Friday, September 30, 2011

Tomato paste

The conversion goblin has struck again!

During the two hours it took me to get Lauris and myself ready and out of the house yesterday, I did once think “maybe I ought to convert those quantities,” but since it did take us two hours to get out of the apartment, I shrugged off the thought and we headed to the store.

I had popped over to google translate to find the French words for several of the spices and ingredients I needed, and found almost everything I had on my list. Still missing the baking soda and baking powder; I will have to ask one of my French friends what they are called, I believe the translations I wrote down may be literal.

The main goal was to pick up the ingredients for lasagna, and as I’ve made this particular recipe a few times before, I thought I would be able to get the correct quantities of everything between quick mental conversions and visual guess-timates.

1 pound = 16 ounces = ~ 450 grams

Maybe I should get a tattoo.

Fast forward to dinnertime, and to a lasagna that doesn’t hold a candle to the frozen ones that require 1/10th of the effort. I ended up with half the required ricotta and double the amount of tomato sauce. I didn’t even use all the tomato paste I came home with, but I think the problem lies in the lack of crushed tomatoes. Since I hadn’t translated “crushed” I went by pictures, and figured a large can with pictures of chunky looking tomatoes on the label would be it. Turns out, tomato paste comes in all shapes and sizes; the box I bought thinking it was tomato paste is in fact tomato paste but is in a tube, what I believed to be an unseasoned tomato sauce is tomato paste, and the “chunky tomato label can” was… tomato paste. And the labels all say something different!

Sorry honey, I won’t serve you tomato paste for dinner again… well, after tonight’s leftovers, that is.

Lauris is toad-ing a fine line at the Jardin Lecoq

5 comments:

  1. Too funny, I can't tell you how often this happens to me! In case you are still wondering baking soda - bicarbonate digestif and you find it with the spices and salt and baking powder - levure chimique or levure anglais (it comes in little envelopes/packets) and you find it with the baking stuff...but be careful because it's always next to the levure boulganger which is regular yeast (I've made that mistake before too)! ;)

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  2. Oh, bless your heart. I can't even imagine what trips to the grocery store must be like in another country. I don't even go here in the US - my hubby loves to do it. I think you might be onto something with the tattoo though. hehehe

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  3. So -- it DEFINITELY seems that there is a niche to be filled - a "magasin spécialisé" catering to expats searching for all those items from "home" not available locally, and/or advice on using/substituting what IS available! Plain Cheerios, dark chocolate Reese's PB cups, white eggs... any investors interested?

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  4. Well, most of these products are available... from expat shipping companies that charge outrageous fees. I just read Lucky Charms are going for 14 dollars at one UK specialty store. And there are several blogs I use to figure out substitutions/translations. Eventually products do make their way over, such as cream cheese, but for the others (anything containing peanut butter) we are able to survive between US visits.

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