The CookingBites Recipe Challenge: Nov 2015-June 2017

It has mushrooms in it........

https://www.cookingbites.com/threads/tom-yam-khung-gai.9652/

straw mushrooms 1 s.jpg
 
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I'm not sure if "adding a link" to my recipe is to be taken literally, but here's mine:

https://www.cookingbites.com/threads/portobello-tagliatelle-with-roasted-garlic.9624/

If I need to plunk the entire recipe here for it to count, I can do that, but it's quite sprawling.


Yes this is right. You can copy the web address of the recipe which is what you have done or the other way to do it is copy and paste the title of the recipe (as a link) from the relevant section, like this: Portobello Tagliatelle with Roasted Garlic.
 
In case anyone is in any doubt, I did do a little survey of all recipe threads (after reviewing the recipe challenge thread and the recipe challenge tag) and came up with the following list:

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So the ones I have greyed are not currently included, but all others are.

Entries don't close until tomorrow lunch time but that is the list as it stands.
 
In case anyone is in any doubt, I did do a little survey of all recipe threads (after reviewing the recipe challenge thread and the recipe challenge tag) and came up with the following list:

View attachment 7239

So the ones I have greyed are not currently included, but all others are.

Entries don't close until tomorrow lunch time but that is the list as it stands.
It looks like I missed a few! Time to look for more exciting interpretations of the humble mushroom! :hyper:
 
In case anyone is in any doubt, I did do a little survey of all recipe threads (after reviewing the recipe challenge thread and the recipe challenge tag) and came up with the following list:

View attachment 7239

So the ones I have greyed are not currently included, but all others are.

Entries don't close until tomorrow lunch time but that is the list as it stands.

Well I have 2 entries to date and only one is showing in your chart! The easiest way to view entries is to click on the cookingbites recipe challenge tag. Currently it shows the following entries:
 
I was on top of your second entry, you posted it while I was posting the chart.
Click on the tag and you will get all the recipes entered to date with the ability to click on each one and read them. I find it the easiest way to go through them when I'm judging. You have a bumper crop of entries! Fantastic.
 
In case anyone is in any doubt, I did do a little survey of all recipe threads (after reviewing the recipe challenge thread and the recipe challenge tag) and came up with the following list:

View attachment 7239

So the ones I have greyed are not currently included, but all others are.

Entries don't close until tomorrow lunch time but that is the list as it stands.
I think your table could be wrong. Both of my entries are listed here and tagged....


P99, second to last entry....

Right - I have finally written up my evening meal from the other night...

View attachment 7117

Mushroom soup with Sumac roasted pumpkin & sunflower seeds served with caramelised onion rice & polenta cakes.
I have adapted my rice cake recipe, switching out the cornmeal for fine polenta and adding caramelised onions in instead of any additional milk, and a touch more flour so they were not too moist.
P102, 8th one down, so middle of the page.

Not that I am worried or bothered but...
 
I think your table could be wrong. Both of my entries are listed here and tagged....



P99, second to last entry....


P102, 8th one down, so middle of the page.

Not that I am worried or bothered but...


I don't understand your objection @SatNavSaysStraightOn, I have both of your recipes listed and have identified both as tagged.
 
@classic33 threw in two more late yesterday, both using mushrooms, but neither are tagged or linked on the thread and are thus not included. And @Yorky threw in his Tom Yam Khung Gai late on, which is tagged and thus included. @morning glory’s Braised Mushrooms with Chickpeas, Spinach and Oyster Sauce came in a bit earlier. So, I make it a total of 16 recipes to choose from. A good crop indeed. And quite genuinely, there is not one of them that I could not think of attempting with full expectation of enjoying the results. Well, almost. I have to confess to you @Yorky, your Tom Yam presents a challenge both in terms of obtaining some of those ingredients, and in terms of my memories of my one experience of eating Tom Yam being that it was the kind of spicy that I don’t really enjoy. I get that it is likely very popular with others.

There are some interesting contrasts. There are plenty of clearly vegetarian recipes as well as some where the mushroom element is an important accompaniment to the central meat content. Among the vegetarian recipes, there are quite a few based on familiar, classic meat dishes where the mushroom content takes over the role normally filled by the meat content, and others designed from the outset as vegetarian dishes with mushrooms at their heart.

One good example of a mushroom version of a meaty classic is @Elawin’s Mushroom Cobbler. I have, in the past, cooked a beef cobbler to the Hairy Biker’s recipe. It seems clear to me that @Elawin’s recipe would stand up to the expectations of a classic cobbler recipe with mushroom as the key ingredient. And perhaps the striking contrasting example would be @SatNavSaysStraightOn’s mushroom curry, which is clearly not just a curry with mushrooms, but is actually a very well designed dish – one that incidentally, could be an entry into the current spice challenge.

From when it was first posted I did love @MypinchofItaly’s Tagliatelle with Champignon Mushrooms. As @morning glory pointed out, it is a very simple dish, that with very little effort and very little time gives you a truly beautiful plate of food, and one where the mushroom really is the star ingredient. This dish was always one of the strongest contenders, for me.

I had already made it clear just how much I liked @The Late Night Gourmet’s idea of adding powdered mushroom to the flour to make a mushroom pasta. I don’t have to make claims that I will make it, because I already have done. At one level, I can immediately identify that as my favourite idea in the whole set. But, and I can only hope that you understand this @The Late Night Gourmet, that is what it is, an idea, and great idea as it is, this is a recipe challenge and the recipe involves more than just the mushroom pasta and I’m afraid I can’t offer forward the recipe as my favourite.

But surely the prize for the most out of left field recipe has to be @classic33's Espresso and Mushroom Cake. I have to say I very much doubt that I will ever attempt to make that, but if fate were ever to present me with an opportunity to try it, I would definitely be taking that opportunity with some interest.

@morning glory’s entries are both everything we expect from @morning glory. Yes, as always, they are beautifully photographed, but the photography can only reflect the basic appetising nature of the food that is presented. I dare say, if this were being judged by a chef or a food critic, both of @morning glory’s recipes would, at the very least, be in the mix to win.

But of course, I am not a chef or a restaurant critic, and what this is all about, I think, is personal choice. I admit that I had missed the broader popularity of @classic33’s Beef, Guinness And Mushroom Pot Pies, and the fact that other’s expressed interest in the dish is a factor for me. But ultimately, the recipe does seem to me to be broadly the kind of steak and ale pie that I have made in the past. And actually, personally, I am not a big fan of Guinness.

Whereas, the Wild Mushroom Pudding recipe also offered by @classic33 also drew strong reactions from others, and had a very different response from me. For all my struggles with suet, the reasons that I have never really liked the steamed steak and kidney puddings that people from Wigan call a baby’s head is as much because I don’t really care for the filling as much as not liking the suet casing. The filling of this pudding does look genuinely lovely, and the prospect of vegetarian suet makes me wonder whether or not I should try it. So, for challenging me in good away, as well as for offering a genuinely excellent idea for using mushrooms, I select @classic33’s Wild Mushroom Pudding as the winner of this particular recipe challenge.
 
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