, whatevers handy, covered in foil and baked on a campfire. It never comes out the same way twice. Sometimes the crust is burned, but flatbread is really forgiving, just scrape off the burned bits and theres good bread underneath.

  • Bakachu@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Bho ko - a spicy Vietnamese beef stew - immediately comes to mind for me. It’s savory, hearty, fragrant. Has a touch of sweet. Great mix of eastern and western ingredients so it’s familiar and comforting on many levels. A Vietnamese friend of mine made it for a dinner party a few years back and it set off the cravings.

    I like mine without noodles, and instead with toasted french bread for dipping.

  • z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I learned to make home made chicken soup from scratch a while back and it’s the best. Lots of work, but worth it, especially when it’s cold or rainy.

    The secret is adding chicken feet (about 1 lb per ~1.75 gallons of water) to the broth. It adds so much collagen, the soup is thick and delicious.

    I like to also add parsley, carrot tops, a bay leaf, and a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar with roasted chicken bones to the broth as well. Pressure cook for an hour, or simmer for a day.

    Strain the broth, add yukon potatoes, carrots, chopped onions, garlic, rosemary, thyme, sage, kosher salt, freshly ground black pepper. Pressure cook for another hour or simmer for two (or until potatoes are soft…).

    Once done, add roasted chicken meat, and lightly simmer with fresh mushrooms and slowly whisk an egg in. Serve over cooked quinoa, topped with freshly chopped basil, cilantro, and/or green onions.

    Obviously… I love this meal.

        • Otter@lemmy.caOP
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          1 year ago

          Yea a friend really likes it. I think the big stores carry it too but for sure smaller independent ones do in the city

  • AshKetchup@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Portugese Bean Soup.

    Ham Hocks Kidney Beans Portugese Sausage ( or any type of sausage really) Carrots Cabbage Diced Tomatoes / Tomato Sauce

    Boil the ham hocks for about an hour then combine all ingredients Boil them all together for a couple of hours

    Takes a bit to prep but it’s delicious!