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What’s your most “patchkadig” recipe ?
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amother
Nasturtium


 

Post Yesterday at 11:59 pm
amother OP wrote:
Or however you spell it… yet you continue to keep making it and why?


Chicken blintzes.
The crepe , chicken mixture , and sauce from scratch. I keep making it because my husband loves it but I dread it because of how long the whole process takes.
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amother
  Chambray


 

Post Today at 1:05 am
amother Pansy wrote:
Isn't that a dump and leave it kind of recipe?

This recipe requires a lot of preparation, at least an hour. In addition, if I "dumped and left it", the soup would end up as one congealed mess at the bottom of the pot. I would never describe someone's else's recipe as dumping and leaving it. All my guests love it and ask for seconds.
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ittsamother




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 1:12 am
amother Chambray wrote:
This recipe requires a lot of preparation, at least an hour. In addition, if I "dumped and left it", the soup would end up as one congealed mess at the bottom of the pot. I would never describe someone's else's recipe as dumping and leaving it. All my guests love it and ask for seconds.


I don't think she was trying to insult your recipe, I think it was a genuine confused question of why it's a patchka, if to her it's the type of recipe where you spill everything into a crock pot and walk away.

I wasn't aware, just by looking at the name of your dish, that it takes prep or additional work once it's in. Can you elaborate? Cuz now I'm curious too.
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amother
NeonPink


 

Post Today at 1:22 am
Anything more than 2 steps is a patchke for me.

Any recipe asking for step 3 goes right over my head.

I don't enjoy cooking, don't enjoy the cleanup, don't enjoy serving, and don't enjoy food I cooked.

If it's up to me, I'd have a chef deliver dinners nightly and the kids self serving while I chill with them at the kitchen table.

And I'm chassidish living in a highly expectant culinary social world.

Aaargh.
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amother
Red


 

Post Today at 1:25 am
I have a bunch and I dont make them often. When my house is clean, im well rested then I get into the mood of making patchkedik suppers
Salmon knishes
Eggrolls
Rice mixed with sautéed veggies and ground meat
Sesame chicken
Shnitzel
Latkes
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amother
Yolk


 

Post Today at 1:28 am
I made falafel from scratch recently. It was delicious by definately a patchka and then all the sides to go with the meal, fried eggplant, coleslaw, Israeli salad, techina, fries.... But it was delicious! From fresh chick peas and a ton of fresh herbs .
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Iymnok




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 2:22 am
Kishka
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amother
Snow


 

Post Today at 2:27 am
amother Lemonchiffon wrote:
Icecream that I have to separate eggs

Separating eggs qualifies as a patschke? Not in my book.
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Bnei Berak 10  




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 2:31 am
amother Papaya wrote:
Chinese chicken stir fry. Takes 20 minutes and that's a parchke in my book.

(I really don't think I'm going to win this thread...)

Nor do I.
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  Bnei Berak 10




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 2:41 am
I once made a chiffon cake around Chanukka time (it contained oil). It has so many steps and the result was below ordinary.
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kugelEater




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 8:54 am
bagels
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Ruchel




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 8:58 am
Maybe leek patties from start, like from leeks and not from leek jars. I do it still because I love it and it's family.
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amother
Grape


 

Post Today at 9:44 am
I actually think simple potato kugel is a patchka. I hate making it but love eating it……so the food processor comes out every week Smile
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naomi2




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 9:53 am
Stuffed cabbage
Stuffed grape leaves
Beef jerky
Challah or any kind of bread. I feel like my kind is always on it even though I'm only doing 5 minutes of work for it every so often.
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amother
Powderblue


 

Post Today at 9:59 am
Chicken soup. I usually make a huge pot and then divide it. Cooking all day, waiting for it to cool, separating chicken from bones, dividing up into containers, washing all the dishes.
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amother
Brickred


 

Post Today at 9:59 am
amother Chambray wrote:
Split pea barley soup made in crockpot for Shabbos lunch


Can you post the recipe please?
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amother
Mintcream


 

Post Today at 10:13 am
amother NeonPink wrote:
Anything more than 2 steps is a patchke for me.

Any recipe asking for step 3 goes right over my head.

I don't enjoy cooking, don't enjoy the cleanup, don't enjoy serving, and don't enjoy food I cooked.

If it's up to me, I'd have a chef deliver dinners nightly and the kids self serving while I chill with them at the kitchen table.

And I'm chassidish living in a highly expectant culinary social world.

Aaargh.

Hi twin
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amother
Oleander


 

Post Today at 10:15 am
Egg rolls/spring rolls is a big patchka

Battered chicken in a sweet and sour sauce - so many stages.

Both above foods are divine and worth all the effort. Usually yomtov foods round here.
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amother
Begonia


 

Post Today at 10:18 am
I generally don't patchka although I do make bagels. Unlike the ima who mentioned them I don't find them especially patchkadik, but I tend make big batches at once so I don't do it all that often.

My big patchka was Yom tov time when I made mafrum for one of my kids who requested it. We aren't Sephardi so it really isn't part of my repertoire. Anywaysas I was making it I couldn't get over the patchka....like who even thought up this recipe... It was yum though.

For those who might not know, it involves:

Making a spiced minced meat mixture

Slicing potatoes and creating a pocket in each slice

Stuffing each pocket with the meat and then coating it with flour and egg and frying them.

Making a tomato sauce and then simmering the fried pockets in the tomato sauce.

Like why???? Meat patties in tomato sauce with potatoes on the side is also delicious....
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amother
Apple


 

Post Today at 10:20 am
I make sourdough every week for shabbos. It's kind of a patchke but we love it and it saves a lot of money to make it myself!
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