Forum Thermomix
Welcoming Center, Management and General Chat => Introduce Yourself => Topic started by: agpest on June 14, 2009, 05:35:13 am
-
Hi. I am not sure I am posting this correctly. I have never taken part in a forum like this.
I have had my Thermomix for a week, had to order it from Canada as I live in Tucson Az USA. My husband sent me the article that ran in the Wall Street Journal & I asked him when he was going to get me one & he laughed. About a week later my 25 yr old food processor broke. I was looking on line to see what Consumers Reports recommended as a replacement when he asked what I was doing. After I told him he said why don't you just get a Thermomix, so I did! But it was not easy I filled out forms on three sites before some one contacted me. Eventually all three answered but it took two weeks to get it from the time I started. I made Mango ice cream from the Canadian Foodie website (her recipe is for raspberry). For my husband I think the mango ice cream justified the price of the Thermomix. (He grew up in India.) I made the Hungarian goulash ( I have the Australian Cook book) but not knowing what tomato concentrate is I used tomato paste, it was good but a little too much tomato flavor. Can some one tell me what tomato concentrate is? I made the Torta Caprese it was very good and the first time I have made a cake where mine looked as good as the picture in the book. I successfully made my usual spaghetti sauce in the Thermomix. I make a lot of Indian food so I plan to adapt the recipes to the Thermomix which may be easier than figuring out how to properly post.
-
welcome and congrats for being so brave as to join us!
can't wait til you convert and post some of your indian recipes, i LOVE indian food!!!
as far as i know tom conc = tom paste but will wait to see what others say ;)
-
Welcome,
I'm new too, I live in Tasmania, Australia. Wow what an ordeal you have to go through to get a TMX when you live in the US. Glad it has all worked out for you. You won't look back once you get started with your TMX you'll become addicted!! I'm still saving for mine, but have been very fortunate & borrowed a friends. I too look forward to trying some Indian.
Mandi
-
I made the Hungarian goulash ( I have the Australian Cook book) but not knowing what tomato concentrate is I used tomato paste, it was good but a little too much tomato flavor. Can some one tell me what tomato concentrate is?
Hi Gayle, welcome to the forum. Tomato concentrate and tomato paste are one and the same so if it was too strong, just cut back to half perhaps. My favourite goulash recipe (which I have yet to convert) doesn't use any at all so I think you could quite easily just put a tablespoon of paste in the recipe book one. Don't be afraid of this forum or your ability to do postings - I would have been the worst computer literate person there was 12 months ago but now know enough to get by. Not clever like some of our members though. Have fun with your TMX - what have you named it?
-
Welcome Gayle - greta to have another enthusiastic user in the US. Don't worry about computer literacy here. There are some who appear to know what to do with all the techo stuff, but most of us just bumble along. Food is what we know about.
How many rocks did you have to put in the old food processor to trash it ??? ;) Fortunatley my wife bought me one, otherwise I'd still be procrastinating, but now she regrets the time I spend with my Bimby and the Bimbettes here.
Look forward to some Indian dishes, like brazen20au (Karen), I love Indian food. Do you have Indian recipe books that are your staples?
-
Hi Gayle,
Nice to meet you. All of a sudden the US team is growing quickly :) There's about 5 of us here now. GO TEAM!!!!
-
Fortunatley my wife bought me one, otherwise I'd still be procrastinating, but now she regrets the time I spend with my Bimby and the Bimbettes here.
In the immortal words of Darryl Kerrigan Thermomixer "You're dreaming"!!! Bimbettes indeed.......(as she does a Miss Piggy toss of the hair & throws her snout in the air)
Welcome Gayle & Mandi - the animal reference is not due to the recent flu quasi pandemic but Thermomixers life away from the Bimby.....
-
I haven't given it a name just had not thought of it. But there is a holiday in India where they decorate the objects that make there lives better with flowers I will have to find out when it is and get a bouquet.
I have an old Time-Life cookbook on India that has very authentic recipes in it. I don't think it is available anymore it 30+ years old. Either today or tomorrow I will make a yoghurt based chicken curry. Then I have 2 Parsi cook books published in India. Over the years I have developed a masla that can be made in large quantities and frozen so you don't have to grind it every time it should be a snap (maybe I should call it Snappy) in the Thermomix and there are at least three recipes I make with it.
I really didn't break the old food processor on purpose but I would have if I known it was going to get me a Thermomix.
It was a 30 year old Black & Decker I had the grating plate in it and dropped cubed Cheddar cheese down the chute a chunk got stuck between the plate & the top and cracked the small piece of plastic that locked the lid on. But it worked as well as rocks and looks much better if you need to break one.
-
Hi Agpest!
Great to know that my hubby is not the only one who reads WSJ and thinks Wow! Kitchen appliances are sooo cool. :D
Seriously though, he is using it almost as much as me. He found out he really likes smoothies. He had dental surgery this week and the dentist told him to have only cold foods-- good excuse for a milkshake. And I made oatmeal this weekend (a rare treat for me as GF oats are as expensive relative to regular oats as the Thermomix is to a food processor). Anyway, he loved it and now knows there is life after slushies.
How many US members are there now? Everybody converting to metric... it's a movement.
-
Welcome Gayle - it's good to see the US numbers coming up and Warren needs the company!!
Be careful with the Australian cookbook - it has some flaws, so be sure to check the thread here!
-
Thanks,
So far the only flaws have been with myself. Although the chili con carne recipe looked a little odd, but I grew up in Texas so even a lot American cook book have odd looking chili recipes.(Texans don't add the con carne because there is no other kind) I did inspire me to try the real thing in the Thermomix tonight. One thing I really like about the Thermomix is it does not heat the kitchen as much as the gas stove and is not affected by the ceiling fan like a flame is. Even though we are running 5 to 10 degrees below the usual June the high today reached 95F (37C) it is still warm. Usually in the summer I fix a salad grill something and never turn the oven on.
-
Welcome Gayle......Enjoy!!!!
Trudy
-
Hello from a native Tucsonan living in Colorado. I also learned about Thermomix through the WSJ article, but I didn't see it until a few weeks ago. So far I've unpacked my Thermomix, washed it and admired it. I may just make the guacamole recipe you posted as my first try. Quite a leap from using the traditional molcajete as they do at a great Mexican restaurant here! http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm (http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm)
-
Hello from a native Tucsonan living in Colorado. I also learned about Thermomix through the WSJ article, but I didn't see it until a few weeks ago. So far I've unpacked my Thermomix, washed it and admired it. I may just make the guacamole recipe you posted as my first try. Quite a leap from using the traditional molcajete as they do at a great Mexican restaurant here! http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm (http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm)
In Australia our molcajete is called a mortar & pestle for anyone interested.
-
Right, but these are used in Mexico and are made from rough lava stone.
-
Once you start, you won't stop ;D ;D ;D
-
Hello from a native Tucsonan living in Colorado. I also learned about Thermomix through the WSJ article, but I didn't see it until a few weeks ago. So far I've unpacked my Thermomix, washed it and admired it. I may just make the guacamole recipe you posted as my first try. Quite a leap from using the traditional molcajete as they do at a great Mexican restaurant here! http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm (http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/recipe_rmgm.htm)
Sorry to take so long to answer. We got back from two weeks in England late on the 19th and I have been very jet lagged and trying to get my youngest settled in college. Had a good time in England but very glad to get home. We have lived in Tucson for 10 years & really love it. We used to talk about retiring to the Texas Hill Country but will probably stay here.
You will love using the Thermomix. I have not used it as much as I wanted to because we were without air conditioning for three weeks before our trip( and the temp was over 100 every day) so the only thing I was making was the gazpacho which I highly recommend.
-
And, my answer is delayed because I've been a bit hesitant to turn my TMX on! I finally made the stock concentrate in preparation for the garlic oil and chile pasta and it worked! Baby steps... I'm sure it would have been better to have a demo and a consultant, but none available! Am looking forward to a Tucson trip next month where my husband and I will attend our 40th high school reunion and visit my mom's Mt. Lemmon cabin. Stay cool!
-
Oh so happy to have another Yank in the forum. We expect lots of new ideas from you! You will find yourself making your own curry powders and pastes to please your palate. I was born in Syracuse, NY but have lived in Australia for 45 years so need some reminding about cooking Tex/ Mex food. Aussies love Indian food too so if you need any help jut ask and you will be showered with tips. Thermomixer can cook just about anything and is madly in love with his Bimby and his Bimbettes. I think his wife bought him a Thermomix to keep him out of her hair. LOL! We love him anyway.
-
And, my answer is delayed because I've been a bit hesitant to turn my TMX on! I finally made the stock concentrate in preparation for the garlic oil and chile pasta and it worked! Baby steps... I'm sure it would have been better to have a demo and a consultant, but none available! Am looking forward to a Tucson trip next month where my husband and I will attend our 40th high school reunion and visit my mom's Mt. Lemmon cabin. Stay cool!
Congratulations - I have heard of somebody not having taken the TMX out of its box for weeks/months after receiving it - so you are miles ahead. :-*
-
Wow...thanks! I enjoy this forum and am glad to see the "Bimby" reference. I love the idea that this expensive and rather formidable appliance has such a cute name!! My husband travels to Brisbane at least yearly, (he works for Boeing) and I got to tag along a few months ago. We also went to Sydney. Love Australia and Aussies!!
-
I was scared enough of mine and I did go to a demo ??? ??? Can understand how daunting it must be for you LynnInColorado but if you try at least one new thing per day, you will build up your confidence and trust in the machine and go on to bigger and better things. Ask here first if you are wanting to try something - you will soon get an answer if the recipe needs tweaking or not. I'd suggest tackling it on your own, with no-one around to distract you as you must read the recipe then read it again before each step - it is easy to miss something. We have all made mistakes by not reading the recipe properly but in most instances, the machine is very forgiving. Good luck, let us know how you go and what you have cooked.
-
Thermomixer can cook just about anything and is madly in love with his Bimby and his Bimbettes. I think his wife bought him a Thermomix to keep him out of her hair. LOL! We love him anyway.
LOL- I can certainly live without any other cooking device (and blowing my own trumpet !!! :-)) ) would be able to produce restaurant quality food - just from my Bimby, but think MrsT has regrets as she is no longer Numero Uno for my attentions.
-
TMXer as long as it's only Bimby and not Bimbo!
-
And, my answer is delayed because I've been a bit hesitant to turn my TMX on! I finally made the stock concentrate in preparation for the garlic oil and chile pasta and it worked! Baby steps... I'm sure it would have been better to have a demo and a consultant, but none available! Am looking forward to a Tucson trip next month where my husband and I will attend our 40th high school reunion and visit my mom's Mt. Lemmon cabin. Stay cool!
I have not been on the internet recently because I had to make myself get the house back in shape. Three weeks without air conditioning then 2 weeks out of the country made for a lot of dust. Mt Lemmon ought to be beautiful next month and maybe chilly. This summer they had free music concerts on the weekend we went up to see Linda Ronstadts' brother's band I liked him even better than her. It was a round 100˚ in Tucson but I had to buy a long sleeve shirt while we were up there it was more than 40˚ cooler and windy.
I made the Torta Caprese for the second time this week. I had a meeting at my house for a group I belong to so I made it to serve to the group everyone really liked it. It is very easy and and looks very impressive to some one who is not familiar with how easy the Thermomix makes it.
I made the vegetable stock concentrate awhile ago I (don't remember what I used it for) and really liked it and I am looking forward to trying some of the soups when it gets cooler. We are in the mid 90's (35℃) now which is better than the mid 100's (40℃) but not soup weather yet.
-
It sounds like the right temperature for sorbets and icecreams.
-
TMXer as long as it's only Bimby and not Bimbo!
I am not a complete dumbo - just a dumby - so no only my little Bimby
-
This summer they had free music concerts on the weekend we went up to see Linda Ronstadts' brother's band I liked him even better than her.
Did you ever see her in the Johnny Cash Folsom Prison Concert? So inappropriately dressed for the gig. (Well for an old fuddy duddy like me)
Good to hear that the torta Caprese is a hit there too.
-
It sounds like the right temperature for sorbets and icecreams.
Definitely sorbets at that temp - hopefully they should be getting into fall now.