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| Mexican Cooking (alt.food.mexican-cooking) A newsgroup created for the discussion and sharing of mexican food and recipes. |
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I posted some spanish food programs a while ago in a.b.m.cooking.
The chef in one of the episodes investigates classic Paella and discovers to her surprise that: a. you do not prepare it in the kitchen but traditionally in the garage and more importantly b. absolutely no seafood (fish or otherwise) is allowed. That I did not know. BBQ and Rodizio or Rodizio and BBQ the best food around. -- --------------------------------- --- -- - Posted with NewsLeecher v3.9 Beta 9 Web @ http://www.newsleecher.com/?usenet ------------------- ----- ---- -- - |
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On Jun 3, 12:23�pm, TexasBBQLover wrote:
a. you do not prepare it in the kitchen but traditionally in the garage Whether it's made in the garage or in the patio is insignificant. You can take any large flat pan and put it over a wood fire or gas flame outdoors. and more importantly b. absolutely no seafood (fish or otherwise) is allowed. Bullshit. Get real. Pour some olive oil in the hot pan. Throw whatever kind of meat, poultry or seafood you like in the pan and brown it. Then add water and rice and steam it all together. The Mexican version of paella is called "discada", and it's cooked on an old cultivator disk that's sitting on a tripod over a wood fire. Discada may have any kind of meat or fowl, or it may contain sausages or spam, and be flavored with any kind of canned or bottled sauce you can imagine. If discada doesn't have any seafood or fish in it, its only because it's being made by cooks who don't happen to have any sea food or fish. |
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