Pan fried noodles made from top ramen? ._. That probably the best I've got...
Dude this can be great if you have a lot of random leftovers and veggies you need to use before they spoil. I use cheapo angel hair to tone down the salt a bit.
Pan fried noodles made from top ramen? ._. That probably the best I've got...
Spaghetti aglio e olio.
Wow lovely stuff. Whats the best restaurant you've eaten at?
I'll teach you hummus and you teach me oyakodon and/or angel hair pasta! (I admit I am terrible at pasta as it's not in our culture). Also, how do you get the pasta al dente without drying it out?
Anyway, my hummus recipe in a nutshell:
- A couple of cans of chickpeas, drained (I use canned for convenience)
- a spoonful of toasted sesame seeds (original recipe calls for tahini but as I can't source that I sub sesame seeds and EVO which work great)
- extra virgin olive oil (EVO)
- A clove of garlic (or two depending on how much you love it)
- Lemon juice (at least half a lemon)
Instruction : just blend it all in the food processor but add a bit of the water from the chickpeas and some EVO to help it along. Get it nice and smooth. But most importantly, taste it often! I often make adjustments (adding a bit of garlic, a bit more lemon juice, EVO, etc) as we prefer, a garlicky, lemony version. The toasted sesame seeds also give it a nice aroma in the mouth (at least for me). I've used store-bought toasted sesame seeds but untoasted seeds literally put in the toaster for a couple of minutes had an even better aroma. Don't be afraid to add a dash of pepper or a pinch of salt if need be.
You can make variations, like taking out the sesame seeds and lemon juice and putting in sun dried tomatoes. I add a bit cumin to mine (optional) and some people like how it tastes like a healthy nacho dip.
It's probably not a recipe loyal to the original but I like the results so far. You can use chickpeas you boiled yourself but personally I find them too bland. YMMV.