List your culinary disasters.

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louis get a cookbook and learn to cook someone else's recipes!

Mr. Que, Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:22 (fifteen years ago) link

this is a good idea

leigh exodus (country matters), Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:24 (fifteen years ago) link

making olive tapenade as a topping for grilled swordfish

I didn't know how salty it was supposed to be
I didn't know how grilled it was supposed to be

the end

-:¦:-•(¯'•omg•'¯)•-:¦:- (dan m), Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:50 (fifteen years ago) link

an entire box of thornton's luxury chocolates
adding an entire wheel of camembert

did you get this idea from a Ween record?

WmC, Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:53 (fifteen years ago) link

Lucky LJ didn't try and follow the instructions in Beefheart's "Ice Cream For Crow"...

snoball, Saturday, 21 March 2009 21:55 (fifteen years ago) link

Recently, I walked to my local grocer (a distance of about 1.5 miles) to procure the ingredients for a large stir-fry, which was to serve as several days worth of sustenance. I returned home, thawed poultry, chopped veggies & started heating up the wok, only to realize that I had failed to purchase wok oil, which I was completely out of. A schlep back to the store was out of the question (lazy), so I rooted through a stash of unfamiliar Asian products my girlfriend had left in the cupboard, in search of a reasonable substitute. Unfortunately, the best thing I could come up with was rice vinegar. Of course, the resulting concoction was disgusting, but I tried to pretend it was tolerable & ended up making myself sick in the process. The rest of the gigantic portion was discarded, and I ended up having to walk back to the store anyway, to get something else to eat.

2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:27 (fifteen years ago) link

great thread. i don't think i've had a culinary disaster in a few years, but i have a theory that the heating element you use can make or break a dish. one year i had an oven in a rented apartment that produced bad food no matter what i cooked, but as soon as i moved to a new place with a different oven, the food was good again. i get really good vibes from my current oven.

battlestar elastica (get bent), Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:40 (fifteen years ago) link

My mother says that quite a bit. Particularly wrt gas vs electric ovens. There's also this false sense of confidence from having an electric fan oven - "it's a fan oven, the temperature will stay even, it's designed that way!" - that just doesn't work out in practice.

Not quite on the level of "melted Thornton's chocolates over fish", but I once tried putting chilli sauce over vanilla ice cream - absolutely disgusting...

snoball, Saturday, 21 March 2009 22:52 (fifteen years ago) link

i don't know...i think that's in the same bizarre ballpark

i once had salmon with a jack daniels and chocolate glaze that was really good, but was cooked by you know a real life chef in a restaurant

fap fap fap wtf crazy caps self-publishe... (1) (rent), Saturday, 21 March 2009 23:59 (fifteen years ago) link

i mean tilapia cooked in red wine is suspicious too...

i just can't get over louis's dish. i mean, it is beyond strongo cuisine isn't it?

i'm sorry louis to single you out but seriously that all blew my mind

Where did you come up with 30 minutes cooking time for tilapia?

There are starving AIG execs in New Jersey who could have used the food you ruined --

WmC, Sunday, 22 March 2009 05:19 (fifteen years ago) link

i expect louis's family looked at their plates and calmly ascribed what they saw to his streak.

estela, Sunday, 22 March 2009 05:23 (fifteen years ago) link

Were you on acid when you did this? Good lord.

one art, please (Trayce), Sunday, 22 March 2009 07:53 (fifteen years ago) link

See, the idea of culinary experimentation is a noble one, but you have to have an innate, deep understanding of flavours and how they work or might work together. It isnt something that comes easily, it takes years of cooking basics and branching out - so I've found, anyway.

one art, please (Trayce), Sunday, 22 March 2009 07:59 (fifteen years ago) link

BUT ANYONE KNOWS CHOCOLATE DOES NOT BELONG ON FISH :|

one art, please (Trayce), Sunday, 22 March 2009 08:00 (fifteen years ago) link

Unaware of their potency, using a handful of extra small dried chilis in a pasta sauce. It was more than beyond hot. To even call it hot would be a category mistake, it was in a whole new dimension.

ledge, Sunday, 22 March 2009 11:52 (fifteen years ago) link

Haha, OMG, Louis, what on EARTH were you thinking? Did you not taste your chocolate and cheese concoction and go "nah, this is horrible, I'm not ruining everything by actually using it"?

ailsa, Sunday, 22 March 2009 12:27 (fifteen years ago) link

My dad once put salt - he figured it was sugar - in his yoghurt. He started gagging. My mum asked what was wrong but he couldn't answer and only pointed at the glass of yoghurt. So what does mum do? Tastes it as well. Dual vomit fest. hahahahahahaha

I once did a pasta sauce with spinach. Had washed it... but not enough. The dirt didn't really add anything. It was horrid. :-)

the tip of the tongue taking a trip tralalala (stevienixed), Sunday, 22 March 2009 12:47 (fifteen years ago) link

improvising in cooking is fucking hard, don't ever try and do it until you've been cooking for years.

I always follow recipes but am starting to feel I've some sense of what flavours go together. The only things I improvise on are like marinades for chicken...

Local Garda, Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:31 (fifteen years ago) link

In my defence, if I was cooking something with the absolute priority of being nice, I wouldn't be nearly so outlandish. This was as much surreal performance art as it was cookery. With our stomachs as collateral.

leigh exodus (country matters), Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:36 (fifteen years ago) link

Don't start that bullshit. Yesterday you were all "oh my god what have I done" and rightly so, and now you're trying to run the "oh it was performance art" bluff? I just suggest-banned you again.

I think it takes somebody who really hates their family to perpetrate performance art on them.

WmC, Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:50 (fifteen years ago) link

This incident seems a bit emblematic of yr approach to life, doesn't it, LJ?

plenty chong (libcrypt), Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:52 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah exactly if someone in my family did this I'd be raging.

Local Garda, Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:55 (fifteen years ago) link

Well, the performance art aspect came in the melted box of Thornton's, and I still hoped that what I made would taste nice; the ingredients were washed, dressed and prepared as food...I'm not denying for a minute that it was a grotesque failure, and that I heavily regret it, and that it was disgusting and wrong-minded etc etc but if you're suggest-banning people for relating anecdotes of their own amusing slip-ups then you really shouldn't be a site moderator. I mean, my latest post was written with the intention of looking at my mishap in a slightly more light-hearted fashion, and you come over all hardman about it? Give me a fucking break. xxp

leigh exodus (country matters), Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:56 (fifteen years ago) link

If this was performance art, I'm sure yr family is grateful you weren't naked. I mean, you WEREN'T naked, yea?

plenty chong (libcrypt), Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:58 (fifteen years ago) link

he's not jamie oliver now is he?

the tip of the tongue taking a trip tralalala (stevienixed), Sunday, 22 March 2009 14:59 (fifteen years ago) link

I wasn't naked, I had hoped to impress and was thus all cut-up when I realised it had failed, I apologised to my parents (who were understanding and described it as a "learning curve"), and my brothers didn't touch it, opting instead for a pizza. Oh, how I hate them all. Next time I'll fucking include strychnine.

leigh exodus (country matters), Sunday, 22 March 2009 15:01 (fifteen years ago) link

Wait, you hate them for not eating yr awful meal?

plenty chong (libcrypt), Sunday, 22 March 2009 15:02 (fifteen years ago) link

Quit riding me or I'll make you a casserole

leigh exodus (country matters), Sunday, 22 March 2009 15:03 (fifteen years ago) link

LJ, you'll be lucky if they don't respond by sneaking a turd into the next meal they cook for you.

plenty chong (libcrypt), Sunday, 22 March 2009 15:04 (fifteen years ago) link

Also, don't complain about being ridden when you arrive at the stable with the saddle strapped to yr back.

plenty chong (libcrypt), Sunday, 22 March 2009 15:05 (fifteen years ago) link

Owwww.

one art, please (Trayce), Sunday, 22 March 2009 23:21 (fifteen years ago) link

I made a huge dish of linguine, about 2 pounds, with a kind of rich lemon zest cream sauce. For some reason though I had the impression that "lemon zest" meant the white stuff on the inside of the peel -- what I now know is called "pith." Should have been tipped off by how many lemons and how much time it took to grate as much "zest" as the recipe required. Lemon pith, if you've never eaten it, has the weird quality of tasting really awful but also like something which you can imagine acquiring as a taste -- so I actually ate quite a lot of this, thinking, "this tastes weird but it must just be a challenging flavor I have to learn to appreciate" -- but at some point I called my mom who told me that I'd ruined the whole thing and would I please stop eating it.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 23 March 2009 01:32 (fifteen years ago) link

Haha ok now thats a mistake I can easily see being made :) In fact I used to get pith and zest confused in my mind too - thankfully I never made a dish out of it though :)

one art, please (Trayce), Monday, 23 March 2009 02:42 (fifteen years ago) link

when I first met my husband he had this thing about leftovers & eggs. whether it was leftover chinese food, or steamed veggies, or...whatever, he was always adamant that they worked perfectly in a scramble with a few eggs the following day. I never really enjoyed this trait much, but I tolerated it. Mostly I'd bow out, but sometimes he'd start preparing while I was sleeping and surprise me with a plate of whatever...creation he'd made. This all came to crashing halt on the day that he decided to mix up Country-Style Pork leftovers with his eggs. Country-Style Pork = boneless pork spareribs, covered in this thick, rich brown sauce that mainly consisted of Soy Vey, liquid smoke and other things I can't remember. It was so saucey that, when mixed with the beaten eggs, the eggs stayed in little separated chunks as they cooked in the frying pan...they just didn't want to hang out with the sauce AT ALL. And this was one of those days where he dished it all up for me and then came and woke me up. I sat down, looked at my plate...it looked like dog food and barf. I looked over at him and just said, "Dude, there's no way." The look of it was SO bad I couldn't even try to taste it. He ate one mouthful and spat it into the sink. It was SO very, very wrong. And whenever he gets wistful about his leftovers + eggs = magic breakfast, I remind him of the Country Style Pork fiasco. So now leftovers are just leftovers.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 23 March 2009 04:12 (fifteen years ago) link

If your husband were raised in the midwest (assuming you are from the states), the leftovers would like have been compiled and made into a hash or casserole. This would probably have been slightly preferable to the "with eggs" option, but not by much.

2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Monday, 23 March 2009 04:18 (fifteen years ago) link

*likely

2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Monday, 23 March 2009 04:19 (fifteen years ago) link

We used to make bubble and squeak that way! But only with left over chopped bits of roast veg like potato and kumera and maybe a bit of cbbage and onion.

one art, please (Trayce), Monday, 23 March 2009 04:45 (fifteen years ago) link

my husband serves as a warning re: the limits of 'the scramble'.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 23 March 2009 04:49 (fifteen years ago) link

I have once made an "alfredo" sauce while stoned using everything white and vaguely dairy or cheese-like in the kitchen at the time. Shit was delicious in the moment tho.

I made muffins once and forgot to put in the flour.

I made a "quick and easy" pasta recipe where you combined everything (pasta, sauce, water) at the start but forgot the water part and wound up with a burned mess and a takeout pizza.

Too Into Dancing to Argue (ENBB), Monday, 23 March 2009 04:53 (fifteen years ago) link

Made some spinach cannelloni, which typically call for a pinch of nutmeg. With the filling still hot in the pan I decided I couldn't taste the nutmeg so I added some more. Still couldn't taste it. Added some more. Still couldn't taste it. Added some more ... until ... It was a culinary disaster of the mildly psychedelic variety.

swedes put dill on fields of salmon (fields of salmon), Monday, 23 March 2009 04:56 (fifteen years ago) link

I have once made an "alfredo" sauce while stoned using everything white and vaguely dairy or cheese-like in the kitchen at the time.

this reminds me of various dairy products I used in lolcollege (yeah, probably stoned) to prepare Kraft dinner when there was a dearth of milk and/or butter: sour cream, cream cheese, cottage cheese, yogurt, salad dressing. I guess this doesn't really count, though, as I typically dumped in enough ketchup after the fact to obscure any taste differentials.

2 ears + 1 ❤ (Pillbox), Monday, 23 March 2009 05:17 (fifteen years ago) link

I have once made an "alfredo" sauce while stoned using everything white and vaguely dairy or cheese-like in the kitchen at the time.

A friend who was at that time a horrible cook once called me for help after she tried to make a "cream sauce" by using every white liquid she had - mayonnaise, sour cream, yogurt, eventually some flour - everything except cream. She apparently though being white and liquid was enough.

Easter Time / Chocolate Time (joygoat), Monday, 23 March 2009 05:28 (fifteen years ago) link

Once I made scones with plain flour by mistake and wondered why they came out like little rocks :(

one art, please (Trayce), Monday, 23 March 2009 05:56 (fifteen years ago) link

The biggest disaster I can recall making is a stew that had an artichoke in it, broken up into its leaves. I was about to toss it as inedible, but my Ugandan housemate insisted that I not and he ate the whole thing (without the hard parts of the artichoke leaves, of course).

plenty chong (libcrypt), Monday, 23 March 2009 06:02 (fifteen years ago) link

Oh I absolutely hate to have to throw good food away because it's been ruined. Luckily it doesnt happen to me too often - burning's the only problem these days thanks to a completely useless electric stove which I suspect has a broken thermostat as it just gets way too hot even if I only put it on 100C :(

one art, please (Trayce), Monday, 23 March 2009 06:12 (fifteen years ago) link

three months pass...

have never read this before now, good show all

gucci gone bonkers (roxymuzak), Wednesday, 15 July 2009 08:13 (fourteen years ago) link

sargnt88 (4:12:49 AM): just for the record
sargnt88 (4:12:52 AM): a run down of louis' recipe
sargnt88 (4:14:06 AM): tilapia, lemon, oregano, olive oil, red wine, chopped tomato, onion, an entire box of luxury chocolates, an entire wheel (? what the hell? lol british has an actual wheel of cheese) of camembert cheese

gucci gone bonkers (roxymuzak), Wednesday, 15 July 2009 08:14 (fourteen years ago) link

continuing on the "all dairies are not the same" tip:

This one time I was VERY DRUNK and housesitting for my aunt around christmastime and I had one of those packages of 7-minute pasta alfredo.
So the recipe called for milk, but I didn't have any, but I DID have eggnog, which had me all excited about my new creation: the Xmas Pasta.
So of course I cooked it and of course i didn't even taste this probably already horrible concotion before I went through my aunt's spice cabinet to see how it should be seasoned.
I finally decided on a blend of lemon pepper ("Heeeyyy! I like pepper! and I LOOOVEE lemon! this'll be great!!!") and celery salt (similar thought process).
By the time it was finished it was reaalllllllllllyyyyyy far from edible. The dog wouldn't even touch it. But never wanting to waste food I popped open a couple cold cans of Schlitz and forced it down. ahhh, good times.

Fetchboy, Wednesday, 15 July 2009 09:58 (fourteen years ago) link

lol we did well there

vacuum head tree disease (imago), Sunday, 8 March 2015 20:45 (nine years ago) link

props to Stevie D for the inspiration

Mistah FAAB (sarahell), Sunday, 8 March 2015 20:46 (nine years ago) link

yes. also funny to see other acclaimed lyricsmiths pass through, unable to add to the glory

vacuum head tree disease (imago), Sunday, 8 March 2015 20:47 (nine years ago) link

would anyone like to know what 'weird dinner' putatively consists of

vacuum head tree disease (imago), Sunday, 8 March 2015 20:48 (nine years ago) link

five years pass...

This is not my disaster, nor anyone's here, but it is a level of disaster to which we should all not-aspire:

Anyway, the story Pattinson tells to preface what he is about to do is roughly this:

Last year, he says, he had a business idea. What if, he said to himself, “pasta really had the same kind of fast-food credentials as burgers and pizzas? I was trying to figure out how to capitalize in this area of the market, and I was trying to think: How do you make a pasta which you can hold in your hand?”

He says he went so far as to design a prototype that involved the use of a panini press, and then, he says, he went even further, setting up a meeting with Los Angeles restaurant royalty Lele Massimini, the cofounder of Sugarfish and proprietor of the Santa Monica pasta restaurant Uovo. “And I told him my business plan,” Pattinson recalls, “and his facial expression didn’t even change afterwards. Let alone acknowledge what my plan was. There was absolutely no sign of anything from him, literally. And so it kind of put me off a little bit.” (Massimini says: “It’s 100 percent true, everything he told you.”)

Nevertheless, Pattinson says, he conceived of a brand name for his product, a soft little moniker that kind of summed up what he thought his pasta creation looked like: Piccolini Cuscino. Little Pillow. He thought he’d give the product another go, with me now: “Maybe if I say it in GQ, maybe, like, a partner will just come along.”

So he now takes hold of the bag that he’s brought from the corner store, out of which he produces the following:

One (1) giant, filthy, dust-covered box of cornflakes. (“I went to the shop, and they didn’t sell breadcrumbs. I’m like, ‘Oh, fuck it! I’m just getting cornflakes. That’s basically the same shit.’ ”)

One (1) incredibly large novelty lighter. (“I always liked the idea of doing a little flambé, like the brand name, with kind of burnt ends at the top.”)

Nine (9) packs of presliced cheese. (“I got, like, nine packs of presliced cheese.”)

Sauce. (Like a tomato sauce? “Just any sauce.”)

He puts on latex gloves. He pulls out some sugar and some aluminum foil and makes a bed, a kind of hollowed-out sphere, with the foil. He holds up a box of penne pasta that he had in the house. “All right,” Pattinson says. “So obviously, first things first, you gotta microwave the pasta.”

I watch as he pours dry penne into a cereal bowl, covers it with water, and places it in the microwave for eight minutes. He says using penne is already new territory for him. Usually he uses…well… “Do you know the pasta that’s, like, a little, it’s like a blob, a sort of squiggly blob?”

“Gnocchi?”

“No, no, no, no, it looks like—what would you even call it? It looks like a sort of messy…like, the hair bun on a girl.”

“I have literally no idea what you’re talking about,” I say.

“There was one type of pasta that worked. It definitely wasn’t penne.”

Nevertheless, penne and water in the microwave for eight minutes. In the meantime, he takes the foil and he begins dumping sugar on top of it. “I found after a lot of experimentation that you really need to congeal everything in an enormous amount of sugar and cheese.” So after the sugar, he opens his first package of cheese and begins layering slice after slice onto the sugar-foil. Then more sugar: “It really needs a sugar crust.”

Then he realizes that he’s forgotten the outer layer, which is supposed to be breadcrumbs but today will be crushed-up cornflakes, and so he lifts the pile of cheese and sugar and crumbles some cornflakes onto the aluminum foil before placing the sugar-cheese back on top of it. Then he adds sauce, which is red. The microwave dings, and Pattinson promptly burns himself on the bowl of pasta. He sighs, heavily, looking at it. “No idea if it’s cooked or not.” He dumps the pasta in anyway. At this point, his spirits have visibly begun to flag. “I mean, there’s absolutely no chance this is gonna work. Absolutely none.”

The little pillow now mostly built, he pours more sugar on top of it and then produces the top half of a bun, which he hollows out, places it on top of the rest of whatever the hell this thing is, and…begins burning the top of the bun with the giant novelty lighter. “I’m just gonna do the initials.…”

“You look like you’re cooking meth,” I say, because he does.

“I’m really trying to sell this company. I’m doing this for my brand.”

At this point, he accidentally ignites one of his latex gloves, which promptly melts onto his palm. He yells in pain. Then he gingerly holds up the finished product: some approximation of a P, followed by a C, for Piccolini Cuscino, burned into the top of a hamburger bun.

He starts wrapping the whole thing up with more aluminum foil, and then compacts it, and then wraps it some more, and then squeezes it again. Suddenly he stops: “Can you actually put foil in an oven?”

I say yes, you can, but what you absolutely cannot do is put foil in a microwave. And he says cool, cool, and then he goes looking for his oven, which he’s never used before, and this is a nice house, so there are multiple options, and the one he settles on, well: It looks like another microwave to me. He assures me it is not.

“I reckon probably…10 minutes?”

He puts the aluminum sphere, the little pillow, into what he thinks is an oven and I think is a microwave. He attempts to turn it on. “I actually knew how to do this before,” he tells me. “I literally did this yesterday. And now it’s just impossible. It’s going to look like I can’t cook at all.”

He fumbles at some more buttons. “Oh, oh, oh,” he says, excitedly now. “A thousand watts, there you go.”

Proudly he is walking back toward the counter that his phone is on when, behind him, a lightning bolt erupts from the oven/microwave, and Pattinson ducks like someone outside has opened fire. He’s giggling and crouching as the oven throws off stray flickers of light and sound.

“The fucking electricity…oh, my God,” he says, still on the floor. And then, with a loud, final bang, the oven/microwave goes dark.

In the silence, Pattinson and I both stare at the mysterious piece of machinery built into the wall behind him.

“Yeah, I think I have to leave that alone,” he says, sighing again, picking himself off the floor. “But that is a Piccolini Cuscino.”

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 12 May 2020 15:10 (three years ago) link

thats good content

adam, Tuesday, 12 May 2020 15:19 (three years ago) link

Oh my god.

change display name (Jordan), Tuesday, 12 May 2020 16:13 (three years ago) link

It’s like, dirtbag Mr Bean or something. But better. So good.

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 12 May 2020 16:16 (three years ago) link

<3

or something, Tuesday, 12 May 2020 16:30 (three years ago) link

He’s giggling and crouching...

Hmmm. This sounds like a man with time on his hands and money to burn.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 12 May 2020 19:17 (three years ago) link

the problem was the fact i drizzled everything

everything

with a sauce

this sauce was made by

oh god

it was made by putting an entire box of thornton's luxury chocolates into a saucepan

yes

into a saucepan

and adding

shit

adding an entire wheel of camembert

pungent, ripe camembert

and then melting the lot over a low heat

adding quite a lot of cognac in the process

and yes

the fish and the seafood

was coated

in this unspeakable concoction

― leigh exodus (country matters), Saturday, March 21, 2009 3:58 PM (eleven years ago) bookmarkflaglink

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/voraciously/wp/2020/05/12/chocolate-milk-simmered-chicken-dont-knock-it-until-you-try-it/?itid=hp_rhp__hp-top-table-low_life-2%3Ahomepage%2Fstory-ans

Could Leigh have been onto something? (Or just...on something?)

Life is a banquet and my invitation was lost in the mail (j.lu), Thursday, 14 May 2020 13:15 (three years ago) link


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