Skip to content
Do you have adblock enabled?
 
If you can read this, either the style sheet didn't load or you have an older browser that doesn't support style sheets. Try clearing your browser cache and refreshing the page.

(The Takeout)   Thank goodness there's chicory, carob, and cauliflower   (thetakeout.com) divider line
    More: Scary, Agriculture, Climate change, globalfood sources, regenerative farming practices, Such products, future crops, Rice production, holistic approach  
•       •       •

630 clicks; posted to Food » on 07 Dec 2022 at 3:50 PM (15 weeks ago)   |   Favorite    |   share:  Share on Twitter share via Email Share on Facebook



17 Comments     (+0 »)
View Voting Results: Smartest and Funniest
 
2022-12-07 3:19:49 PM  
Carob is NOT a substitute for chocolate, and it's a terrible lie to tell hippy children.
 
2022-12-07 5:45:54 PM  
I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?
 
2022-12-07 6:11:03 PM  

KB202: I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?


You might be able to get away with barley or groats in place of rice for some dishes.   I wonder if pinhead oats would cook up like brown rice if you cooked it similarly
 
2022-12-07 6:39:03 PM  
Do people hate cauliflower rice or something?  I've never tried it, but keep meaning to... I gotta tell ya, I made "potato" salad with it a while back and it was pretty convincing.
 
2022-12-07 6:44:03 PM  
Running out of coffee will definitely start WW3.
 
2022-12-07 7:39:08 PM  

hubiestubert: Carob is NOT a substitute for chocolate, and it's a terrible lie to tell hippy children.


Did you know that some religious scholars think that the Forbidden Fruit might have been carob? I'd understand God kicking them out if they made carob brownies instead of brownies made with chocolate.
 
151 [OhFark]
2022-12-07 8:37:50 PM  

middleoftheday: Do people hate cauliflower rice or something?  I've never tried it, but keep meaning to... I gotta tell ya, I made "potato" salad with it a while back and it was pretty convincing.


I've used it to make stuffed cabbage a handful of times and it turned out phenomenally. Made meatballs once with it too and it was really good.
 
2022-12-07 8:53:47 PM  

Oneiros: KB202: I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?

You might be able to get away with barley or groats in place of rice for some dishes.   I wonder if pinhead oats would cook up like brown rice if you cooked it similarly


I've been using wheat berries as a replacement for rice for a few years. It's not the same, but it works for me.
 
2022-12-07 10:06:08 PM  

plecos: Running out of coffee will definitely start WW3.


I made a text one of these that says "damage report"  , but I cant find it atm

Fark user imageView Full Size
 
2022-12-07 10:44:17 PM  

gietmay: Oneiros: KB202: I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?

You might be able to get away with barley or groats in place of rice for some dishes.   I wonder if pinhead oats would cook up like brown rice if you cooked it similarly

I've been using wheat berries as a replacement for rice for a few years. It's not the same, but it works for me.


I've made rolled oats with a heavy pinch of salt, and then used it as a starch for stuff like Filipino adobo.

But that was more a 'I don't want to wait for rice to cook' situation.
 
2022-12-07 11:06:43 PM  

Oneiros: gietmay: Oneiros: KB202: I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?

You might be able to get away with barley or groats in place of rice for some dishes.   I wonder if pinhead oats would cook up like brown rice if you cooked it similarly

I've been using wheat berries as a replacement for rice for a few years. It's not the same, but it works for me.

I've made rolled oats with a heavy pinch of salt, and then used it as a starch for stuff like Filipino adobo.

But that was more a 'I don't want to wait for rice to cook' situation.


Cooking speed is definitely not a point in the favor of wheat berries.

On the plus side, I buy it in bulk at Costco for really cheap and the bucket it comes in is the same size as the bucket fermenters I used to buy for making beer.
 
2022-12-08 4:19:37 AM  
Rice production in particular releases an estimated 34 million tons of methane per year, released by microbes that grow in the flooded fields where rice is cultivated. It's an unsustainable practice, to say the least.

Rice isn't "endangered." Rice doesn't require flooded fields - it's just more convenient. Keeps weeds down and yields up. In some areas, those fields are going to flood regardless; it's how folks figured out that rice grows just fine in flooded fields in the first farking place.

The link sounds scary, but, although rice production is the single biggest contributor to food-related methane release, the total for all food production is about 15% of the global total and represents the smallest group of anthropogenic methane emissions.

If you're worried about anthropogenic methane emissions, slow your roll on fossil fuels & livestock. Fossil fuel and animal agriculture represents about two-thirds of that total. Rice is fine.
 
2022-12-08 4:20:39 AM  
*food production from plant agriculture - it's about 30%  for animal agriculture, 15% for plant agriculture.
 
2022-12-08 6:52:45 AM  

middleoftheday: Do people hate cauliflower rice or something?  I've never tried it, but keep meaning to... I gotta tell ya, I made "potato" salad with it a while back and it was pretty convincing.


I've had it a few times.  The texture's there but it has a slightly off flavor.  Like rubbery almost.
 
2022-12-08 7:36:30 AM  

freakdiablo: middleoftheday: Do people hate cauliflower rice or something?  I've never tried it, but keep meaning to... I gotta tell ya, I made "potato" salad with it a while back and it was pretty convincing.

I've had it a few times.  The texture's there but it has a slightly off flavor.  Like rubbery almost.


Use it in biryani recipes, and you don't notice.
 
2022-12-08 7:37:08 AM  

freakdiablo: middleoftheday: Do people hate cauliflower rice or something?  I've never tried it, but keep meaning to... I gotta tell ya, I made "potato" salad with it a while back and it was pretty convincing.

I've had it a few times.  The texture's there but it has a slightly off flavor.  Like rubbery almost.


I once saw a recommendation to not try to replace it entirely, but to go 50/50.

Personally, I just roast them both in the oven and make aloo gobi
 
2022-12-08 4:11:34 PM  

gietmay: Oneiros: gietmay: Oneiros: KB202: I'm okay without chocolate, but should I be figuring out how to stockpile 30 years' worth of coffee and rice?

You might be able to get away with barley or groats in place of rice for some dishes.   I wonder if pinhead oats would cook up like brown rice if you cooked it similarly

I've been using wheat berries as a replacement for rice for a few years. It's not the same, but it works for me.

I've made rolled oats with a heavy pinch of salt, and then used it as a starch for stuff like Filipino adobo.

But that was more a 'I don't want to wait for rice to cook' situation.

Cooking speed is definitely not a point in the favor of wheat berries.

On the plus side, I buy it in bulk at Costco for really cheap and the bucket it comes in is the same size as the bucket fermenters I used to buy for making beer.


Farro is a decent sub for brown rice and cooks pretty quick.
 
Displayed 17 of 17 comments

View Voting Results: Smartest and Funniest

This thread is closed to new comments.

Continue Farking




On Twitter


  1. Links are submitted by members of the Fark community.

  2. When community members submit a link, they also write a custom headline for the story.

  3. Other Farkers comment on the links. This is the number of comments. Click here to read them.

  4. Click here to submit a link.