Cool. Now, here are the ingredients and a recipe for shrimp cocktails.
Court Bouillon:
10 cups cold water
2 medium carrots, quartered
2 stalks celery, quartered
1 large onion, quartered
1 head garlic, halved
1 lemon, halved
1/2 bunch parsley
5 sprigs fresh thyme
2 bay leaves
Shrimp:
1 pound medium or large shrimp, in the shell, rinsed
1 tablespoon kosher salt
Cocktail Sauce, recipe follows
Lemon wedges
Cocktail Sauce:
1 cup ketchup
1 lemon, zest finely grated and juiced
4 teaspoons prepared horseradish, or to taste, drained
1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Hot sauce, to taste
Directions
Put the water, carrot, celery, onion, garlic, lemon, parsley, thyme, and bay leaves in a pot and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat to a simmer, set a cover on top slightly ajar, and cook for 10 to 30 minutes.
Drop the shrimp into the liquid and turn off the heat. Cook the shrimp, stirring occasionally, until they curl and turn pink, about 2 to 2 1/2 minutes for medium shrimp, 3 minutes for large ones. Drain and cool to room temperature. Peel the shrimp and remove the vein along the curve of the shrimp, if desired. Refrigerate if not serving right away. If refrigerated, bring the shrimp to room temperature 20 minutes before serving.
To serve put the cocktail sauce in a medium bowl and surround with the shrimp, or loop the shrimp over the edge of an individual cocktail glass and top with the sauce. Garnish with the lemon and serve.
Optional Tip: To de-vein the shrimp before cooking, hold a shrimp between the thumb and forefinger with the rounded side of the shrimp upward. Place the pointed end of a wooden skewer at the junction of the second and third segments of the shrimp shell, about 1/8-inch down from the top. Gently push the skewer through the shell and then lift up to remove the vein.
Cocktail Sauce:
Combine the ketchup, lemon zest and juice, horseradish, and Worcestershire sauce in a small bowl. Add hot sauce, if desired. Mix well, then refrigerate until ready to serve.
Yield: 1 1/2 cups
@TheMouse laughs in Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 (not a flagship chip, ofc, but fast enough to handle this lag fest. Still choppy on high quality settings, but playable.)
@Graingy Oh, in that case, the National Transitional Council won the 2011 Libyan Civil War which resulted in the flag change; they changed the flag from this plain green flag you see here to the flag used before 1969 which was the flag used by the United Kingdom of Libya. (only for a second civil war to happen again in 2014 which ended in a ceasefire after the Libyan National Army attempted a coup against the Libyan Army. The Libyan Army is extremely disunified and mostly consists of a nightmarishly diverse militias that are bunched up together. The only reason why they control the capital city is because of the RADA, one of the most strongest defence forces in Tripoli and also the Turkish intervention which basically bombed several military bases and operations against the LNA.) That's basically what happened. I'm not going to mention any names because I know for a fact that someone might comment praising their leaders.
@Graingy Well, just look up the flag of Libya of 1977 and Google why it was abandoned and you'll see what I'm referencing. Not gonna explain on this website since, well, this ain't a political debate website.
@Graingy yes, this was a flag. Well, until what happened in February, but this is a community about online building aircraft, so, I won't go deep in the political details.
@TheAirbusA380addict First, they use STILL use analog flight instruments as they're less susceptible to EMP attacks, with fuel tanks massive enough to stay airborne at around 35.4 hours with fuel and generally stay airborne for a full week with the added bonus of being able to be refueled mid-air. Then, we have communications systems, liquid oxygen converters and storage systems for baggage and spare parts. The plane is also shielded with 'hardened' material. The lower trailing wire antenna (TWA) area contains the aircraft's 5-mile-long (8.0 km) TWA reel—which is used by up to 13 communications links—the antenna operator's station, as well as the antenna reel controls and indicators. Much attention has been given to hardening this area against EMP, especially as the TWA, essential for communicating with Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, is particularly effective in picking up EMP
Or, maybe, you were the captain, only to get crushed by debris. Of course, flying is still very safe, but, let's just say that we had to earn and learn that safety the hard way. (ahem, ahem, Boeing 737 Max 9, ahem, ahem.)
@TheAirbusA380addict Sure, there aren't a lot of deaths, but imagine it was a regular day in your home, only for you and the house itself to get completely run over by an unsuspecting aircraft. That's just brutal.
@TheAirbusA380addict The same thing happened to a Fokker 100. This was Bek Air Flight 2100 after failing to take off due to ice formations on the wings of the aircraft, eventually overrunning and crashed into a recently built house near the airport in 2019.
@TheAirbusA380addict I told you. So, yeah. That's what happened. When it overran, it killed several other people on the ground when it crashed into 10 houses in the process.
@TheAirbusA380addict You don't need to call me a bozo. This is a community where we gather around and share our interests in aviation. Or, if you're 'that' kind of person, cars and trains. And maybe ships. As in ships in WATER. Not 'those' ships.
@TheAirbusA380addict Yes, that's true, but it is still worth noticing. Especially since there were casualties. 18 died, 2 were on the ground while 57 were injured, 20 were on the ground, so, while yes, it was an overrun, I'll still count it as a crash due to the severity. Especially since it crashed into 10 houses. Which, again, still makes it at least the 10th deadliest accident involving the DC-10
I've been blessed by the sight of such a majestic, flamboyant, impressive, awe-inspiring, sumptuous, magisterial, striking, distinguished, palatial, Olympian, monumental, glorious, grand, lofty, stately, august, and exalted flying tampon
Cool. Now, here are the ingredients and a recipe for shrimp cocktails.
Court Bouillon:
10 cups cold water
2 medium carrots, quartered
2 stalks celery, quartered
1 large onion, quartered
1 head garlic, halved
1 lemon, halved
1/2 bunch parsley
5 sprigs fresh thyme
2 bay leaves
Shrimp:
1 pound medium or large shrimp, in the shell, rinsed
1 tablespoon kosher salt
Cocktail Sauce, recipe follows
Lemon wedges
Cocktail Sauce:
1 cup ketchup
1 lemon, zest finely grated and juiced
4 teaspoons prepared horseradish, or to taste, drained
1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Hot sauce, to taste
Directions
Put the water, carrot, celery, onion, garlic, lemon, parsley, thyme, and bay leaves in a pot and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat to a simmer, set a cover on top slightly ajar, and cook for 10 to 30 minutes.
Drop the shrimp into the liquid and turn off the heat. Cook the shrimp, stirring occasionally, until they curl and turn pink, about 2 to 2 1/2 minutes for medium shrimp, 3 minutes for large ones. Drain and cool to room temperature. Peel the shrimp and remove the vein along the curve of the shrimp, if desired. Refrigerate if not serving right away. If refrigerated, bring the shrimp to room temperature 20 minutes before serving.
To serve put the cocktail sauce in a medium bowl and surround with the shrimp, or loop the shrimp over the edge of an individual cocktail glass and top with the sauce. Garnish with the lemon and serve.
Optional Tip: To de-vein the shrimp before cooking, hold a shrimp between the thumb and forefinger with the rounded side of the shrimp upward. Place the pointed end of a wooden skewer at the junction of the second and third segments of the shrimp shell, about 1/8-inch down from the top. Gently push the skewer through the shell and then lift up to remove the vein.
Cocktail Sauce:
Combine the ketchup, lemon zest and juice, horseradish, and Worcestershire sauce in a small bowl. Add hot sauce, if desired. Mix well, then refrigerate until ready to serve.
Yield: 1 1/2 cups
@TheMouse I deleted it. I know, maybe that was too impulsive of me lol
+2@MarkMCraft What you made, however, kinda evaporated my game entirely.
+1@TheMouse laughs in Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 (not a flagship chip, ofc, but fast enough to handle this lag fest. Still choppy on high quality settings, but playable.)
+1@intruder72 is it okay to lick the chocolate off first before taking a munch?
@NominalSituation Fun fact, that's the official motto of New Hampshire.
+1@Graingy Oh, in that case, the National Transitional Council won the 2011 Libyan Civil War which resulted in the flag change; they changed the flag from this plain green flag you see here to the flag used before 1969 which was the flag used by the United Kingdom of Libya. (only for a second civil war to happen again in 2014 which ended in a ceasefire after the Libyan National Army attempted a coup against the Libyan Army. The Libyan Army is extremely disunified and mostly consists of a nightmarishly diverse militias that are bunched up together. The only reason why they control the capital city is because of the RADA, one of the most strongest defence forces in Tripoli and also the Turkish intervention which basically bombed several military bases and operations against the LNA.) That's basically what happened. I'm not going to mention any names because I know for a fact that someone might comment praising their leaders.
@Graingy Well, just look up the flag of Libya of 1977 and Google why it was abandoned and you'll see what I'm referencing. Not gonna explain on this website since, well, this ain't a political debate website.
Please credit @VinFage, me, and @Renzoo; that would be appreciated, thank you :)
@BilibiliOldDai sure thing, but I was already working on that.
@Pan this is so cool-(I'm a simp for retro liveries.)
𝓼𝓺𝓾𝓮𝓪𝓴 𝓼𝓺𝓾𝓮𝓪𝓴
@SamTheUncle wait till you see my abominations for 'merica
+1Literally an oil barrel.
@SamTheUncle Are you still a mouse with a machine gun?
+1I mean, they look like that since they're meant to literally protect you from demons-
@Graingy yes, this was a flag. Well, until what happened in February, but this is a community about online building aircraft, so, I won't go deep in the political details.
@MrSilverWolf Apologies due, I may have reacted unnecessarily.
@dekanii cool!
@dekanii he's the chosen one lol. the ultimate anime and a380 lover in this community is gonna cook.
@dekanii I just make liveries after borrowing some aircraft.
@dekanii ah, I see.
@dekanii so, any plans for posting an aircraft or a livery or smth?
@CaptainBrody nothin' wrong with it, just sharing interests in aviation, obviously.
@dekanii yeah, anyway, this quite the comment section, huh?
@dekanii I kinda mentioned that already????
@DatFiat126Fan19 Does anyone get the reference I made? No? Well, I'll just grin since nobody knows.
+1@SamTheUncle I'm sure we have ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with what happened on the dates of 15 February – 23 October 2011
@NanstarEnterprise I already knew that, but, thanks for the trivia.
+1@dekanii I mean, yea; they ain't wrong with that either.
@Cessna921alt Uh, well, that escalated quickly. I like eating bacon. And Peking Duck.
+1@TheAirbusA380addict Can I make a version 2 of this livery?
@TheAirbusA380addict Yeah, it's a shame it happened.
@TheAirbusA380addict First, they use STILL use analog flight instruments as they're less susceptible to EMP attacks, with fuel tanks massive enough to stay airborne at around 35.4 hours with fuel and generally stay airborne for a full week with the added bonus of being able to be refueled mid-air. Then, we have communications systems, liquid oxygen converters and storage systems for baggage and spare parts. The plane is also shielded with 'hardened' material. The lower trailing wire antenna (TWA) area contains the aircraft's 5-mile-long (8.0 km) TWA reel—which is used by up to 13 communications links—the antenna operator's station, as well as the antenna reel controls and indicators. Much attention has been given to hardening this area against EMP, especially as the TWA, essential for communicating with Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, is particularly effective in picking up EMP
@TheAirbusA380addict Exactly, so, what do you think? The story's pretty wild.
@TheAirbusA380addict Well, good for you. But, what I said was simply asking you to imagine.
Ah, yes. The plane that crashed into 10 houses after an overrun.
Or, maybe, you were the captain, only to get crushed by debris. Of course, flying is still very safe, but, let's just say that we had to earn and learn that safety the hard way. (ahem, ahem, Boeing 737 Max 9, ahem, ahem.)
@TheAirbusA380addict Sure, there aren't a lot of deaths, but imagine it was a regular day in your home, only for you and the house itself to get completely run over by an unsuspecting aircraft. That's just brutal.
@TheAirbusA380addict So, yeah, that's the story. Pretty deadly crash now that you think about it?
@TheAirbusA380addict The same thing happened to a Fokker 100. This was Bek Air Flight 2100 after failing to take off due to ice formations on the wings of the aircraft, eventually overrunning and crashed into a recently built house near the airport in 2019.
@TheAirbusA380addict I told you. So, yeah. That's what happened. When it overran, it killed several other people on the ground when it crashed into 10 houses in the process.
@CaptainBrody Or flags. Again, this is a diverse community with diverse interests, but you get the gist.
@CaptainBrody (and also anime-style characters and personifications, apparently)
@TheAirbusA380addict You don't need to call me a bozo. This is a community where we gather around and share our interests in aviation. Or, if you're 'that' kind of person, cars and trains. And maybe ships. As in ships in WATER. Not 'those' ships.
@TheAirbusA380addict Yes, that's true, but it is still worth noticing. Especially since there were casualties. 18 died, 2 were on the ground while 57 were injured, 20 were on the ground, so, while yes, it was an overrun, I'll still count it as a crash due to the severity. Especially since it crashed into 10 houses. Which, again, still makes it at least the 10th deadliest accident involving the DC-10
@CaptainBrody Uh, I mean fuselage, hahaha....
I've been blessed by the sight of such a majestic, flamboyant, impressive, awe-inspiring, sumptuous, magisterial, striking, distinguished, palatial, Olympian, monumental, glorious, grand, lofty, stately, august, and exalted flying tampon
@RepublicOfCursedPlanes You forgot Cubana de Aviacion Flight 1216. The DC-10's 10th deadliest crash.
I know it's been more than a year, but...