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Oyster sauce substitute?
What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on
hand? I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
Kalmia wrote on Sat, 12 Jun 2010 13:04:38 -0700 (PDT):
> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't > have it on hand? > I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. Look around; I've seen both regular and vegetarian oyster sauce in ordinary grocery stores. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Jun 12, 4:22*pm, "James Silverton" >
wrote: > *Kalmia *wrote *on Sat, 12 Jun 2010 13:04:38 -0700 (PDT): > > > What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't > > have it on hand? > > I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > > It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > > Look around; I've seen both regular and vegetarian oyster sauce in > ordinary grocery stores. No, by 'on hand', I meant didn't have it in the house. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"Kalmia" wrote
> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on > hand? > I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"cshenk" wrote
> "Kalmia" wrote >> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >> hand? >> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > > Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. Forgot to give a guide. I'd start with 2 parts teriyaki and 1 part hoisin then taste. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 16:31:46 -0400, "cshenk" > wrote:
> "cshenk" wrote > > "Kalmia" wrote > > >> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on > >> hand? > >> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > >> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > > > > Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. > > Forgot to give a guide. I'd start with 2 parts teriyaki and 1 part hoisin > then taste. I'd do soy and hoisin. Add a paste of garlic, ginger and onion to it also. As you said, it'll be good, but it won't be the same. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"cshenk" > wrote in
: > "Kalmia" wrote > >> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >> hand? >> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > > Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. > > I was going to go the soy and hoisin mixed. -- Peter Lucas Brisbane Australia Pain is your friend, your ally, it will tell you when you are seriously injured, it will keep you awake and angry, and remind you to finish the job and get the hell home. But you know the best thing about pain? It lets you know you're not dead yet! |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
In article
>, Kalmia > wrote: > What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on > hand? > I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > > It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. There really is no substitute. I'd try mixing a bit of Hoisin and Teryaki. Got any worcestershire? If so, I'd add that too. -- Peace! Om Web Albums: <http://picasaweb.google.com/OMPOmelet> *Only Irish *coffee provides in a single glass all four *essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar *and fat. --Alex Levine |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"PL" wrote
> "cshenk" wrote >> "Kalmia" wrote >>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>> hand? >>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. >> >> Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. > I was going to go the soy and hoisin mixed. Not enough 'kick'. SF adds a paste of garlic, onion and ginger which might be good too. For me, I stuck where the texture would match up fairly close. Now, if i didnt mind a texture change and wanted to close in on the flavor, I'd open a tin of smoked oysters and add one to the blender then pulse until smooth. I'd also have tamari vice teriyaki sauce. I've adjusted asian recipes on the fly around ingredients for ages it seems. What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little thinner. This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"Omelet" wrote
> Kalmia wrote: >> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >> hand? >> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > There really is no substitute. I'd try mixing a bit of Hoisin and > Teryaki. Got any worcestershire? If so, I'd add that too. Lol! That would also be a good addition but yes, you can sub. In my cabinet is a Kimlan (Taiwan) vegetarian mushroom 'oyster' sauce. No oysters in it, this time it's a texture thing that drives the name. I have an entire cabinet dedicated to 'sauces and vinegars' here. Don and I like to play with different flavors in marinades. I also have a new bannana hot sauce from Mexico to try. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On 2010-06-13, cshenk > wrote:
> > What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little thinner. > This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian > brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most mkts. I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. nb |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 10:32:42 -0400, "cshenk" > wrote:
> I also have a new bannana hot sauce from Mexico to try. That might be different! What's the brand? I usually see the same ole, same ole. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"cshenk" > wrote in
: > "PL" wrote >> "cshenk" wrote >>> "Kalmia" wrote > >>>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>>> hand? >>>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >>>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. >>> >>> Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. > >> I was going to go the soy and hoisin mixed. > > Not enough 'kick'. Promite and water ;-P -- Peter Lucas Brisbane Australia Pain is your friend, your ally, it will tell you when you are seriously injured, it will keep you awake and angry, and remind you to finish the job and get the hell home. But you know the best thing about pain? It lets you know you're not dead yet! |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"sf" wrote
> "cshenk" wrote: >> I also have a new bannana hot sauce from Mexico to try. > That might be different! What's the brand? I usually see the same > ole, same ole. Milagros and it's more of a Mole with banana puree. Looks interesting! |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 12:54:00 -0400, "cshenk" > wrote:
> "sf" wrote > > "cshenk" wrote: > > >> I also have a new bannana hot sauce from Mexico to try. > > > That might be different! What's the brand? I usually see the same > > ole, same ole. > > Milagros and it's more of a Mole with banana puree. Looks interesting! It's sounding more and more interesting. Do you plan to use it as a mole and not as a banana sauce? I dip lumpia in banana sauce. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 16:31:46 -0400, cshenk wrote:
> "cshenk" wrote >> "Kalmia" wrote > >>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>> hand? >>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. >> >> Teriyaki and Hoisin mixed. It won't be the same, but it will do. > > Forgot to give a guide. I'd start with 2 parts teriyaki and 1 part hoisin > then taste. i was thinking of mushroom soy. your pal, blake |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 10:32:42 -0400, cshenk wrote:
> "Omelet" wrote >> Kalmia wrote: > >>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>> hand? >>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > >>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > >> There really is no substitute. I'd try mixing a bit of Hoisin and >> Teryaki. Got any worcestershire? If so, I'd add that too. > > Lol! That would also be a good addition but yes, you can sub. > > In my cabinet is a Kimlan (Taiwan) vegetarian mushroom 'oyster' sauce. No > oysters in it, this time it's a texture thing that drives the name. that's why i was thinking mushroom soy. texture and umami. your pal, blake |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"sf" wrote
> cshenk wrote: >> > That might be different! What's the brand? I usually see the same >> > ole, same ole. >> >> Milagros and it's more of a Mole with banana puree. Looks interesting! > > It's sounding more and more interesting. Do you plan to use it as a > mole and not as a banana sauce? I dip lumpia in banana sauce. Dunno! Never done 'mole' so I was gonna open it, sniff, then decide. Yeah, I'm an odd cook like that. I don't particularily care about how something is traditionally used, just what tastes nice to us. Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in Banana sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. Heaven! |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"notbob" wrote
> cshenk wrote: > I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most > mkts. Yup, decent stuff. > I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised > to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food > condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, > they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and > process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their > products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. I have tried quite a few of them and normally been pretty happy! Not a bad brand to center on when not sure of some item. I think of them as a decent centerline for all but soy sauces and patis. I upscale my patis and soys to other types due to specific taste preferences. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"blake murphy" wrote
> cshenk wrote: >>> Kalmia wrote: >>>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>>> hand? >>>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >> In my cabinet is a Kimlan (Taiwan) vegetarian mushroom 'oyster' sauce. >> No >> oysters in it, this time it's a texture thing that drives the name. > that's why i was thinking mushroom soy. texture and umami. Yes, it will come closer! She didnt have it though and hasnt replied to the thread. I'm curious what she did? |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 14:16:34 -0400, blake murphy
> wrote: > i was thinking of mushroom soy. I have a container that I never use. Good concept, but the saltiness overwhelms any mushroom flavor. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 14:24:45 -0400, blake murphy
> wrote: > On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 10:32:42 -0400, cshenk wrote: > > > "Omelet" wrote > >> Kalmia wrote: > > > >>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on > >>> hand? > >>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. > > > >>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. > > > >> There really is no substitute. I'd try mixing a bit of Hoisin and > >> Teryaki. Got any worcestershire? If so, I'd add that too. > > > > Lol! That would also be a good addition but yes, you can sub. > > > > In my cabinet is a Kimlan (Taiwan) vegetarian mushroom 'oyster' sauce. No > > oysters in it, this time it's a texture thing that drives the name. > > that's why i was thinking mushroom soy. texture and umami. > Oh, ok... yours has texture? None in mine, it's just flavored (actually more smell, which disappears when cooked, than taste) soy. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 15:34:15 -0400, "cshenk" > wrote:
> "sf" wrote > > cshenk wrote: > > >> > That might be different! What's the brand? I usually see the same > >> > ole, same ole. > >> > >> Milagros and it's more of a Mole with banana puree. Looks interesting! > > > > It's sounding more and more interesting. Do you plan to use it as a > > mole and not as a banana sauce? I dip lumpia in banana sauce. > > Dunno! Never done 'mole' so I was gonna open it, sniff, then decide. Yeah, > I'm an odd cook like that. I don't particularily care about how something > is traditionally used, just what tastes nice to us. Banana mole sounds unusual to me! I'd go with that first, see what it tastes like and if it inspires me to do other things with it. > > Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in Banana > sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. Heaven! I've already tried that. I'm too white bread for that... still prefer my beloved Heinz ketchup for fries. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
sf > wrote: > It's sounding more and more interesting. Do you plan to use it as a > mole and not as a banana sauce? I dip lumpia in banana sauce. What's your lumpia filling? MartyB -- |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"sf" wrote
cshenk wrote: >> >> Milagros and it's more of a Mole with banana puree. Looks >> >> interesting! >> > It's sounding more and more interesting. Do you plan to use it as a >> > mole and not as a banana sauce? I dip lumpia in banana sauce. >> Dunno! Never done 'mole' so I was gonna open it, sniff, then decide. >> Yeah, >> I'm an odd cook like that. I don't particularily care about how >> something >> is traditionally used, just what tastes nice to us. > Banana mole sounds unusual to me! I'd go with that first, see what it > tastes like and if it inspires me to do other things with it. Was thinking to just baste some chicken with it and see what develops. >> Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in >> Banana >> sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. >> Heaven! > > I've already tried that. I'm too white bread for that... still prefer > my beloved Heinz ketchup for fries. Heheh at least you tried! |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
In article >,
sf > wrote: > > Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in Banana > > sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. Heaven! > > I've already tried that. I'm too white bread for that... still prefer > my beloved Heinz ketchup for fries. Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> -- Peace! Om Web Albums: <http://picasaweb.google.com/OMPOmelet> Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar and fat. --Alex Levine |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
notbob wrote: > > On 2010-06-13, cshenk > wrote: > > > > What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little thinner. > > This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian > > brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. > > I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most > mkts. > > I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised > to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food > condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, > they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and > process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their > products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. > > nb That's the only brand we ever use, other than its sister brand 'Panda'. My current bottle of Panda brand says 'made in the US'. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On 2010-06-13, Omelet > wrote:
> Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> Not even at gunpoint. I hate ranch dressing. I despise ranch dressing. If salad dressings were africa, ranch dressing would be aids. The biggest abomination in the salad dressing world is taking ranch dressing, adding some blue cheese bits, and calling it blue cheese dressing. What makes it so horrific is, nine out of ten restaurants do just that! Ranch dressing is the chicken mcnuggets of the salad dressing world. I speeet on yew, ranch dressing. Ptui! nb |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
In article >,
notbob > wrote: > On 2010-06-13, Omelet > wrote: > > > Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> > > Not even at gunpoint. > > I hate ranch dressing. I despise ranch dressing. If salad dressings > were africa, ranch dressing would be aids. The biggest abomination in > the salad dressing world is taking ranch dressing, adding some blue > cheese bits, and calling it blue cheese dressing. What makes it so > horrific is, nine out of ten restaurants do just that! Ranch > dressing is the chicken mcnuggets of the salad dressing world. > > I speeet on yew, ranch dressing. Ptui! > > nb <lol> Ok, I can respect that... :-) While I will make my own fresh Ranch for a veggie dip, fries are eaten nekkid. No dips! Just a bit of seasoning salt... Salads get herbed oil and vinegar or a mustard dressing! -- Peace! Om Web Albums: <http://picasaweb.google.com/OMPOmelet> Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar and fat. --Alex Levine |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"Arri London" > wrote in message ... > > > notbob wrote: >> >> On 2010-06-13, cshenk > wrote: >> > >> > What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little >> > thinner. >> > This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian >> > brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. >> >> I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most >> mkts. >> >> I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised >> to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food >> condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, >> they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and >> process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their >> products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. >> >> nb > > > That's the only brand we ever use, other than its sister brand 'Panda'. > My current bottle of Panda brand says 'made in the US'. LKK is good stuff. But be aware that of the 4 or 5 different incarnations of LKK oyster sauce, only the Premium (full color picture of couple in a boat on label) lists "oyster extract" as the *first* ingredient. That's the one you want. Panda and the others I've seen in varioust Asian stores don't list it first. Boli |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
notbob wrote:
> I hate ranch dressing. I despise ranch dressing. If salad dressings > were africa, ranch dressing would be aids. The biggest abomination in > the salad dressing world is taking ranch dressing, adding some blue > cheese bits, and calling it blue cheese dressing. What makes it so > horrific is, nine out of ten restaurants do just that! Ranch > dressing is the chicken mcnuggets of the salad dressing world. > > I speeet on yew, ranch dressing. Ptui! > You have some issues there. Ranch dressing is not my favourite, but it's not bad. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 18:44:39 -0500, Omelet >
wrote: > In article >, > sf > wrote: > > > > Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in Banana > > > sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. Heaven! > > > > I've already tried that. I'm too white bread for that... still prefer > > my beloved Heinz ketchup for fries. > > Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> Yes. I prefer to dip chicken nuggets in Ranch. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
In article >,
sf > wrote: > On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 18:44:39 -0500, Omelet > > wrote: > > > In article >, > > sf > wrote: > > > > > > Mostly I cook an asian-southern fusion. Try diping french fries in > > > > Banana > > > > sauce! even better, add a pinch of wasabi powder and mix that in. > > > > Heaven! > > > > > > I've already tried that. I'm too white bread for that... still prefer > > > my beloved Heinz ketchup for fries. > > > > Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> > > Yes. I prefer to dip chicken nuggets in Ranch. I'll have to try that. I usually dip those in Marinara. <g> -- Peace! Om Web Albums: <http://picasaweb.google.com/OMPOmelet> Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar and fat. --Alex Levine |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 21:19:11 -0500, Omelet >
wrote: >In article >, > notbob > wrote: > >> On 2010-06-13, Omelet > wrote: >> >> > Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> >> >> Not even at gunpoint. >> >> I hate ranch dressing. I despise ranch dressing. If salad dressings >> were africa, ranch dressing would be aids. The biggest abomination in >> the salad dressing world is taking ranch dressing, adding some blue >> cheese bits, and calling it blue cheese dressing. What makes it so >> horrific is, nine out of ten restaurants do just that! Ranch >> dressing is the chicken mcnuggets of the salad dressing world. >> >> I speeet on yew, ranch dressing. Ptui! >> >> nb > ><lol> Ok, I can respect that... :-) > >While I will make my own fresh Ranch for a veggie dip, fries are eaten >nekkid. No dips! Just a bit of seasoning salt... > >Salads get herbed oil and vinegar or a mustard dressing! I've made salad dressings using plain fat free yogurt as a base that got raves; in a quart mayo jar to a pint of yogurt add grainy mustard, honey, dill weed, granulated garlic, s n'p, apple cider vinegar, thin to consistancy of choice with beer. |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
In article >,
brooklyn1 > wrote: > On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 21:19:11 -0500, Omelet > > wrote: > > >In article >, > > notbob > wrote: > > > >> On 2010-06-13, Omelet > wrote: > >> > >> > Have you tried dipping fries in ranch dressing yet? <eg> > >> > >> Not even at gunpoint. > >> > >> I hate ranch dressing. I despise ranch dressing. If salad dressings > >> were africa, ranch dressing would be aids. The biggest abomination in > >> the salad dressing world is taking ranch dressing, adding some blue > >> cheese bits, and calling it blue cheese dressing. What makes it so > >> horrific is, nine out of ten restaurants do just that! Ranch > >> dressing is the chicken mcnuggets of the salad dressing world. > >> > >> I speeet on yew, ranch dressing. Ptui! > >> > >> nb > > > ><lol> Ok, I can respect that... :-) > > > >While I will make my own fresh Ranch for a veggie dip, fries are eaten > >nekkid. No dips! Just a bit of seasoning salt... > > > >Salads get herbed oil and vinegar or a mustard dressing! > > I've made salad dressings using plain fat free yogurt as a base that > got raves; in a quart mayo jar to a pint of yogurt add grainy mustard, > honey, dill weed, granulated garlic, s n'p, apple cider vinegar, thin > to consistancy of choice with beer. Sounds interesting, but I'd skip the honey. I really do not care for sweet dressings for the most part (altho' raspberry dressings are a class all their own!). Yogurt as a base is a good idea. -- Peace! Om Web Albums: <http://picasaweb.google.com/OMPOmelet> Only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar and fat. --Alex Levine |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 12:49:51 -0700, sf wrote:
> On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 14:24:45 -0400, blake murphy > > wrote: > >> On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 10:32:42 -0400, cshenk wrote: >> >>> "Omelet" wrote >>>> Kalmia wrote: >>> >>>>> What would you use in place of oyster sauce, if you didn't have it on >>>>> hand? >>>>> I have soy, teriyaki, ponzu, hoisin.....but no oyster. >>> >>>>> It was called for in a Thai sauce for a shrimp dish. >>> >>>> There really is no substitute. I'd try mixing a bit of Hoisin and >>>> Teryaki. Got any worcestershire? If so, I'd add that too. >>> >>> Lol! That would also be a good addition but yes, you can sub. >>> >>> In my cabinet is a Kimlan (Taiwan) vegetarian mushroom 'oyster' sauce. No >>> oysters in it, this time it's a texture thing that drives the name. >> >> that's why i was thinking mushroom soy. texture and umami. >> > Oh, ok... yours has texture? None in mine, it's just flavored > (actually more smell, which disappears when cooked, than taste) soy. it's maybe not as thick as oyster sauce, but it has thickness. your pal, blake |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 22:57:15 -0400, bolivar wrote:
> "Arri London" > wrote in message > ... >> >> >> notbob wrote: >>> >>> On 2010-06-13, cshenk > wrote: >>> > >>> > What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little >>> > thinner. >>> > This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian >>> > brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. >>> >>> I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most >>> mkts. >>> >>> I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised >>> to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food >>> condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, >>> they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and >>> process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their >>> products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. >>> >>> nb >> >> >> That's the only brand we ever use, other than its sister brand 'Panda'. >> My current bottle of Panda brand says 'made in the US'. > > LKK is good stuff. But be aware that of the 4 or 5 different incarnations > of LKK oyster sauce, only the Premium (full color picture of couple in a > boat on label) lists "oyster extract" as the *first* ingredient. That's the > one you want. Panda and the others I've seen in varioust Asian stores > don't list it first. > > Boli sound advice. your pal, blake |
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Oyster sauce substitute?
On Mon, 14 Jun 2010 16:43:34 -0400, blake murphy
> wrote: > it's maybe not as thick as oyster sauce, but it has thickness. OK, mine's completely different. Maybe I'll give it another try if I notice mushroom soy again. -- Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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Oyster sauce substitute?
bolivar wrote: > > "Arri London" > wrote in message > ... > > > > > > notbob wrote: > >> > >> On 2010-06-13, cshenk > wrote: > >> > > >> > What I recall of the few Thai oyster sauces is they were a little > >> > thinner. > >> > This may be just the brands I tried though. Current one is a Malaysian > >> > brand called Dynasty. Fairly thick as they go. > >> > >> I have some Dynasty oyster sauce. Pretty common and carried by most > >> mkts. > >> > >> I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised > >> to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food > >> condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, > >> they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and > >> process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their > >> products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. > >> > >> nb > > > > > > That's the only brand we ever use, other than its sister brand 'Panda'. > > My current bottle of Panda brand says 'made in the US'. > > LKK is good stuff. But be aware that of the 4 or 5 different incarnations > of LKK oyster sauce, only the Premium (full color picture of couple in a > boat on label) lists "oyster extract" as the *first* ingredient. That's the > one you want. Panda and the others I've seen in varioust Asian stores > don't list it first. > > Boli TY but I know that LOL. The Panda brand is for when the income is lower |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
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Oyster sauce substitute?
"Arri London" > wrote in message ... > > > bolivar wrote: >> >> "Arri London" > wrote in message >> ... >> > >> > >> > notbob wrote: >> >> >> >> I really want to try some Lee Kum Kee oyster sauce. I was surprised >> >> to learn, from a recent tv program, that LKK, now a huge Asian food >> >> condiment producer, began as the originator of oyster sauce. In fact, >> >> they still make it the same old way, using oysters they still farm and >> >> process themselves. I've taken a renewed interest in LKK and their >> >> products and have been buying them whenever I run across them. >> >> >> >> nb >> > >> > >> > That's the only brand we ever use, other than its sister brand 'Panda'. >> > My current bottle of Panda brand says 'made in the US'. >> >> LKK is good stuff. But be aware that of the 4 or 5 different >> incarnations >> of LKK oyster sauce, only the Premium (full color picture of couple in a >> boat on label) lists "oyster extract" as the *first* ingredient. That's >> the >> one you want. Panda and the others I've seen in varioust Asian stores >> don't list it first. >> >> Boli > > TY but I know that LOL. The Panda brand is for when the income is lower > Rats!! Sorry, Arri, that was meant for nb, and I see now that I didn't "address" him. lol I figured you knew that. Boli |
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