T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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959.1 | Simple/scrumptious appetizer | CIVIC::WINBERG | | Thu Jan 28 1988 11:07 | 8 |
| Heat equal parts Dijon mustard and grape jam. Cut up kielbasa (or
hot dogs), dip in heated mixture . . . and enjoy.
I'd never have believed how good the mustard/jam mixture could be
'til I tried it.
If you like, you can serve it in a chafing dish for a little added
pazzaz -- and to keep it warm.
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959.2 | directory/keyword=appetizer | FDCV16::LAHANAS | | Thu Jan 28 1988 12:33 | 4 |
| I did a "DIRECTORY/KEYWORD=APPETIZER" when I was planning menus
for my last few parties, and got TONS of good ideas.
Give it a shot!
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959.3 | cheese crabbies | FDCV14::DUNN | Karen Dunn 223-2651 | Thu Jan 28 1988 12:52 | 20 |
|
I added one of my favorites in 952.
Alos, here's another
cheese crabbies :
1 jar kraft old english cheese
1 can crabmeat
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1 Tbs mayonaize
1/2 stick margerine
1 pkg english muffins
melt margerine, add to rest of ingredients, mix well. separate muffins
into their halfs, spread mix over the 12 halfs. Cut each half into
quarters, put on cookie sheet
broil until bubbly and slightly brown. will burn fast, watch
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959.4 | Little bread things | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:17 | 11 |
| Mix some mayo and grated parmesan cheese together. Spread on those
little cocktail rye breads. Put a slice, actually 1/4'ed or 1/2'ed,
on the bread and then place strips of your favorite cheese,
criss-crossed on top of the tomatoes. Broil until cheese melts.
These are like little grilled cheese and tomatoes sandwiches but
the parmesan gives it a more zesty flavor. You can get more elaborate
with these by placing a piece of cooked bacon, smoked ham, etc
on them as well. You can make these ahead of time, keep in the
refrigerator covered so the bread won't dry out ,and bake when the
time comes.
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959.5 | Vouch for .1 | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:24 | 11 |
| Re .1 I can vouch for this one - it is good. I have also made
the dipping sauce with mustard and honey. Some gourmet places
carry something called Sweet and Rough mustard which it essentially
honey and mustard and mustard seeds. If you can find it, you don't
even have to mix something up. Kielbasa is great for appetizers
because it is usually pre-cooked so all you need to do it slice
it up and then heat it in the microwave, without water. It seems
to dry out if you don't slice it up first and you don't have to
hold a hot kielbasa to slice it. Put out your dipping sauce, some
horseradish, the kielbasa and some of those little rye cocktail
breads.
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959.6 | Here's one that goes over big! | 19358::MCKAYJ | | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:55 | 11 |
| Try broiled cherry stone clams on the half shell.
Take cherry stone clams and split them in half.
next place 1/3 slice of uncooked bacon on clam.
Place 1 teaspoon of dry shery into each clam sheell along with 2
to 3 drops of tabasco sauce.
place on a cookie sheet and bake at 425 degrees for approx 10 min.
or till bacon is crisp.
is crisp
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959.7 | ..a quickie.. | SALEM::MEDVECKY | | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:21 | 4 |
| ...get some of that party rye bread, put some cheddar cheese and a slice
of pepperoni and pop under broiled until cheese melts
Rick
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959.8 | ,,,cherrystones... | SALEM::MEDVECKY | | Mon Feb 01 1988 11:54 | 17 |
| Re .6....cherrystones on the half shell.....these sounded good so
Friday I bought a bag (4) of cherrystones and proceeded to do this
one.
Well, I dont happen to have a special clam knife....or whatever
it is you need to open clams......Perhaps I should have used a
wood chisel....anyway, with a paring knife I finally got the
four of them opened.....and had this nice big, sore red spot in
the palm of my right hand....
So I proceeded to add the sherry, hot sauce and bacon and cooked
until bacon was done...
Well, I must say this didnt do anything for me.....they were on
the tough side and to be honest, Id rather eat steamers
Rick
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959.9 | Try the micro-wave | SPICE1::MCKAYJ | | Mon Feb 01 1988 14:33 | 7 |
| Rep .8
Rick
I have found that if you place cherry stones in micro wave for
about 1min at a time on high the cherry stones open up enough where
you can put a knife in easily to open (usually 8 cherry stones at
a time)
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959.11 | | MIGHTY::MICHAUD | I have become comfortably numb.. | Thu Feb 11 1988 13:12 | 15 |
|
Scallop and bacon rolls.
Wrap each scallop in a half slice of bacon, use a toothpick to hold
the bacon around the scallop.
Broil it in the oven just until the bacon is cooked.
-----------------------------------------------------
Keilbasa with sweet and sour sauce.
Cut the Keilbasa in 1/2 pieces. Put them all in a casserole and
cover with sweet and sour sauce. Place the keilbasa on the table
near a box of toothpics...
Well, that's the extent of my culinary knowledge....
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959.12 | more kielbasa s/s | DELNI::HANDEL | | Wed Feb 17 1988 16:17 | 19 |
| My recipe for sweet and sour kielbasa - through months of trying:
1 bottle ketchup
1 jar grape jelly
1 jar picalilli
onions
brown sugar
lemon
tabasco
(did I leave anything out?)
maybe a dash of balsamic vinegar
Heat all ingredients together with kielbasa and cook a while.
taste for sweetness/sourness
Add accordingly
What's your favorite kielbasa recipe?
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959.13 | Simple Appetizer | PENUTS::HOGLUND | | Thu Feb 18 1988 13:11 | 5 |
| Soften a package of cream cheese and spead over a round dish leaving
a ring around the edge. Cover the cream cheese with a layer of crab
meat. Cover that with a jar of cocktail sauce. Place some crackers
around the outer rim.
|
959.14 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Apr 26 1988 17:39 | 9 |
| RE: .11 "Scallops broiled with bacon"
I cook the bacon a little bit first, otherwise you have to leave
it under the broiler longer than is necessary for the scallops and
it tends to dry them out. Also, I sometimes cut the strips of bacon
in half so that there is only one thickness of bacon wrapped around
the scallop.
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959.15 | THIS IS MUCH YUMMIER THAN IT SOUNDS ! | DONVAN::MUISE | | Fri Feb 03 1989 12:26 | 17 |
| Chopped onions
Mayo
Saltine crackers
Paprika
Mix chopped onion with mayo
Spread on Saltine crackers
Arrange as many as possible on cookie sheet
Sprinkle with paprika
Broil for a couple of minutes until golden and bubbly
*be careful* the crackers can burn quickly, do not overcook!
This is so simple, and sooooo good!
jacki
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959.16 | Substitute for Kraft Old English Cheese? | SALES::GAIL | | Tue Oct 27 1992 10:21 | 5 |
| Does anyone know exactly what Old English cheese is? Can you
substitute Velveeta for it? It looks like Velveeta or Cheese Whiz.
Thanks,
Gail
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959.17 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Oct 27 1992 11:02 | 5 |
|
I substituted Cheese Whiz for it once. Are you having trouble
finding it?
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959.18 | | SALES::GAIL | | Tue Oct 27 1992 16:38 | 6 |
| No. I'm not having trouble finding the Old English Cheese, but I plan
on making quite a bit of it and it seemed kind of expensive.
Thanks.
Gail
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959.19 | Sharper than Velveeta | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Mon Nov 02 1992 13:15 | 7 |
| Old English Cheese is more of a combination of cheddar and American
cheese flavors, a bit sharper than Velveeta, but you could probably
substitute. I use it in a fondue and it seems to add more flavor and
give a better consistency than Velveeta (for fondue).
Debbie
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959.20 | American Cheese is a cheddar | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Nov 03 1992 07:53 | 2 |
| Technically American cheese is a very mild cheddar. Then it gets pasteurized
and "processed". (I always wondered what sins that disguised?)
|
959.21 | | MANTHN::EDD | When monkeys fly... | Tue Nov 03 1992 09:54 | 8 |
| > (I always wondered what sins that disguised?)
I dunno, but I'm always sceptical about a product that seems to be
required to be labeled as "food". ("Processed American Cheese Food")
Is it really *that* far removed?
Edd
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959.22 | cheese food vs. food | BODICA::BERMAN | | Tue Nov 03 1992 12:04 | 4 |
| I thought cheese food has less fat in it than cheese and is therefore better
for you than cheese. I wouldn't swear to it, though.
Rachael
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959.23 | Pass the cheese flavored grease, please | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Tue Nov 03 1992 12:40 | 7 |
| "Cheese food" just means that it does not meet the government
definition of cheese and therefore cannot be labeled as cheese.
Sometimes the difference can mean that it is lower in fat, but
it can also be labelled :cheese food: for other reasons, like being
made from oil instead of dairy products.
-ellie
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959.24 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Nov 03 1992 16:01 | 14 |
| RE: .22
"Pasteurized process cheese food" is usually made out of scrap ends, bits of
questionable appearance, and other miscellaneous pieces of cheese that would
not be marketable as cheese on their own. These are combined together (the
"processing"), pasteurized to prevent spoilage, then combined with emulsifiers,
artifical coloring, artificial flavoring, etc. so that the resulting product
more or less looks like cheese.
Rather than being better for you than real cheese, I would say the likelihood
is the exact opposite, if what you're looking for is fewer additives. Real
cheese made from skim milk is the way to go if you're trying to cut down fat.
--PSW
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959.25 | Not to continue a tangent, but... | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Wed Nov 04 1992 07:48 | 3 |
| And while we are on the subject... why are many cheese colored orange?? Is
it the result of some natural processes, or is it just a dye added to hide
imperfections?
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959.26 | the tangent goes on | MILE::PRIEST | | Wed Nov 04 1992 09:02 | 14 |
| >And while we are on the subject... why are many cheese colored orange??
>Is it the result of some natural processes, or is it just a dye added to
>hide imperfections?
All the "orange" cheeses in the UK are dyed to that colour. Not to hide
anything, but simply as an early form of marketing. The locals
preferred the colour, or the cheese-maker THOUGHT the locals preferred
the colour, or the cheese-maker wanted to differentiate his cheese from
the cheese made in the next region, or ....
Presumably the original dyes were natural ones - some still are, but
most I guess are now synthetic. In many cases you can buy both dyed and
undyed versions of the same cheese - e.g. Red/White Leicester.
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