What's For Dinner?

I am making homemade ramen soup tonight. The dough has been resting in the fridge for about an hour. Time to roll out and cut them and then on to the soup base. I will use my chicken stock as a base with spinach, baby bok choi, carrot, and soft cooked egg as the main characters along with the ramen.
 
How do you cut them? Do you make slimmer noodles like ramen or wider noodles like udon?
Skinny like ramen, because I was making......ramen :). I ended up using my Kitchenaid mixer to work the dough (almost 10 minutes!) then refrigerate it for an hour. Then rolled sheets, dried them part way, and used the spaghetti cutter on the Kitchenaid. We used two "nests" of ramen for our dinner and placed the rest on sheet pans in the freezer to freeze up and bag for later use.
The noodles were great! Chewy and springy texture. We are definitely making these again.
 
Today is National Nacho Day, so we are making nachos. I made oven baked tortilla chips earlier. I read that the original Nachos were just tortilla chips with melted cheese and pickled jalapenos. Anything else is not authentic.
OK. We are layering nacho chips with cheddar cheese, hot salsa, cilantro, chili con carne, tomatoes, (repeat) then top with some cheese and Oaxacan crema (instead of sour cream: more sour and less thick) and shredded lettuce.

Time to start assembling!
 
Slow-cooker chicken thighs simmered in red wine, garlic, rosemary, tomato, and onion. Then partially shredded into large chunks and served over fresh fettuccine with the reduced sauce over top. Steamed broccoli on the side.
 
Croziflette! This is a Savoyard (French Alps) version of mac-n-cheese. A famous dish in that region is called tartiflette (tarta being the ancient word for potatoes in the region). This is a heavy dish of sliced potatoes, onions, heavy cream, chopped bacon or ham, and an unbelievable amount of Beaufort cheese melted on it. Delicious, by the way. A popular pasta in the Savoy is called crozettes. They are small, thick squares made of buckwheat flour. So, replace the "tarta" with crozettes and you get Croziflette! Beaufort is very hard (and expensive) to find in the US, so we used a mixture of Gruyere, Fontina, and a touch of smoked Gruyere.

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