• @BonesOfTheMoon
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    212 hours ago

    I once made borscht. That is a labour of love I’ll never go through again. I also made a hot chocolate layer cake, including making the marshmallows, and that was a lot of work.

  • @Evrala
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    212 hours ago

    Tofu.

    Pressing the water out, marinating for hours, then cooking properly so it’s delicious and not a rubbery mess is just too much hassle.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 hours ago

      I rarely even marinate my tofu, and have never really had issues with it getting rubbery, but the hassle of pressing the water out is enough of a deterrent for me. I’ve considered buying a tofu presser, but I have a small kitchen, so I don’t really like owning such specialized tools.

  • @AceSLive
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    515 hours ago

    Lamb Vindaloo.

    God I wanna be good at making that. And veggie samosas

    • @RBWells
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      11 hour ago

      I just made that this week and think I may agree with you, or at least I’d not try on a workday again. I didn’t have the right peppers and used dried ancho, jarred roasted red pepper and a little fresh red pepper and it came out really good, sorta new world /old world delicious fusion but my God, toasting, grinding, processing, tasting, resting the paste. Started in the morning and let it rest while I was at work. Also started sourdough naan in the morning & of course made a vegetable dish to go with the meat - everything was good but I was exhausted by the end of the day!

  • @[email protected]
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    11 hours ago

    I like to do a bunch of baking for the holidays, and usually do a mix of easy/familiar recipes, plus some new/challenging recipes. I made caramels, and while I was pretty happy with them, I never heard one person comment on them, and they were a lot of effort compared to things like chocolate chip cookies, so I’ve never made them again.

    Edit: Another is pumpkin pie from fresh pumpkins. I’ve done it, it’s not that difficult, but it’s also not any cheaper or better tasting than just buying good canned pumpkin.

  • @Sizbang
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    1322 hours ago

    Croissants - 3 days prep time minimum? You have to be very precise with everything and it’s just such a bother.

  • venotic
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    220 hours ago

    Most of them. They require not only the right ingredients and even the right brands. But the amount of tools you would have to go out and get, just to make that thing. I currently am struggling to make homemade butterbeer, from harry potter, because I spent like a combined $30+ in materials and ingredients and that’s only by one recipe. Which is another thing, recipes vary and have their own way of doing things which again is going to require having to spend more just to make it.

    It’s a no-brainer why people would rather have take out or go out to restaurants.

    • @[email protected]
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      217 hours ago

      You really don’t need a ton of tools to cook most dishes. And once you have the tool, you have it for the next dish that needs it. You think ingredients are expensive? Restaurants use the same ones and up charge you.

      Ordering or eating out for every meal? In this economy?

    • @[email protected]
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      61 day ago

      I was thinking about making this to surprise ans impress my wife. Watched a video on how to make it and decided that there are easier ways to impress her.

      • @TroubledVegan
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        423 hours ago

        I made one for new years and while there are alot of steps, but the steps themselves are very doable. I prepped mine the day before and just had to cook in the oven on the day.

  • @[email protected]
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    223 hours ago

    Soup dumplings. The broth for the soup has to be make in a specific way to solidify and I think there’s also a complex method of incorporating the soup into the meat and veggies in the dumplings. It’s just a very time consuming process all around. It’s sucks tho because I love soup dumplings and being able to make a huge portion of them would be amazing.

    • @[email protected]
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      218 hours ago

      It’s not that hard to get the stock to solidify. You just need to reduce it enough and pop it in the fridge.

  • @BenLeMan
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    24 hours ago

    Homemade pizza. Making the dough creates a mess and requires delicate manual labor in several steps at precise times over more than 24 hours. Looks great on YouTube but that’s just not me.

    Edit: thanks for the suggestions, guys. Who knows, maybe one day… 😉

    • TerkErJerbs
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      315 hours ago

      A middle ground I do often is buy frozen pizzas and then add my own extra toppings. They’re usually so cheap and skimp anyhow that I look at it like buying a starter pizza shell.

      • @BenLeMan
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        18 hours ago

        That’s what I always do since there are decent options available nowadays.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 day ago

      It takes me an hour to make pizza from scratch at home. I’ll grant it’s messy but it’s pretty easy!

      Dough recipe

      Pizza sauce recipe

      Pizza stone

      Pizza peel

      1. Prepare dough following steps 1-8 in the dough recipe above
      2. While your dough is rising, prepare the pizza sauce
      3. Liberally dust your pizza peel with corn meal (use more than you think you need!)
      4. Transfer the rolled-out dough onto the pizza peel and pinch the edges to form a crust
      5. Assemble and cook the pizza following steps 10-12 in the dough recipe above. I tend to use about 1/2 cup of pizza sauce, 4oz grated mozzarella, fresh basil leaves, and pepperoni, but the sky’s the limit really
      6. Enjoy!
      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        The pizza dough tastes better when allowed to rest and rise slowly in the fridge. Using a ton of store bought yeast for a quick rise is fine, but planning out the dough the night before is better.

    • @telllos
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      51 day ago

      Well it depends on what you want to achieve. Because there is also the oven, which os important, and your ingredient.

      I love making pizza since I was a teenager and I learned slowly. Internet was great for learning cold fermentation or about different type of pizza.

      But you can make a decent pizza quite easily.

      Maybe try focaccia first it’s super fun. This is the recipe I use.

        • @telllos
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          41 day ago

          Yep, if you make pizza in a home oven it’s really important to have a stone plate.

          • @[email protected]
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            222 hours ago

            I really like my lodge cast-iron one, but when I’ve used stones they seem to work just as well for New Haven style

    • @BigSadDad
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      117 hours ago

      It’s a ham sandwich. If you can pick your nose up can make a passable bechemal

  • @[email protected]
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    72 days ago

    Ramen. Like true, 14+ hrs of effort tonkotsu broth.

    It’s been a dream of mine for a long time, but fuck is that a long time.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 day ago

      It’s not 14 hours of effort. It’s 14 hours of letting shit boil.

      I highly recommend getting slow cooker if you don’t have one. You can do stocks and broths without having to keep an eye on them. I let my bone broths go for two days.