Queezle_Sister's Profile

From: Salt Lake City, UT USA

Joined: March 29th, 2010

About me: I enjoy cooking, and my favorite internet COOKING community is the one here at cookbooker. If you want to connect about my other non-academic passion, you can find me as QueezleWeaver on Ravelry, and mostly Warped Weavers. But I've miss you cookbooker, and so here I am again, and happy to contribute.

Favorite cookbook: Savory Way

Favorite recipe: roasted anything (most recently grapes)


Latest review:

August 23rd, 2019

Stuffed Zucchini with spiced beef or lamb from Zaitoun

When it is zucchini time, it can be difficult to find something interesting. But this was both different and a total delight! Zucchini are scraped out and roasted. The "meat" from within the zucchini... read more >


recipe reviews (1403)
book reviews (39)
useful review votes (961)

Queezle_Sister's Reviews


Search Reviews:

2 recipe(s) reviewed. Showing 1 to 2Sort by: Title | Date | Rating

Off The Shelf: Cooking From the Pantry

By Donna Hay
Ecco - 2001

4th November 2013

Miso-Crusted Salmon with Fennel Salad : page 134

Instead of fillet, I ended up with salmon steaks, but this recipe still worked out swell. The miso paste sauce was pretty mild, so I added some grated fresh ginger, toasted sesame oil. When the steaks were done cooking, I sprinkled them with toasted sesame seeds.

There turned out to be quite a bit extra sauce.

The recommended internal temperature for salmon is 125, this took about 4 minutes on the first side and another 3 minutes on the second side. My steaks were about 1 inch thick. They were easy to prepare, especially if you can resist the extra doctoring up that I gave the sauce.

The fennel salad recipe looks good, but we have so much lettuce and so many tomatoes that I couldn't rationalize purchasing the extra ingredients. As a starch side, I also served brown rice.

This is my first recipe

useful (0)  


22nd December 2014

Seared Salmon on Coconut Spinach : page 116

Stunning flavor, a bit spicy, and fish cooked to delicate perfection.

The salmon is a fairly standard approach - marinated in ginger, sesame oil, and soy sauce - but then quick seared over very high heat. I used a large cast iron skillet, and cooked for about 4-5 minutes/side, rather than the 1 minute suggested. A thinner filet would be fine at the 1 minute mark, though the intention was to have this fish on the raw side of rare.

The salmon is served on top of the coconut spinach. This is prepared with asian chili sauce, garlic, and chili peppers -- I used three dried cayenne peppers from our garden, and they provided more punch than I had anticipated. Then you are instructed to add 2C coconut cream. I'm not sure what this meant, but I used regular coconut milk. Spinach is then wilted in the coconut-chili mixture. For me, this turned out soupier than suggested by the accompanying photo, probably because I used way too much spinach. But I do wonder if the coconut I used was intended to be all cream, no milk?? Regardless, the spicy coconut spinach was a perfect foil for the salmon.

Two 19-yr-old young men, one my son, were ecstatic over this dish. Every bit of it was eaten, including the salmon skin.

If you prepare this, use the thinner pieces for eaters who are squeamish over raw fish.

useful (1)