Ya, RLY.
In an effort to reduce my potato and onion mountain, I was looking for something suitable. As I was browsing my little Tesco's out the back, some Finest traditional pork sausages caught my eye and it was decided:
Very basic: Shallow fried the bangers in the pan, took them out, sauteed the onions in the remaining fat/juices until almost soft, dusted with flour and cooked the mix for a while, added water and reduced down to a nice consistency (no artifical gravy for me!), mashed the potatoes with some cream, grated mature cheddar and chopped coriander, arranged everything on a plate, took a photo and finished it all off. :o)
I now return you to my usual programming. ;o)


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Date: 10/8/06 08:42 pm (UTC)*note to self, must make bangers & mash again...*
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Date: 10/8/06 08:45 pm (UTC)Sadly, I didn't have an open bottle at hand. Balsamic sounds interesting...
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Date: 10/8/06 08:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 10/8/06 09:00 pm (UTC)Thanks!
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Date: 11/8/06 07:30 am (UTC)I did cassoulet for Liz earlier this week and it went down very well.
G
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Date: 11/8/06 08:43 am (UTC)Ozzy, how do you take such good photos of food? I've tried, but without a flash I end up with a blurred shot (perhaps my kitchen lights aren't strong enough) and with flash my plates are always too stark (even if I try to zoom in from a pace back).
(BTW digital I'm afraid - Canon Ixus 2x zoom, 2.1m pixels)
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Date: 11/8/06 09:15 am (UTC)Decent answer: It's most likely that your light is too weak.
Light is just the flourescent tube above my cooker/worktop.
This one was actually taken at ISO400, the steak on Saturday at ISO200 (which was slightly shaky at 1/30s)
And yes, full-on flash will make it too flat.
Try a desk lamp with a strong daylight bulb (you can get 150W equiv energy saving bulbs which are superb and I've used to light photos).