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Dried Limes
I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never used them,
really didn't know what they were used for. Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give dried limes a go!! http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining |
Dried Limes
On Wed, 2 Jun 2010 11:29:10 -0700 (PDT), ImStillMags
> wrote: >I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never used them, >really didn't know what they were used for. > >Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give >dried limes a go!! > >http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining If you have access to Tess Mallos' book on Mid-East cooking, check out Baghdad lamb, made with dried limes. That and B'Harat seasoning, which you can whip up in your kitchen. The dish is magnificent, and worth of respect. If dried limes are not available, a decent sub is lime zest peels or lemon zest peels. Here in Texas, I find them in Mideast-Indo-Pak stores. Be aware there are many names for these puppies, but they look like olive drab-black golf ball shells. Very light, as the pulp is gone. Not expensive, though. HTH Alex |
Dried Limes
"ImStillMags" > wrote in message ... > I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never used them, > really didn't know what they were used for. > > Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give > dried limes a go!! > > http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining Last week I bought some limes for gin & tonics and for homemade salsa. They might as well have been dried limes for all the juice I was able to get out of them. Lots of pulp, no juice! |
Dried Limes
On 2010-06-02 13:10:06 -0700, news said:
> "ImStillMags" > wrote in message > ... >> I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never used them, >> really didn't know what they were used for. >> >> Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give >> dried limes a go!! >> >> http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining > > Last week I bought some limes for gin & tonics and for homemade salsa. > They might as well have been dried limes for all the juice I was able > to get out of them. Lots of pulp, no juice! I think there might be significant difference. Like the difference between "dried fish" and cooked fish that "tastes dry". But it's true they both use the same words. -- If God didn't want us to eat animals, why did he make them out of meat? |
Dried Limes
news wrote on Wed, 2 Jun 2010 16:10:06 -0400:
> "ImStillMags" > wrote in message > ... >> I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never >> used them, really didn't know what they were used for. >> >> Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give >> dried limes a go!! >> >> http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining >Last week I bought some limes for gin & tonics and for homemade salsa. >They might as well have been dried limes for all the juice I was able >to get out of them. Lots of pulp, no juice! You might try nuking a cut lime for 30 seconds and then squeezing out the juice with a teaspoon. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Dried Limes
In article
>, ImStillMags > wrote: > I've seen dried limes at the ethnic markets but I've never used them, > really didn't know what they were used for. > > Found this article today in the NY Times.......might have to give > dried limes a go!! > > http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/di...tml?ref=dining Interesting! I've used ground dried Orange and Lemon peel frequently. Never thought of Limes. :-) Might have to try drying some keys when they are cheap seasonally. -- 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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