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That tomato tortellini soup thing was a bust. The flavor profile was fine, but trying to cook everything together made it more of a pasta & sauce dish than a soup. I added more broth, but it just sponged it up. I think it could be great assembled in the bowl like a lobster bisque, but lazy it ain't.
Uno could probably make you deader...
I'm still mastering the subtle alchemy of the cream sauce. Different cheeses have wildly different outcomes in sauce. Shaker parmesan seems to disappear. Cheddar is straightforward. Jack adds little flavor but some gooeyness. Shredded mozzarella is immensely gooey and doesn't incorporate fully; it forms a peculiar sort of matrix within the sauce. And now Swiss.(For mac and cheese of the conventional type, I highly recommend a mix of smoked cheddar, sharp conventional cheddar, and jack for goo. Small traces of mustard and even curry powder boost flavor)
Quote from: Rusty Edge on January 03, 2018, 02:00:11 AMThat tomato tortellini soup thing was a bust. The flavor profile was fine, but trying to cook everything together made it more of a pasta & sauce dish than a soup. I added more broth, but it just sponged it up. I think it could be great assembled in the bowl like a lobster bisque, but lazy it ain't.I don't know if I've posted here previously about my 'crock pot lasagna' that kind of takes advantage of this. You get the sausage and tomato sauce in the crock all day, then 30 minutes before eating, dump in the cheeses. 15 minutes before eating, you dump in pasta and some water (I actually prefer to use the shells for this) The shells soak up a good portion of the mixture. If you let it sit too long, though, the shells will soak it all up and you get a kind of mush. Tastes fine, but mush.
But for the tortellini soup specifically, I'd suggest pan frying the tortellini first.
I don't know how to call it. hEt and I liked it (hEt LOVED it), Alec (never had stuffed pasta before) and Talia (thinks Chef Boyardee mini raviolis are the best) tolerated it. Pan seared sausage. Added onions and bell peppers to sautee in the grease. Removed that mixture and added the tortellini with a little olive oil to pan fry, just a quick browning on each side. Added about 1 1/2 cup of water with a minor deglazing of the pan and a good bit of basil, and covered that for about 2 minutes to ensure the rest of the pasta that hadn't hit the pan got cooked. (I considered using a wine, but wasn't sure how the pasta would cook with just wine.) Added the meat mix back in with a can of tomato sauce (soup can) and sliced grape tomatoes. (they didn't have the brand tomatoes I normally use and these were rather meh, unfortunately) Unfortunately, had to transfer to a bigger pan, so my whole one pan idea got ruined. Stirring that in, it barely coated everything. Added salt to taste and enough cream to just get a bit of sauciness.
I think I'm going to make a Jaeger Schnitzel next Sunday. Not exactly lazy, but I plan to take the lazy approach and use a store jar gravy & serve it in a gravy boat, instead of making a pork roast first and saving the juices. The Mrs. is mildly allergic to mushrooms, so I'm planning to do them as a side dish for myself rather than incorporating them into the gravy. If I fry the cutlets with a couple shallots, some butter and a little garlic, then deglaze the pan with white wine or sherry, she'll be happy to have that jus all to herself, and figure she got the better bargain. She says her mother would prefer Spatzle ( I'll get that from the store, too. ) , and we'll go with glazed carrots as the vegetable.Now I want to buy some Spaten to go with it.