To boil or stew okra and tomatoes without producing slime, start by washing and slicing the okra into bite-sized pieces. Blanch the okra in boiling water for a few minutes before adding it to your stew or sauce, which helps reduce the slime. Additionally, cooking okra quickly at high temperatures and avoiding excessive stirring can minimize slime formation. Adding acidic ingredients, like tomatoes, can also help reduce the sliminess.
The longer one cooks it the thicker the 'slime' will get. This is one reason okra is often used to thicken soups. However, if you pan-fry sliced okra in butter or oil on medium, and constantly stir it, the thick slime will completely dry out. The okra will shrivel somewhat, but there will be NO slime. This is a long process, but well worth it. Don't be alarmed if the okra and/or seeds turns dark or even somewhat green-black. That's gooood eatin'! It will be a little crunchy and provide that breaded and fried okra taste without the deep fry. This method does not work particularly well with frozen okra, which kind of turns to mush. Fresh is best.
If cooked in water, yes. There are, however, ways to cook it that are "slime free."
To ensure slime safety when making and playing with homemade slime, always use non-toxic ingredients, wash hands before and after handling slime, avoid ingesting slime, and store slime in a sealed container when not in use.
You can use green beans, zucchini, or eggplant as substitutes for okra in a recipe.
Not anymore. As of 2012, McDonald's has dropped the use of pink slime.
Yes, cornbread mix can be used when frying okra. Do not add salt, or salt the okra, because the mix already has salt added.
you use fertilizer to provide nutrients and food for the plants.
If you do use okra, I'm guessing that you will be more itchy then lubricated. i wouldn't advise it. just have the person eat you out, of just get lubricant from the store.
i mean i know it is called slime activator but for saline and contact solution you use baking soda and slime activator you don't so the real question is can you use baking soda with slime activator
no it taste weird
Use My New Fertilizer Its Called The "Captive Milk Man"