There are cruise missiles with munitions designed to ruin a power sub station, That's all that's really needed to bring down Russia given ho...

There are cruise missiles with munitions designed to ruin a power sub station, That's all that's really needed to bring down Russia given how long it would take to bring up a power substation in America.

An anti-electrical weapon, the CBU-94/B, was first used by the U.S. in the Kosovo War in 1999. These consist of a TMD (Tactical Munitions Dispenser) filled with 202 BLU-114/B "Soft-Bomb" submunitions. Each submunition contains a small explosive charge that disperses 147 reels of fine conductive fiber of either carbon or aluminum-coated glass. Their purpose is to disrupt and damage electric power transmission systems by producing short circuits in high-voltage power lines and electrical substations. On the initial attack, these knocked out 70% of the electrical power supply in Serbia.

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  1. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    >frick military shit
    >/k/uisine
    That looks fricking DELICIOUS.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Recipe? OP better deliver.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        look up the filename

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          I was hoping OP had some family recipe or something. I'll go ahead and search it up and post one that seems good.

          • 3 months ago
            Anonymous

            I'm not French so I don't know how authentic this is but it looks good. I guess it's supposed to be an old rooster but have fun trying to find that. Most of the recipes I've found just call for chicken.

            https://vikalinka.com/coq-au-vin-the-ultimate-one-pot-dinner/

            1 tbsp Olive Oil
            120g/4 oz Pancetta or Bacon lardons cubed
            8-10 pieces Chicken thighs and legs
            1 Onion
            2 Carrots
            1-2 cloves Garlic chopped
            80ml/1/4 cup Brandy or Whisky
            375ml/1 ½ cup Red Wine your choice
            250ml/1 cup Chicken Stock
            8-10 sprigs Thyme
            1 tbsp Butter
            1.5 tbsp Flour for thickening could substitute for corn starch for gluten-free version
            250g/1/2 lbs Mushrooms
            Salt and Pepper to taste

            INSTRUCTIONS

            Preheat oven to 120C/250F. Heat a tablespoon of olive oil in a large Dutch oven. (If you have a cast iron pot it's perfect for it.) Fry your bacon lardons for 8-10 minutes until browned and remove them to a plate.
            Season your chicken pieces with salt and pepper and brown them in the same pot in batches to avoid overcrowding. Remove to the same plate as bacon. You are not cooking your chicken all the way through, just browning on both sides.
            Slice your onions and carrots in medium sized chunks and add them to the pot with salt and pepper, cook over medium heat for 10 minutes, add the garlic and cook for 1 minute longer stirring the whole time not allowing it to burn. Add your brandy and scrape all the burned bits to incorporate them into your sauce, now add bacon and chicken with all the juices they collected, pour in your wine, chicken stock and thyme sprigs and bring to a boil. Once boiling, cover with a lid and put it in the oven for 55 minutes.
            When chicken is no longer pink mix melted butter with flour and stir in the sauce. Slice mushrooms thickly and add to the pot, taste and adjust the seasoning if needed. Put back in the oven with the lid off for 10-15 minutes to allow the sauce to thicken.

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              >go on /k/ to shitpost
              >come away with amazing recipe for tomorrow's family dinner
              thanks anon I was looking for something to make in my new cast iron pot

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                You can also switch chicken for beef chuck and the recipe then becomes Boeuf Bourguignon, another French staple and delicious as well.

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              A key aspect is dredging all your meats in flour.
              Also, you can substitute finely chopped dried mushrooms (available year round)
              also don't hesitate using more wine, it's where the flavor is
              You want a red with strong flavor and lots of barrique generally

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              >1 tbsp Olive Oil
              Use butter, olive oil is ageographical
              french cuisine does not really use olive oil except in the far south and this is a northwestern dish

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              For proper coq au vin you need to marinate the chicken in the wine for a day or so. Then you use the mixture of wine+chicken juices for your stock. Also 55 minutes is nowhere near long enough, it needs to be in the oven for 4-5 hours to cook it to the proper rich and dark level

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                >For proper coq au vin you need to marinate the chicken in the wine for a day or so.
                it heavily depends on the chicken you get and you are liable to botch it if it's not an old rooster as is traditional.

                >Also 55 minutes is nowhere near long enough, it needs to be in the oven for 4-5 hours to cook it to the proper rich and dark level
                It's 60-90 minutes, no longer. You can refine the sauce later, but you will ruin the chicken if you overcook it

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              >not allowing it to burn.
              >scrape all the burned bits to incorporate them
              WHICH IS IT GODDAMMIT

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                When you're browning your meat it's inevitable small bits of it will stick to the bottom of the pan and continue to cook as you progress. Bear in mind when I say 'stick' I don't mean it's now glued to the pan like if you tried to cook eggs on a bare steel surface, it's still loose enough that they can easily be dislodged with a wooden spoon. And when you add in your wine that'll deglaze the surface of the pot and now everything that was on the bottom can be easily scraped off and added to the broth, bringing more flavor to the dish as it continues to cook.

                t. made this beef stew last night using a somewhat similar recipe to the one above, shit's cash

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                Understood, thanks Anon. I was mostly joking because I thought it was funny the way the sentences were worded and paired together. Your pic looks delicious.

          • 3 months ago
            Anonymous

            This one

            I'm not French so I don't know how authentic this is but it looks good. I guess it's supposed to be an old rooster but have fun trying to find that. Most of the recipes I've found just call for chicken.

            https://vikalinka.com/coq-au-vin-the-ultimate-one-pot-dinner/

            1 tbsp Olive Oil
            120g/4 oz Pancetta or Bacon lardons cubed
            8-10 pieces Chicken thighs and legs
            1 Onion
            2 Carrots
            1-2 cloves Garlic chopped
            80ml/1/4 cup Brandy or Whisky
            375ml/1 ½ cup Red Wine your choice
            250ml/1 cup Chicken Stock
            8-10 sprigs Thyme
            1 tbsp Butter
            1.5 tbsp Flour for thickening could substitute for corn starch for gluten-free version
            250g/1/2 lbs Mushrooms
            Salt and Pepper to taste

            INSTRUCTIONS

            Preheat oven to 120C/250F. Heat a tablespoon of olive oil in a large Dutch oven. (If you have a cast iron pot it's perfect for it.) Fry your bacon lardons for 8-10 minutes until browned and remove them to a plate.
            Season your chicken pieces with salt and pepper and brown them in the same pot in batches to avoid overcrowding. Remove to the same plate as bacon. You are not cooking your chicken all the way through, just browning on both sides.
            Slice your onions and carrots in medium sized chunks and add them to the pot with salt and pepper, cook over medium heat for 10 minutes, add the garlic and cook for 1 minute longer stirring the whole time not allowing it to burn. Add your brandy and scrape all the burned bits to incorporate them into your sauce, now add bacon and chicken with all the juices they collected, pour in your wine, chicken stock and thyme sprigs and bring to a boil. Once boiling, cover with a lid and put it in the oven for 55 minutes.
            When chicken is no longer pink mix melted butter with flour and stir in the sauce. Slice mushrooms thickly and add to the pot, taste and adjust the seasoning if needed. Put back in the oven with the lid off for 10-15 minutes to allow the sauce to thicken.

            seems pretty good, I just made this one and can confirm shit is cash, as well as the boeuf bourguignon:
            https://www.daringgourmet.com/coq-au-vin/#recipe

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              I might legitimately make this for diner tomorrow. I'm getting hungry just looking at it.

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              >boeuf bourguignon
              Literally made that last night and it was fricking good.

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                Based. Nice presentation, as well.

              • 3 months ago
                Anonymous

                Ta. Learned a couple things for next time but it was very enjoyable. I think coq au vin will have to be next.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's literally "chicken and wine".

  2. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    ngl i'm hungry at work rn and this shit got me hard.

  3. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Man, I would trade my soul, let alone my countries nuclear deterrent, for that hotpot right now.

  4. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Nah, they used something similar against Baghdad in '91.

  5. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    god I fricking love shallots

  6. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Russia does not rely on power stations as it is not a modern country and it's entire GDP is less than troonyfornias. OP = moron.

  7. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    that's a fricking delicious stew friend
    frick
    it's 3am and I really want some stew

  8. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Wanted to drop in long enough to tell OP that the thumbnail of pic unrelated to spam a shitty thread on to the board looks absolutely disgusting. When I hit the catalog it looked like someone took a picture of a toilet filled with three different loads of shit after different people took huge curry dumps in it. The full sized pic unrelated doesn't look much more appetizing.

    Maybe don't be a homosexual next time? If you think you can control yourself? k'thx'bye

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      >The full sized pic unrelated doesn't look much more appetizing
      Does it not have enough fried chicken and grape soda for you?

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        African cuisine.

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          Delish

          >The full sized pic unrelated doesn't look much more appetizing
          Does it not have enough fried chicken and grape soda for you?

          *breaks pasta noodles in half*

  9. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Yum Yum?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      yum yum

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Noice

  10. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    This thread got me.. French potato and carrot beef stew…. Leftovers for lunch for the week. Cheers

  11. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Yum Yum?

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