Recipes and Cooking Tips
Welcome to !recipes, a place to share recipes and cooking tips of your own or those that you've found and loved. Share your favorite tips and meals.
Taken a nice photo of your creation? We highly encourage sharing with us and our friends over at [email protected].
Other Cooking Communities:
[email protected] - A general communty about all things cooking.
[email protected] - Showcasing the best cooking creations.
[email protected] - All about sous vide precision cooking.
[email protected] - Have questions about cooking, ask away!
[email protected] - Celebrating Korean cuisine!
While posting and commenting in this community, you must abide by the Lemmy.World Terms of Service: https://legal.lemmy.world/tos/
Rules
Your post must provide an actual recipe or cooking tip. This can be provided via a link to a website, via a screenshot, or typed out. Original recipes are especially welcomed! If you provide a link to a website, please avoid paywalls. Additionally:
- Be respectful and inclusive.
- No harassment, hate speech, or trolling.
- Engage in constructive discussions.
- Share relevant content.
- Follow guidelines and moderators' instructions.
- Use appropriate language and tone.
- Report violations.
- Foster a continuous learning environment.
view the rest of the comments
It most certainly changes dishes, it has a fresh, green, crunchy quality to it that adds texture to dishes that don't have these qualities, especially dishes that are cooked for a long time. We should all pay more attention to texture.
Parsley is an ingredient, not a spice, and used as such it has a fairly strong taste of leaf and it is slightly astringent. Middle Eastern folks use parsley by the handful, not teaspoons. It needs to be finely minced because it is so tough to chew.
Also dried parsley is completely useless. If you want it stored, frozen is the way to go.
Also have the soapy gene ๐
A friend from Syria recently made me a salad with parsley as the main ingredient and some bulgur. It was pretty good!
Tabouleh ๐