T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
546.1 | Chili Con Queso | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Mar 10 1987 17:51 | 15 |
| Here is one for quick, easy, Chili Con Queso dip that I might have posted
elsewhere in this file. It's about as cheezy as it gets:
8 oz velveeta chunks
8 oz monterey jack chunks
8 oz hot salsa
1/4 cup milk
Mix these in a bowl. Heat over a double boiler, or on slow speed in a
microwave, stirring frequently, until smooth. Use jalapeno pepper velveeta
and jack if you want it hotter, or add tobasco. If it gets too solid as it
cools, add more milk and reheat. Serve with nacho chips.
- JP
|
546.2 | | ARNOLD::WIEGMANN | | Wed Mar 11 1987 08:11 | 6 |
| We do something similar to Chili Con Queso for parties - but put
it in a fondue pot! Our electric one keeps it at the right temperature
and you only have to stir it occasionally. Instead of milk, we
use about half a bottle of beer and half a stick of butter. The
new Mexican Velveeta is good, too, plus whatever cheese scraps are
in the fridge!
|
546.3 | | ARNOLD::WIEGMANN | | Wed Mar 11 1987 08:17 | 2 |
| Forgot to mention - I put a recipe in Note 421 for a good quick
bread - it uses one cup of grated cheese.
|
546.4 | GREEK STYLE | HEFTY::SILVAK | | Thu Mar 12 1987 18:43 | 8 |
| Hi,
Went to Detroit to visit with my bro and his wife and went
to eat at this greek resturant. What they did was take a chunk
of motzerella cheese about 2"thick, about 6"x6". They broiled it
in butter until the top was golden brown, than put some brandy over
it and lit it on fire for about 30 sec. After that you took and
spread it on bread like a dip. It was GREAT!!!!!!
S.F.
|
546.5 | | NUTMEG::TEMP6 | | Tue Mar 17 1987 13:27 | 33 |
|
-<Spinach Squares>-
1 cup flour
1 cup milk
1 small chopped onion
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
dash of pepper
2 packages frozen spinach
20 oz. grated cheddar cheese
3 eggs
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Melt butter in a 2" deep baking pan.
Beat eggs well in a large bowl. Add milk, flour, baking powder,
and seasoning. Mix well. Add the remaining ingredients. Spoon
onto the baking pan, making sure the mixture is level. Cook at
350 degrees for 35 minutes. Allow to cool for about 45 minutes
and cut into 1 inch bite size squares.
Enjoy!
|
546.6 | John Wayne's Cheese Casserole | BUFFER::MILLER | Silents, Please... | Mon May 11 1987 13:47 | 24 |
|
2 cans (4-oz. size] green chiles, drained
1 lb. Monterey Jack cheese, coarsely grated
1 lb. Cheddar cheese, coarsely grated
4 egg whites
4 egg yolks
2/3 cup canned evaporated milk, undiluted
1 tbsp. flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. pepper
2 medium tomatoes, sliced
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Remove seeds from chiles and dice.
Combine chiles with the grated cheeses in a large bowl. Turn into
well-buttered, shallow 2-quart casserole (8 X 12 X 2). Beat egg
whites at high speed on electric mixer until stiff peaks form.
In separate bowl beat egg yolks, milk, flour, salt and pepper until
well blended. With a rubber scraper, gently gold beaten whites
into egg yolk mixture. Pour egg mixture over cheese mixture in
casserole and "ooze" it through the cheese with a fork. Bake
30 minutes. Remove from oven and arrange sliced tomatoes, over-
lapping, around edge of casserole. Bake 30 minutes longer, or
until knife inserted in center comes out clean. Garnish with a
sprinkling of chopped green chiles, if desired. Serves 8.
|
546.7 | sauce it with cheese!! | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Sun May 24 1987 20:10 | 21 |
| Killer cheese sauce for everything...
grate 2 cups GOOD cheddar cheese (I like a sharp cheddar in this)
grate 1 cup monterey jack or swiss cheese
1 cup half and half
1 teaspoon dried mustard (use the english stuff)
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
herbs to taste (try dill weed, etc)
1 - 2 tablespoons super file flour (wondra brand works well) or
sift some cake flour
in top of double boiler over simmering water, mix cheeses and half and
half and stir until melted... add flour and stir until all lumps are
gone. Add mustard, pepper, and herbs to taste.
Stir into cooked macaroni and brown in oven for gourmet mac and cheese
or pour the sauce over steamed veggies...the options are endless with
this stuff and I even get my roommate to eat broccoli this way...she
hates broccoli!
|
546.8 | another dip - (not me!) | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:52 | 6 |
| Another variation on the cheese dip/chile con queso -
A loaf of Velveeta and a can of green chiles with tomatoes,
(Rotel or Old El Paso work fine). Easiest way to cook is the crock
pot!
Theresa.
|
546.9 | Cheese Recommendations Solicited | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Nov 18 1987 17:03 | 17 |
| I'm looking for information on what cheeses are good for spreading on
crackers. The characteristics I am looking for are:
o Found relatively commonly in stores.
o "Tasteful". I was going to say sharp, like cheddar,
but anything that makes you aware you are eating cheese
will do.
o Spreadable. It does not have to be soft, but you should
not need a laser to cut it. Something that can be cut
off of a chunk one-handed by a person at a party is what I
am looking for.
I know these cheeses exist; I have had them before. I just didn't get
the names. Can you help?
-- edp
|
546.10 | | ISTG::ADEY | | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:56 | 9 |
| re: -1 Muenster (sp?) and Monterey Jack are relatively soft
(but not spreadable) cheeses that are flavorful.
One other solution is to cut up the cheese beforehand
so your guests won't have to. This way you could have
harder cheeses like cheddar.
Ken....
|
546.11 | Cheese is good food! | CSSE32::AUBUT | the DUKE makes me PUKE | Thu Nov 19 1987 13:20 | 19 |
| Brie is good and easy to spread went brought to room temp. before cutting.
Usually found in stores that have a special cheese section like Heartland,
Hampshire Hills, or Victory.
Harvarti is another good cheese which is a bit softer than Muenster. This
type also comes with different herbs embedded in the cheese. Usually
found in stores that have a special cheese section like Heartland,
Hampshire Hills, or Victory.
There are the cream cheese based cheeses like Alouette which are very
spreadable. They usually have herbs mixed in. This can be found in most
any supermarket dairy section.
There are many others, but these are some of my favorites. If you go to
a store like Hickory Farms and ask questions, they will probably offer
samples for you to try.
Rachelle
|
546.12 | Speaking of Brie... | CSSE32::AUBUT | the DUKE makes me PUKE | Thu Nov 19 1987 13:32 | 11 |
|
I was at a party where someone brought a wegde of Brie wrapped in phyllo
dough and then baked it. It was wonderful. I asked about the recipe but
never got the details. I tried to do this once by guessing and it came
out ok, but not like the original. Does anyone know how to do this...do
you wrap individual sheets of phyllo around the brie or can you wrap a
bunch of sheets together....and...do you need to brush anything on the
sheets like melted butter. I also need to know the oven temp and length
of time in oven.
Rachelle
|
546.13 | My absolute favorite! | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:27 | 7 |
| For a delicious nutty taste, try Jarlesberg cheese. It's somewhat
like swiss, but not sharp at all - creamy textured and, well, nutty.
You can't spread it, but it's easy to cut when it's at room temp.
And I think it's part skim, too, so it's one of the lower cholesterol
cheeses.
--Louise
|
546.14 | Would a Hot Topper work?? | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Thu Nov 19 1987 16:51 | 8 |
| re .12
Brie in phyllo sounds like a neat experiment! Yes, you do have
to brush each sheet with butter & I haven't had any luck using more
than 2 at a time. Was it a wheel of cheese? Was it cut before
baking? Seems like it would have to be or the phyllo would crumble,
but maybe if it was, the cheese would melt and ooze out. Check
entries on baklava for working with phyllo.
|
546.15 | Re cheese types | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Thu Nov 19 1987 19:29 | 23 |
| From "The World of Cheese" by Evan Jones (1976):
THE BASIC KINDS OF CHEESE
The four basic classifications under which to consider the numerous variations
of cheeses are: soft, semisoft, firm, and hard. The soft category includes,
first of all, the unripened or fresh types that people know as Cottage Cheese,
Cream Cheese, Pot, or Ricotta, as well as such others as Mysost and
Neufch�tel. More sophisticated soft types ripen naturally in a matter of
days and include Brie, Camembert, and the so-called double creams and triple
creams--cylinder shapes that develop thin downy-white crusts and tender,
almost fluent interiors. Among those technically described as semisoft is the
group ripened with bacteria and yeasts that includes Brick and Munster, and
the group, including Liederkrantz, Limberger, and Port Salut, which requires
surface microorganisms as well. A third semisoft subdivision takes in the
blue-veined cheeses like Roquefort and Gorgonzola. Firm cheeses include the
Cheddars and their English cousins, such as Cheshire and Lancashire, and the
various members of the Caciocavallo family; and they include those having
noticeable holes, like the Swiss products called Emmenthal and Gruy�re, as
well as such new Scandinavian creations as Jarlsberg. Hard cheeses are made
in much the same way but develop a smooth, grainy texture that is
characteristic of grating types called Asiago, Parmesan, Romano, Sapsago,
and Spalen.
|
546.16 | My choices for soft cheeses | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Thu Nov 19 1987 19:39 | 12 |
| By the way, the book in .-1 also has 105 pages of cheeses listed with the
source (cow/sheep/goat/buffalo/...) and a brief description.
My favorites for the soft category are brie, plain or herbed, a triple cream
mushroom cheese called Bon champi, St. Andre, the allouette and rondele
spreads (forgive the spelling), every variety of Ch�vre that I tried in France
and one that comes from Hubbardston, Mass., and a variety of really smelly
cheeses that I wouldn't serve at a party unless everyone knew everyone else
verrry well.
- JP
|
546.17 | faux phyllo | PARROT::GALVIN | Another Grey Area | Fri Nov 20 1987 11:06 | 17 |
| I like to buy brie or boursin studded with peppercorns. Regular
boursin is also very good, but it's full of garlic, which may not
always go over well. Another easy way to "make" spreadable cheeses
is to blend cream cheese with other ingredients. Some I've seen
are caviar, smoked salmon, olives, and crabmeat (not all together).
Add spices to taste.
Re: .12
My mother makes a variation of this, which is simple and delicious.
She wraps small rounds of brie in Pillsbury pop 'n fresh croissant
dough, brushes the outside with egg white, and bakes them according
to the directions on the package. Actually she prefers using a
slightly harder cheese, like gouda, instead of brie, because the
brie gets VERY runny.
Susie
|
546.18 | I got all the details... | CSSE32::AUBUT | the DUKE makes me PUKE | Fri Nov 20 1987 13:22 | 17 |
| Re. 12 Brie wrapped in phyllo....
To answer my own questions....I saw the woman last night and got all the
details....
She used a round of Brie and
wrapped it with 2-3 sheets of phyllo & brushed with melted butter (she
repeated this about 5-4 times)
Put in a preheated 350 degree oven for 15 minutes and serve immediately and
garnish with chunks of French bread, sliced green apple & grapes.
Mnnnnnnn....its a little runny but c'est tres bon!!
Rachelle
|
546.19 | Another experiment! | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Sat Nov 21 1987 08:46 | 6 |
| It must be a sign! I've got half a package of phyllo I've got to
use up, and I know the store has miniature Goudas - about an inch
and a half in diameter - I can just see them on individual plates
with the apple/grape garnish! Thanks!
Terry
|
546.20 | Variation on Brie Wheel | SCOLOX::BROWN | | Wed May 31 1989 13:36 | 12 |
|
re: .12
Brie wrapped in phyllo IS delicious, and I was at a party once where
the hostess offered a DELICIOUS variation!! She baked the wheel of
brie with chopped walnuts and brown sugar covering the top, talk
about sweet and delicious!!! With the wheel was served apples and
stoned wheat crackers. You should try this one sometime!
-Lisa
|
546.21 | How to melt cheddar cheese? | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Tue Apr 18 1995 11:16 | 7 |
| What does it take to get cheddar cheese to melt smoothly? I had a bunch
of shredded left over from a party, and decided to melt it down in some
milk to pour over some sliced potatoes and bake. I couldn't get it to
melt! I put it in a heavy saucepan on very low, added some milk, and
stirred and stirred. It never melted...only softened a bit, but still
was unusable.
Sarah
|
546.22 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue Apr 18 1995 11:29 | 11 |
| Real "cheddar cheese" doesn't melt into sauces very well at all. I've tried
just about everything, and always end up with a lump or lumps of cheddar.
Mildly cheddared cheeses, like Velveeta, and "American Cheese" will do much
better for melting into sauces.
Save the other stuff for melting on top, or making cheddar crisps.
-jp
|
546.23 | try a white sauce base | WMOIS::PAGLIARULO | | Tue Apr 18 1995 12:54 | 11 |
| I've had success melting cheddar cheese into a standard white sauce for
homemade macaroni and cheese.
First make the white sauce (butter, flour, milk and/or cream) then add
the grated or shredded cheddar cheese. The melting may take a bit of time,
but keep stirring. (I use a wisk)
It must have something to do with the chemistry between the roux
(butter/flour) in the white sauce and the cheese.
Kitchen science ;-)
|
546.24 | Would extra fat help? | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Tue Apr 18 1995 15:32 | 8 |
| You know, I wondered if I added it to FAT first, say oil or butter, if
it would loosen up a bit? I added it to skim milk, assuming I would
only need heat to melt it. Does cheddar have a lower fat content than
the softer cheeses like mozzarella?
I have a ton of cheese left over, so I'll try the white sauce too!
Enough for sprinkling and broiling and enough to find the elusive
secret to making a cheddar cream sauce : )
Sarah
|
546.25 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Tue Apr 18 1995 16:17 | 3 |
| Cheddar won't be as smooth as other cheeses, even when fully melted.
It's just a characteristic of the cheese. It does seem to work better
in a thicker base, like veloute.
|
546.26 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue Apr 18 1995 16:43 | 19 |
| Cheddar is very high in fat. The drier/older/sharper, the fattier.
Shredded cheddar freezes well, so you could always store it that way.
Also, you could make cheddar chips:
- cover the bottom of a nonstick(!!!) skillet with shredded cheddar
- heat...
First copious amounts of oil will separate, and the solids will melt and bubble.
Then the solids will start to firm up. At this point, give the mix a little
poke every now and again. When the solids no longer flow, but move like a big
flat pancake, turn them over. After about another 3-4 minutes, remove from the
heat and drain on lots of paper towels. You should be able to break it up into
pieces.
What you will have is a pretty salty cheddar chips. A bit too salty to eat as
is, but great when crumbled over other food, like meatloaf, veggie casserole, or
apple pie!
|
546.27 | PSW, any comments? | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Thu Apr 20 1995 16:59 | 8 |
| > Cheddar is very high in fat. The drier/older/sharper, the fattier.
This doesn't seem right. More fat should make for a "creamier" texture.
Do you really think, say, a block of Parmesan cheese has more fat
than the same weight of Brie?
John
|
546.28 | | TAMDNO::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Thu Apr 20 1995 17:19 | 16 |
| re: .27
>> Cheddar is very high in fat. The drier/older/sharper, the fattier.
>
> This doesn't seem right. More fat should make for a "creamier" texture.
>
> Do you really think, say, a block of Parmesan cheese has more fat
> than the same weight of Brie?
Wait a minute, he didn't say "the drier/older/sharper the cheese the fattier",
he said "the drier/older/sharper the *cheddar* the fattier".
Mind you, I'm hardly an expert, but I find it plausible that as a cheese
ages and dries out it would loose water rather than fat.
-Hal
|
546.29 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Fri Apr 21 1995 08:27 | 14 |
| Re .27
Here is an experiment:
Take 1 oz of regular american cheese (which is a young, mild cheddar), and melt
it in a skillet. After the the moisture evaporates, remove the solid, and
measure the fat.
Then do the same with, say, a 1 year old sharp cheddar.
I'm sure a triple cream brie has more fat than Parmesan. I'd venture a guess,
hoever, that if you let a wheel of brie sit in a warm dry place until it was
hard and dry, and then (after scraping the lifeforms off) compared 1 oz dried
brie to 1 oz fresh brie, the dried brie would have a higher fat content.
|
546.30 | Cheese Ball | OHNO::CASSELLS | Nooke...Just did it! | Tue Apr 25 1995 10:30 | 17 |
| >> I have a ton of cheese left over, so I'll try the white sauce too!
Since it's already shredded perhaps you might like to make a cheese ball.
Assuming you have mild cheddar, mix in a blender equal amounts of
the mild cheddar, a mature cheddar (also shredded) and Philli Cream Cheese
(normal or low fat). Add a small onion and half a red capsicum, both finely
chopped. Add about a teaspoon of Worstershire sauce and mix well. Don't let it
become too mushy. Sprinkle a piece of foil with lots of curry powder
and form the cheese mixture into a ball in the middle. Make sure the ball
is thoroughly coated in curry powder. Wrap the ball with the foil and
it will keep in the fridge.
This is great spread on crakers, but I like it most spread on toast
and put under the grill for a few minutes. Dead simple to make
and everbody tends to rave about it.
Skippy.
|
546.31 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Wed Apr 26 1995 12:40 | 9 |
| Sarah,
I freeze shedded cheese and use it in enchiladas, burritos, or anywhere
else I like fresh shredded cheese.
As for the potatoes, why not poor chili over the baked potatoes and
topwith the shredded cheese? (yum)
meg
|
546.32 | American is chedder? | GRANPA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Mon May 22 1995 17:03 | 11 |
| re:.29
... American cheese is just mild,young Chedder cheese....
is this true? I never really looked into the ingrediants of american
cheese? I just assumed different ingrediants/aging/something, as swiss
cheese/bleu cheese/chedder/etc. all seem to be so very different.
What makes it ironic, is that I have family members that won't eat
chedder (even mild chedder) but love American cheese.... may have just
found another ingrediant that goes un-announced in recipes!
|
546.33 | | TAMDNO::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Mon May 22 1995 17:39 | 14 |
| re: .32
> What makes it ironic, is that I have family members that won't eat
> chedder (even mild chedder) but love American cheese.... may have just
> found another ingrediant that goes un-announced in recipes!
Isn't it terrible having family members with bad taste? (many :-)s )
On a more serious note, I don't know if American cheese is really just
very mild cheddar, but if so your unadventurous family members' position
isn't that inconsistent...many people prefer mild cheddars to sharp ones
(not me, mind you :-).
-Hal
|
546.34 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Tue May 23 1995 01:33 | 11 |
| RE: .29
A triple-cream cheese will be 60% or more fat. Ripe St. Andre, for
example, is almost more like butter in texture and flavor than
cheese.
The reason that harder, more mature cheddar has more fat than softer,
younger cheddar is that it has less moisture (water), and thus more
fat per unit volume or unit weight.
--PSW
|
546.35 | What is???? | COMICS::HAMILTONS | Scott HAMILTON U.K. CSC DTN:833 3538 | Tue May 23 1995 10:08 | 13 |
|
What is `American Cheese'??? Is it that plastic stuff that comes
in slices, sticks, balls, aerosols, pink elephants, also usefull
for patching holes in wall plaster and rust spots on cars (use
Coca-Cola to clean as much of the rust off as possible before
applying the plastic chesse, can be coloured with food dyes to
suit the rest of your cars paintwork)......
From a distant memory they do take mild cheddar and `melt-it-down'
then add a variety of fillers (calcium something-poly-something-chloro-
something-ose).. Damn I wish I could remember exactly what is involved..
Scott, Esq
|
546.36 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue May 23 1995 11:32 | 15 |
| When I was growing up, American Cheese looked, felt and tasted like very mild
cheddar. In New England, it was almost exclusively yellow-white in color. The
most popular brand sold was Land O Lakes.
Then along came Velveeta with its orange colored "pasteurized processed cheese
food". Then the convenience market became big, and manufacturers found that
much of the processed stuff flows under pressure, so they put it in aerosol
cans, and molded it into preformed slices, etc.
Now, it seems that any bland cheese made in the US gets called American Cheese,
although under a microscope, you will see that the label will usually contain a
second line, and the actual name is "AMERICAN CHEESE like food stubstance"
Producers that still make the older style American Cheese, now label it Monterey
Jack. It has much more snob appeal, but it's basically processed mild cheddar.
|
546.37 | thanks! | GRANPA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Fri May 26 1995 12:06 | 19 |
| re:33 - yes, family members with "bad taste" :^) can be a trial...
though it is funny to go someplace, order food with modifications and
watch the reactions - ..."you want AMERICAN cheese on an Italian sub?"
(yuck...) or trying to get a chef's salad with only american cheese.
thanks for the other replies. American cheese, and I'm referring to the
yellow brick type, even my family members haven't sunk to canned cheese
:^) is just a mild chedder.....hmmmmm...that might explain when we get
cheese from a local italian deli, it doesn't "taste" right to some. I
think it's fine (but I get the fresh feta cheese, so after that
anything would be mild, not to mention having to eat it down-wind from
family members since they all complain about the smell!)
Of course, now the dilema is do I tell them and risk them not eating
any cheese again? ....nahhh, I think I'll keep this a secret for now!
thanks again!
janetb.
|
546.38 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Fri May 26 1995 13:57 | 3 |
| OR, I got asked this one a while ago, "You *want* swiss cheese?"
ed
|
546.39 | but do you have any limburger? | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | | Fri May 26 1995 17:57 | 13 |
|
Sorry fresh out of swiss.......
This is a cheese shop isn't it?
oh yes!
Mark
|
546.40 | Cheese strata.... | MROA::DUPUIS | | Wed May 01 1996 09:49 | 4 |
| Looking for recipe for a cheese strata....
Thanks,
Roberta
|
546.41 | This one sounds really good... | NETCAD::DREYER | who wrote the game of love? | Wed May 01 1996 12:41 | 55 |
|
STRATA
This is from "Whole Foods for the Whole Family"
6 to 10 slices whole wheat bread
1 to 2 c. grated Cheddar cheese
2 to 3 c. milk
3 to 6 eggs
1 to 2 t. dry mustard
1 t. paprika
1/2 t. salt
1 t. thyme (optional)
1 t. worcestershire sauce (optional)
OPTIONAL:
Any of the following to total 2 c.:
Cooked chicken, turkey, or ham, sliced
or chopped
Sausage or bacon, browned and drained
Chopped spinach or broccoli, steamed & drained
Sliced mushrooms and onions, sauteed
Arrange half the bread, in slices or
cubes, on bottom of a greased 9x9-inch or
9x13-inch baking dish. Layer thus: half the
cheese, all the meat and/or vegetables, remaining
bread and remaining cheese. Beat milk, eggs,
and seasonings; pour over casserole. Let stand
for 1 hour (or refrigerate, covered, for up to
24 hours). Bake at 350 degrees F. for 45 to
60 minutes, until a knife inserted in the center
comes out clean.
Using more eggs and milk will yield a
custardy texture, while using the smaller amount
results in a "bread quiche."
Bread, cheese, and egg souffles (stratas)
have many virtues. They benefit from long
soaking, especially whole grain or stale bread,
so you can prepare them a day ahead. They use
less expensive egg and milk protein with little
or no meat. With the addition of vegetables,
they are a complete meal. They are attractive,
taste good cold or reheated and even use up
stale bread.
Personal Note: Even though it calls for whole
wheat bread, I know of no reason why one can
not use regular bread, if desired.
Hope this is what you wanted. It seems to be
a really flexible recipe.
Laura
|
546.42 | | MROA::DUPUIS | | Wed May 01 1996 13:47 | 3 |
| Thanks, That was EXACTLY what I was looking for.
Roberta
|