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missdiane ([personal profile] missdiane) wrote in [community profile] weekly_food_challenge2017-12-27 06:04 pm

When in doubt, stir fry!

The leftovers I had were some garlic thyme chicken thighs (need to use up my meat before veggie January!) I made in my pressure cooker and some butternut squash sticks I roasted in the oven with some maple syrup. I added in mushrooms, snow peas, soy sauce and sesame oil and topped it off with some toasted sesame seeds. Turned out fabulous 

miss_s_b: River Song and The Eleventh Doctor have each other's back (Default)

[personal profile] miss_s_b 2017-12-29 01:11 pm (UTC)(link)
OK, so here there are "garden peas" which I think equate to your English peas, "marrowfat peas" which are bigger, and almost exclusively tinned, "mushy peas" which are tinned and horrendously overcooked marrowfat peas, "petit pois", which are baby garden peas, "sugarsnap peas" which appear to be the same thing in both languages, and "mange tout", which appears to be our word (well, French people's word) for snow peas.

You live and learn!

... and then there's all the types of dried peas (main use for which, afaict, is being put in referrees' whistles - my dad used to swear by the Acme Thunderer).
miss_s_b: River Song and The Eleventh Doctor have each other's back (Default)

[personal profile] miss_s_b 2017-12-29 01:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's partly snobbery: French being the language of diplomacy and therefore taught to posh people at school.

Whereas you guys use not just Italian veg names, but Sicilian veg names (c.f. arugula, which everybody in the world except for you and Sicily calls rocket). I think this is because you're all secretly still Mafiosi.

ETA: and yeah, mushy peas are DISGUSTING and it's a constant source of shame to me that they are part of a famous Yorkshire dish.
Edited (fulminating disgust about mushy peas) 2017-12-29 13:36 (UTC)