#18 tofu is not Indian, and not eaten much here. We eat Panner, which is made from milk, Panner is the most preferred toppings on pizza for vegetarians
There is a large difference in taste between processed and packaged pepperoni and the sort you get in a deli or butcher shop and it is a vastly entire experience altogether. My favorite is a spicy variety I like to use on naan bread pizzas and Italian sandwiches. I don't even eat delivery or frozen anymore.
Fear friends in India, please help - what is the fragrant spice in papadum?? I tried it when I was young and haven't been able to find it again. It is my quest.
Levone here, yeah you're not being harsh, it seems obvious - but it's not the common spices in the recipe like cumin, chili, black pepper, etc., it's the mystery spice that's usually just listed as "Indian spices."
When I was a kid, we had a family from New Delhi stay with us briefly when they first moved to the U.S., and it was something they made. Haven't had any luck at the big Indian spice store either. That's how it became my quest.
#18 tofu is not Indian, and not eaten much here. We eat Panner, which is made from milk, Panner is the most preferred toppings on pizza for vegetarians
There is a large difference in taste between processed and packaged pepperoni and the sort you get in a deli or butcher shop and it is a vastly entire experience altogether. My favorite is a spicy variety I like to use on naan bread pizzas and Italian sandwiches. I don't even eat delivery or frozen anymore.
Fear friends in India, please help - what is the fragrant spice in papadum?? I tried it when I was young and haven't been able to find it again. It is my quest.
Levone here, yeah you're not being harsh, it seems obvious - but it's not the common spices in the recipe like cumin, chili, black pepper, etc., it's the mystery spice that's usually just listed as "Indian spices."
When I was a kid, we had a family from New Delhi stay with us briefly when they first moved to the U.S., and it was something they made. Haven't had any luck at the big Indian spice store either. That's how it became my quest.
European : Here's what I think of America!
American : Funny, I don't think about you at all.
That's not something to be proud of. How's that civil war coming along?
Italy (and just about the rest of the world) is metric.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/02/the-history-of-frozen-pizza-from-totinos-to-digi
orno.html
#20 - Yet one more thing to be oh-so-grateful to Canada for, along with the likes of Jim Carrey and Justin Bieber.
Yes. Is sarcasm.
"Dear friends in India..."
Levone here, yeah you're not being harsh, it seems obvious - but it's not the common spices in the recipe like cumin, chili, black pepper, etc., it's the mystery spice that's usually just listed as "Indian spices."
When I was a kid, we had a family from New Delhi stay with us briefly when they first moved to the U.S., and it was something they made. Haven't had any luck at the big Indian spice store either. That's how it became my quest.