T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1351.1 | cheesy-sweet | CLSTR1::MORAN | | Thu Aug 25 1988 16:23 | 19 |
| The first time I tried a fruit dip that my sister makes, I was suprised
to find out what it was made up of.
But it's very easy and VERY good!
All you need is cream cheese and marshmellow fluff. The proportions
are up to you, depending on if you want it cheesier or sweeter.
I usually use a medium package of cream cheese, and likewise, a
medium jar of fluff. Mix together well. Then I cut a pinapple
in half, hollow out half to put the dip in and cut up the rest to
dip. Then arrange on platter, along with some fresh strawberries,
and leave it on a table somewhere where people can find it easily.
And believe me, they find it alright!
Try it, it'll surprise you on it's ease and taste!
Kathleen
|
1351.2 | TV snack | FXADM::THOMAS | | Fri Sep 02 1988 09:47 | 4 |
| How about a peanutbutter, mayonaise and sliced onion sandwich.
My Father and Grandfather got me hooked on this. Great with a cold
glass of beer or cold glass of milk.
|
1351.3 | PB & M | ROBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Fri Sep 02 1988 10:59 | 9 |
| One of my very favorite sandwiches to take fishing is peanut
butter, champagne mustard, and well-done crumbled bacon.
Or, peanut butter, French's mustard, and O & C French Fried Onion
Ring sandwich.
My mouth is watering.
Art
|
1351.5 | More quick sandwich ideas | VIA::GLANTZ | Just a bag of quarks & leptons | Fri Sep 02 1988 13:45 | 16 |
| In case someone thinks you're kidding (about pickles), let's not
forget the peanut butter & pickle sandwich! I used to love them as a
kid. A nice change from PB&J.
But the PB recipes reminded me that in college, when supplies were low
and hungers high (usually in the wee hours), we'd try just about
anything. One of the more popular snacks was the mustard and
mayonnaise sandwich. It wasn't popular because it tasted good, but
because the ingredients were always around. Some people also added
ketchup for a little color. We used to call it "tangy treat". This was
an all-male dorm, in case anyone was wondering. A guy would say to a
woman he was trying to impress "Why don't you spend the night? We can
watch the late movie and snack on some tangy treats." And we call this
"civilization"?
- Mike
|
1351.6 | I deny all knowledge of this. | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Sep 02 1988 17:16 | 13 |
| Ahem. Take one can of tuna, add lemon juice and mayonnaise, and mix.
Prepare one box of Noodles Romanoff according to the package
directions.
Place together in bowl (or the pot the noodles were prepared in).
Stir. Serve.
(If there will be left-overs, keep the tuna and noodles separate, so
the tuna can be kept cold and the noodles can be reheated.)
-- edp
|
1351.7 | | KERNEL::JWILLIAMS | | Tue Sep 06 1988 09:20 | 7 |
| Yeuk, I am sure they all taste delicious but they sure all send
quite disgusting...
When I was a kid, I used to like coming home from school to a plate
of strawberry jam and cheese sandwiches. Ymm.
|
1351.9 | | MYVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Fri Sep 09 1988 14:21 | 17 |
|
When we were kids we used to love Cheese Ketchup and Bologna
sandwiches. NOt too wierd except for the ketchup.
My mother once served us chicken which she coated with
peanut butter and baked - we wouldn't eat it and we've never
let her forget it.
And then there was the time she made pea soup with the
yellow peas. She knew we wouldn't eat it so she added green
food coloring.
And finally, another college favorite : Snotties!!! These
are french fries covered with melted cheese whiz or velveta.
My mom told me that when she was a kid french fries used to
be served with VINEGAR!!!
|
1351.10 | | WHYVAX::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Fri Sep 09 1988 15:06 | 10 |
| Fries with vinegar is common across the pond and, if you'll look
at the ingredient list on your favorite brand of catsup, you'll
find vinegar right up there.
My childhood favorite wierd taste was to put potato chips in
the roll when they gave us tuna salad subs for lunch at school
And I remember a few batches of peanut-butter milkshakes a good
friend and I made. We outgrew that phase pretty quickly.
--Louise
|
1351.11 | fries+vinegar=good | SALEM::STATT | | Fri Sep 09 1988 15:30 | 10 |
| fries and vinegar are pretty common here too I believe. Just walk
up to one of the frie vendors at any of the numerous fairs taking
place here in New England and there with the salt and ketchup will
be a bottle of vinegar. I love em' going to get my fill this weekend.
Anybody else ever have bread + butter + sugar sandwiches as a kid
???
john
|
1351.12 | | NEBVAX::PEDERSON | Keep watching the SKIES! | Fri Sep 09 1988 16:22 | 4 |
| re: .11
YES!!! I've had bread, butter and BROWN sugar sandwiches.....
mmmmm, mmmmm good! Now how 'bout molasses sandwiches?
|
1351.13 | Ronald McDonald would be upset if he knew | MPGS::NEEDLEMAN | Funny...she doesn't LOOK Druish | Fri Sep 09 1988 16:27 | 16 |
| re .10
> My childhood favorite wierd taste was to put potato chips in
> the roll when they gave us tuna salad subs for lunch at school
Yes....that was a favorite of mine too. Potato chips in Tuna/
Egg/Chicken/Turkey salad, mixed right in there or placed right
in the roll.
Also, another favorite of mine was dipping McDonald's french
fries in their shakes....chocolate was my favorite, but vanilla
and strawberry-coated fries were also pretty good (and still are,
only I won't "dip" in public anymore 8-) ).
Marc
|
1351.14 | hot dogs over rice! | STAR::APPELLOF | Kathy Appellof | Fri Sep 09 1988 18:21 | 15 |
| My mother used to make a dish made of:
- a small onion sliced & browned in cooking oil in frying pan
- add a one lb. pkg of hot dogs, sliced vertically
- after the hot dogs are also brown, dump in a small can
of tomato sauce with enough water to thin to a sauce
Let all of this simmer for just a few minutes, and then serve over
steamed rice! Yum Yum!
I had not tasted this in years, and actually made it for my family
a few weeks ago. They loved it.
- Kathy
|
1351.16 | | STAR::OBERLIN | | Mon Sep 12 1988 12:22 | 4 |
| I like my fries with mustard. Yum!
-mrs o
|
1351.17 | Condiments on fries | OBSESS::FITZPATRICK | Dave FitzPatrick HLO2-1/E11 225-7122 | Mon Sep 12 1988 15:46 | 15 |
| re: < Note 1351.16 by STAR::OBERLIN >
> I like my fries with mustard. Yum!
Yeah, I use mustard on 'em, sometimes, too. But only the brown kind.
Yellow doesn't quite make it for me. I also used to put tartar sauce
on fried and pretend I had fried clams. Outgrew that one.
I got a taste for vinegar on fries (chips) and fried fish on a visit
to the UK ten years back. Took me a while of experimenting to relize
that you should use malt vinegar. Normal cider vinegar is much too
sour and overpowering.
D=
|
1351.18 | tartar'd fries | DONVAN::PEGGY | Y.B.NORMAL?? | Mon Sep 12 1988 16:42 | 2 |
| re:17
I still like tartar sauce on my fries.
|
1351.19 | could NOT resist.... | SKITZD::WILDE | Time and Tide wait for Norman | Tue Sep 13 1988 14:53 | 22 |
| Small meatballs made with lots of parsley, garlic, diced onion, and half
beef, half pork....brown really well in pan. Put in a casserol with
apricot or peach halves in heavy syrup, retaining approx. 1/2 cup syrup.
mix 1 and 1/2 teaspoon cornstarch into r�etained syrup and then stir into
casserol. Bake until everything is hot and bubbly and the meatballs are
glazed. Serve over rice or noodles....don't laugh, they loved it!
re: P BUTTER AND PICKLES - it is only good with dill pickle chips, and
SMOOTH PB...8^}
re: vinegar on fries - yesss....but you haven't lived until you've tried
Hidden Valley Ranch salad dressing on TOP of the fries and vinegar.
Serious comfort food here.
re: fries and melted velveeta - you DID mean the hot mexican velveeta,
didn't ya? 8^}
mexican velveeta is also good over scrambled eggs, stuffed in a baked
potato, and poured over a hamburger patty...
I'm hungry...
|
1351.20 | Miracle ham casserole | WHYVAX::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Tue Sep 13 1988 16:09 | 25 |
| Couldn't resist entering this one here, though I'll keyword it
properly.
Miracle Ham
1/2 lb ham, cubed or julienned 2-3 Tbsp Miracle Whip
Assorted veggies, diced or 1 Tbsp spicy brown mustard
julienned to match ham salt pepper and garlic to taste
(I used onions, sweet 1 tsp cornstarch
peppers, and a 1/2 ripe ALL ABOVE blended with 1 cup
garden surplus tomato, water
and some green onions and chives.)
Cooked noodles - twists are good.
Put a tsp or two oil in a skillet. Cook onion until soft. Add
tomato and ham, then pepper. Pour sauce over and cook until thick.
Add green onions and chives and toss. Put in a casserole. Stir
in your noodles. Voila!
This dish, believe it or not, disappeared so quickly there was none
left for today's lunch. The taste was not wierd, as you might
expect, but more like one of the more time-consuming mustard sauced
dishes, and it took only 10 minutes to put together.
--Louise
|
1351.21 | P.B. and Catsup? | MCIS2::CORMIER | | Wed Sep 14 1988 14:02 | 5 |
| I heard the ultimate Yuck this morning - Peanut butter and catsup
dip!
Sarah
|
1351.22 | Thats spanish rice, isn't it??? :-)) | MYVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Wed Sep 14 1988 17:29 | 44 |
|
Re: Hotdogs over rice!!
My mother has a similar recipe that she calls "Spanish
Rice Pronto". Its quite good and I still make it.
She also has a recipe called "Frankfurts and Noodles"
which I make on occasion. The recipes follow...
Karen
Spanish Rice Pronto
5 frankforts, sliced
2 medium onions, sliced
1 Green pepper, chopped (optional)
2 C Minute Rice
2 C hot water
3-8 oz cans tomato sauce
1-1/2 tsp salt
dash pepper
3/4 tsp mustard
Start browning onion and pepper in 1/4 C bacon drippings or in oil. Add
frankforts and then rice. Cook and stir over high heat until lightly browned.
add remaining ingredients. Mix well. Bring quickly to boil, reduce heat, and
simmer uncovered for 5 minutes.
Frankfurts and Noodles
4 C egg noodles
2 C sliced onions
2 small peppers chopped
1 C chopped celery
2-3 franks per person
1 large can tomatoes
2-8 oz cans tomato sauce
Cook noodles. Meanwhile brown onions, peppers, celery and frankfurts. Add to
cooked noodles along with tomatoes and tomato sauce. Season with celery salt,
seasoned salt, pepper to taste.
|
1351.23 | mashed potato salad | DOOBER::WILDE | Time and Tide wait for Norman | Thu Sep 15 1988 20:31 | 9 |
| I learned this from a southerner - a REALLY southern southerner - so I'm
willing to believe this is regional....Mashed Potato Salad
Mix mashed potatos (plain smashed, cooked, cooled potatos) with mayonaise
to taste. Add diced sweet pickle, diced hard boiled egg, diced onion,
and diced celery to taste. Season with salt, pepper, and paprika.
It's really quite good, but a little surprising.
|
1351.24 | | CNTROL::STOOKER | | Fri Sep 16 1988 16:15 | 6 |
| re .23 Mashed Potato Salad
I grew up in Charleston, S.C. and this was the only way my mom served
potato salad. Only difference was we used diced dill pickle instead
of sweet pickle.
|
1351.25 | moms potato salad | MYVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Mon Sep 19 1988 10:38 | 13 |
|
RE: .24 Diced dill pickles in potato salad!!
Yum!! This is the way my mom does it. The potato salad is
close to mashed too. She peels and cooks the potatoes, then
cuts into large chunks, then mixes in chopped green pepper,
diced onion, diced dill pickles, seasonings, and mayonaise.
In the process of mixing, it gets kinda mashed.
Delicious! I think I'm going to have to make some soon.
Karen
|
1351.26 | pb and tarter | CSG001::SCHOFIELD | | Mon Sep 19 1988 12:06 | 4 |
| A friend of mine eats Peanut Butter and Tarter Sauce sandwiches.
Suppose thats rates up there with pb and mayo.
Gag. I don't even put mayo in tuna. Just the thought. G-A-G!
|
1351.27 | | ELMO::MARCOUX | | Tue Sep 20 1988 14:45 | 7 |
|
I have a friend who has a friend that has a friend whose weakness
is Oreo cookies seperated and spead with "Gorton" then reassemled.
YECHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
RONM
|
1351.29 | Hmm, yummy, Schmaltz | AKOV11::JOSBACHER | Tastes Great! Less Filling! | Tue Sep 20 1988 15:36 | 15 |
| My preferred low-cholesterol, diet meal is Schmaltz on Bread.
Schmaltz is lard cooked with apple chunks and sauteed onion bits
and then cooled.
The meal consists of <your favorite> bread with Schmaltz spread on it
<to your favorite thickness> with salt sprinkled <your favorite way> on
it during <your favorite season>.
My favorites are "rye," "not too much," "liberally" and "winter."
The low-cholesterol diet part of the meal is before you start.
Frank_who_is_known_for_his_Mar|Vegemite_on_Bread_too_and_has_such_
low_blood_pressure_that_he's_not_worried...yet.
|
1351.30 | Yes, very good on rye | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike | Tue Sep 20 1988 17:49 | 8 |
| > Schmaltz is lard [...]
I thought lard was usually pork fat, which wouldn't be too kosher, and
I thought schmaltz was typically found in Jewish cooking. In any case,
in our family, schmaltz is made from rendered chicken fat seasoned
with onions. No apples. Incidentally, I noticed rendered chicken fat
in near the bacon at the Triple-A market in Acton. It wasn't called
schmaltz, and I didn't notice if it had been flavored.
|
1351.31 | Gorton | ROBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Wed Sep 21 1988 11:33 | 20 |
| Gorton in this case (I think) refers to a Canadian French meat thingy. I
just sat here trying to come up with a better word than meat thingy and
couldn't.
Anyway, gorton (pronounced GORR-TAWN') is made from ground pork which is
cooked in a large pot. You boil it with grated onions, salt, pepper, and
ground cloves. While it's still hot you pour it into a loaf pan and
refrigerate it. The next day you either remove the loaf from the pan or
slice it right in there. It's a sandwich meat; you slice it 1/4" to 3/8"
think, or you just pile rough chunks of it on the bread. It has the
constistency and look, I guess, of broken-up meatloaf. In any case,
catsup OR mustard compliment it very nicely.
It's not for someone on a low fat diet, as it's the solidified fat which
keeps it together. But it's delicious. My grandmother made it, taught it
to my mother, who taught it to my wife. It's a basic staple in my house,
from Fall on. (In the old days they only killed pigs after the first hard
frost, I think.)
Art
|
1351.32 | A Yiddish word for Pork Lard? Oy! Gevalt!! | SSGBPM::KENAH | Limerence isn't enough | Wed Sep 21 1988 12:48 | 6 |
| In any good kosher deli, you'll find schmaltz -- it's rendered
chicken fat. It sure in hell isn't a pork product!
I mean, really!
andrew
|
1351.34 | | DSTEG::HUGHES | | Wed Sep 21 1988 14:06 | 8 |
| I grew up on Gorton, we called it pork scrap. My mother would put
it in a bowl (after cooking) and refigerate. When she served it she
would invert the bowl onto a platter. One of my brother's girlfriends
that never had it before thought it looked like jellied birdseed.
My mother still liked her!
Linda
|
1351.35 | speck | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike | Wed Sep 21 1988 14:08 | 10 |
| BTW, this discussion reminds me of a deadly snack my father used to
eat until he got a look at his cholesterol count. His family is
Hunagarian and this is apparently popular there and in other parts of
eastern Europe. It's called "speck" (sp? - pronounced "shpeck") and is
cubes of pure white beef fat rolled in paprika. It's very tasty, and
is one food where the quality of the paprika really makes a
difference. My father would accept only imported Hungarian sweet
paprika, which could be bought at "Paprika Weiss" in NY. As much as I
claim to ignore the bad effects of a high-cholesterol diet, I don't
have the nerve to eat this too often.
|
1351.36 | bacon, onion, gravy sandwich | SKITZD::WILDE | Time and Tide wait for Norman | Wed Sep 21 1988 16:04 | 8 |
| You want cholesterol? My grandfather (the german one) used to make
a sandwich by frying approx. 6 to 8 slices bacon nice and crisp -
then he would fry onion slices in the bacon fat until nice and tender,
stir in some flour, and then some beef broth (just a little) to make
a thick gravy. The sandwich was open-faced toast, well mayonaised, with
the bacon strips on top, covered with the onion/gravy mixture. I know, this
doesn't sound good, but it really is nice with some nice german beer on a cold
night.
|
1351.37 | sounds familiar to me!!!!!!! | DNEAST::TURCOTTE_PAU | | Thu Sep 22 1988 08:40 | 12 |
|
REF 31
Hi, what you described sounds to me like creton, roll the crrreton.
It is really good used like butter on toast in the AM.
Most grocery stores have it in the meat department next to the pork.
Homemade is much better though.
have a hoppy day
froggy
|
1351.38 | Creton | NAC::L_WILLIAMS | | Thu Sep 22 1988 09:54 | 10 |
| re: -1
I agree with you that it sounds like "creton". It is very popular
in Quebec.
Can you tell me which grocery stores you are referring to? (which
area?) I live in Mass. and have never seen it around here.
Lorraine
|
1351.40 | PB & CW (Country/Western?) | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Tue Sep 27 1988 13:25 | 26 |
| OK, I read through all 39 replies before mentioning....
Peanut butter and Cheez Whiz sandwiches (lunch box standard), or
peanut butter and drained crushed pineapple.
Boy, our moms knew how to stretch peanut butter, didn't they!
Re: "Speek" - I used to have a boyfriend, who, when we went camping
would get a couple pounds of sliced beef marrow bones from the butcher
and a loaf of fresh bread from the bakery. Then he'd put the bone
on a stick and roast over the fire then let it drip onto the bread
and eat the bread. He called this "speek" but I didn't hang around
long enough to find out for sure!
Another friend of mine makes a "salad" by tearing up Romaine lettuce,
sprinking on a little bit of sugar and serving with a lemon wedge.
At first he apologized for ad-libbing with this when he was out
of the normal salad greens, but now that he's getting raves, it has
turned into "Steve's Nouvelle Salade"!
Another comfort food - SOS! My mom's version is basically fried
hamburger and onions in white sauce served over boiled potatoes,
but there are some wintery days when that's *all* I want. Luckily
it usually coincides with the days my husband works late!
Terry
|
1351.41 | No sprinkles | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Sep 27 1988 18:15 | 11 |
| Nouvelle salad, eh? Mom was giving us lettuce with sugar on it thirty
years ago...
I was also fond of taking half a cucumber, hollowing it out, filling
the hollow with French dressing, and eating it like an ice cream cone.
Nowadays, of course, I eat a balanced diet (of Buffalo wings and
bleu cheese dip and beer), but it's enjoyable to think back on the
quaint family dishes of olden days!
-b
|
1351.42 | | EMASA2::SOKOLOWSKI | | Wed Sep 28 1988 12:14 | 7 |
| I ALSO HAD A MOM THAT SERVED THIS LETTUCE AND SUGAR SALAD BUT
OURS INCLUDED VINEGAR POURED OVER THE TOP!!!
I JUST INTRODUCED THIS CONCOCTION TO MY 8 YEAR OLD AND SHE LOVED
IT - OF COURSE IT WAS EVEN BETTER WHEN SHE FOUND OUT IT WAS
GRAMMA'S RECIPE.
|
1351.43 | cookies and juice, yummmm | HPSRAD::MYERS | | Mon Oct 03 1988 14:39 | 6 |
| When I was a little kid and I came home from school, my favorite
snack wasn't chocolate chip cookies and milk, but chocolate chip
cookies and orange juice!
I used to love to dip the cookies in the juice and eat them. It
would make the cookies very tangy.
|
1351.44 | more peanut combos | AKOV12::SILVERIA | | Tue Oct 04 1988 16:40 | 6 |
| I'm not sure if it was my mid-west upbringing or the fact that my
parents grew up during the depression but a lot of these combos
sound familiar. A few of my favorites: grilled peanut butter and
jelly, peanut butter and maple syrup sandwich, a salad made of diced
bananas topped with a dressing made with mayo and milk, sprinkled
with chopped peanuts - yum, think I'll give mom a call tonite!
|
1351.45 | Northern Vermont's liquid gold | LYMPH::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Tue Oct 04 1988 21:28 | 10 |
| >> peanut butter and maple syrup sandwich
There is nothing that tastes better except maybe leaving out the
peanut butter for a simple maple syrup on home-made whole wheat.
From my Dad I learned to enjoy a small cup of syrup, sipped as if
it were a cordial.
I was a little kid on a northern Vermont farm during the depression,
and then during the war we used maple syrup and soft sugar in cereal,
coffee, etc. So my perversions are, I hope, understandable.
|
1351.46 | Haven't seen this one yet. | CRETE::DAIGNEAULT | | Mon Oct 10 1988 17:58 | 7 |
| My mother use to give use cream cheese and jelly sandwich for lunch.
Another favorate was lettce sandwich with mayo.
Sandy d.
|
1351.47 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon Oct 17 1988 06:27 | 4 |
| Pork sausage with maple syrup its just not the same without it.
-j
|
1351.49 | Things just keep getting weirder! | PENUTS::CIMICS | | Fri Oct 21 1988 16:27 | 65 |
|
.11 - I love Bread Butter & Sugar! Try it sometime with cinamon &
sugar!
.10 - When I was younger, dunking McDonalds french fries in your
shake was the ONLY way to eat them.
Now a days, I just put them on my hamburger!
.47 - I forgot to mention it in my last reply, but Bacon isn't the
same without maple syrup either
Now for some new wacky treats....
My all time favorite to this day is Chips & Ketchup! Whenever
I make a sandwich, I pour some ketchup on the side of my plate
for chip dunking. I LOVE it - my family thinks im nuts.
Another favorite in my family is Chip Sandwiches. Just pile
a bunch of chips (preferably "Ripples") between 2 pieces of
white bread and eat!
Anyone ever try ketchup on spaghetti when you were out of sauce?
Now this one is kinda crazy - "JEMICH" (pronounced Jem-ich)
This dish was invented about 9 years ago by my sister's friend
JE-nnifer and my sister MICH-elle. (get it!)
Here are the directions:
Ingredients
-----------
Ham
Balone
Hotdogs
Hamburg
Cheese
(any other sandwich meat you can find)
Butter
Tomato Sauce
Salt & Pepper
Directions:
Take meat and chop up into small chuncks or slices. Saute'
in a frying pan with butter until brown. Add Tomato Sauce,
and seasonings to taist. Cook for 5 min. on medium heat.
Lay slices of cheese over mixture put a lid on the pan and
remove from heat.
TA DA! Your done. Now pour into a bowl and eat with a spoon!
(Yuuuuuccccckkkkkkk)
I know I've got more, but this is enough for now.
Happy eating
Sheila
|
1351.50 | The only way to eat tunafish | CECV03::HACHE | Shout Daughter of Jerusalem! Zec 9:9 | Fri Oct 28 1988 13:22 | 14 |
|
The only way to eat tuna fish is this:
Get squishy white bread...like wonder bread
make a batch of tuna fish with LOTS of mayonaise
Put down a layer of mayo, a layer of sweet (bread and butter) pickles
plenty of tuna fish and top it with lots of potato chips (Ruffles
sour cream and onion work great!) and then another piece of bread
with mayo.
Talk about comfort food! My sisters and I still call each other on the
phone and eat tuna fish sandwiches together!
|
1351.51 | Peanut butter on pancakes | CSC32::A_SALE | | Fri Nov 04 1988 18:34 | 7 |
| Someone previously mentioned peanut butter and maple syrup sandwiches.
A variation of this one that I grew up with is peanut butter on
pancakes topped with maple syrup. Yummy! That was the only way
my mom would eat pancakes, French toast, or waffles. I even found
them this way in a restaurant here in Colorado.
Addie
|
1351.52 | Maple Syrup Scrambled Eggs | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Mon Nov 07 1988 09:29 | 7 |
| When I was in college, at breakfast the cafeteria would put your
scarmbled eggs and your french toast on the same plate. The maple
syrup would inevitably get all over your eggs, to the point where
for me and many of my friends, we would put maple syrup on our eggs
regardless of whether we were also having french toast.
The looks that I would get from my parents during mid-semester breaks.
|
1351.53 | icecream and pretzels | RDVAX::ERPTEMP | | Wed Nov 16 1988 16:49 | 11 |
| I agree with a few of you...the only way to eat tuna is with chips
right in the sandwich.
I used to love Vanilla Icecream with Pretzels...its the only way
that I would eat Vanilla Icecream.
And for something incredibly sweet my mom and I used to combine
Hersheys Syrup, butter and sugar in a bowl and just cream together
until smooth..yum.
Linda
|
1351.55 | Strange but YUMMY! | BRAT::PARSHLEY | | Thu Nov 17 1988 16:03 | 27 |
|
Boy, there sure are some different/strange things in here.. However,
I'm sure we all have had our share of "experimenting" with various
combinations.. Here are a few of mine, which came from the influence
of my father, who I swear has't the weiredest taste buds on this
side of the mississippi; (Also, might I say I do recall trying all
of these with him, and of course continuing to eat them now as an
adult. I also, cannot help to recall the moment when we would put
together these things, each related to a activity we would do together.
1) Sardines on Saltine cracker sandwiches.. (This was kite flying
snacks).
2) Pickled pig feets with saltines (This was a fishing off a bank
snack.)
3) P. Butter sandwiches, with as much peanut butter was we wanted
and as many slices of bread as we wanted and then flaten them
down as much as we could. (This one always required a quart of
milk on hand.) This was a "Watching TV" snack.
4) A package of saltines crushed while still in the package and
dumped in (usually) a mixing bowl, and cover it all with milk.
(We would eat this while we play cribbage together)
My mother would sit and watch us and not try a thing and just make
faces at us.. Oh, well her loss, I still like all of the above.
|
1351.56 | | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Mon Nov 21 1988 07:17 | 7 |
| The ice cream and pretzels reminded me of an old favorite I haven't had in
years. Kathy John's, an ice cream parlor near UConn, used to sell a cone of
icecream rolled in lightly salted cashews. My flavor was blueberry
cheesecake ice cream.
- JP
|
1351.57 | | NEBVAX::PEDERSON | DITSY to the nth degree | Mon Nov 21 1988 10:58 | 8 |
| Just thought of entering this one, since I ordered it
at a sub shop Friday nite:
Tuna sub with *the works* PLUS grilled onions and lots of
hot peppers!
You haven't lived till you've had one!
|
1351.58 | ANOTHER VARIATION ON TUNA | SKITZD::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Mon Nov 21 1988 11:16 | 7 |
| Fry bacon slices real crisp and drain well. Toast your favorite kind of
bread. Make a tuna salad with lots of diced cucumber (no seeds) and
diced spanish onion. Spread mayo on the toast, heap on the tuna salad,
and top with bacon slices. Eat.
the above may be made with cheese as well - but that is not considered
quite "right" and is assumed to be a "city-slicker" option.
|
1351.59 | Cottage Cheese | GUCCI::JBROWN | | Mon Nov 21 1988 15:37 | 8 |
| When I was growing up, Mom would always make chicken pot pies
(the frozen kind)(heated) and serve them with cold cottage cheese.
Another favorite was black-eyed peas w/ cottage cheese
Also Spaghetti, Fried Chicken, Applesauce, German Potato Salad,
Italian Bread & Onion Rings. You have to eat this all together.
It's a family tradition.
|
1351.60 | | TULA::JBADER | Who knew!? | Sat Nov 26 1988 20:34 | 3 |
| Cottage cheese, green chile, purple onion chopped fine..
-positively yum!-
|
1351.62 | pretzels in tomato juice | VLSBOS::WALKER | | Fri Dec 02 1988 10:03 | 10 |
| One of my favorites was a tall glass of cold tomato juice with
pretzels. It is best to throw a handfull of miniature pretzels
or pretzel pieces in and eat them with a spoon (like cereal).
It's best to throw only a few pretzels at a time so they don't
get a chance to get soggy...........mmmmmmm.....a "watch t.v."
snack.
Lynn
|
1351.63 | A bloody mary combo | RUTLND::KCAMPBELL | | Mon Feb 06 1989 12:46 | 7 |
| The best tasting Bloody Mary combination I've had is not with
celery, .... it's with a stick of pepperoni!!!!
Talk about DELICIOUS!!!!! Oh, and don't forget lots of
horseradish!
Kath
|
1351.64 | V8 --> Bloody Mary | MARCIE::HOGLUND | | Fri Feb 10 1989 14:55 | 3 |
| re:63
Use V8 instead of tomato juice for Bloody Mary.
|
1351.65 | Stranger and Stranger | ICS::SINIAWSKI | You might, rabbit, you might..... | Thu Mar 09 1989 10:46 | 16 |
| re: 49
I can't eat hamburgers without my french fries on top!!
re: .55
Sardines on Saltines are great -- try adding onions with that also
I also have pigs feet on Saltines too! It makes my roommate sick.
Now for my own --- An onion sandwich
Just Slice an yellow onion and add some italian salad dressing put
it all on bread. Yummm.
Christina
|
1351.66 | Don't blame me. I didn't design this one. | FSHQA1::JFERGUSON | Always smilin' | Thu Mar 09 1989 11:44 | 3 |
| Try a combination of apple and celery juice. Yummy.
Judy
|
1351.67 | combination of .21 and .49 | ISLNDS::COLELLA | I'll start procrastinating tomorrow! | Tue Mar 28 1989 13:26 | 16 |
|
A friend of mine in college was famous for doing weird things with
her food. She would put a piece of cake in a bowl and pour milk
over it, saying "Well, I like cake and milk! What's the difference
how you eat it??" The grossest thing she ever did was right after
an Organic Chemistry exam: a peanut butter, ketchup, and potato
chip sandwich!! Even she felt sick afterwards!!
Another college buddy ate spaghetti and ketchup! She says it's
great and swears she'll never make "real" spaghetti sauce.
Oh well, I've been known to dip tangerine slices in Grey Poupon
mustard........
Cara
|
1351.68 | Caramel/Cheese Corn | POBOX::HEIN | | Thu May 04 1989 18:40 | 8 |
| I don't know if this one has come up since I didn't read all replies
but a delicious combination and a very popular one in Chicago is
a bag of 1/2 cheese popcorn and 1/2 caramel popcorn. Truly divine.
The popcorn shops off state street sell it this way as so many people
ask for it.
re: -<combination of .21 and .49>- I also had roomates (two of them)
who did the spagetti and catsup think. Yucko!
|
1351.70 | oysters and raspberries | MYRTLE::HUISH | Life is a Cabernet ... | Wed May 17 1989 09:21 | 13 |
|
we have a local restaurant who serves oysters with a raspberry sauce.
another surprising combination was strawberries with pink peppercorns
the strawberries were flambed in a sweet liquor type of mixture
and the peppercorns were added and gave the whole mixture a nice
piquancy (I may have invented a word here - it doesn't mater though
as i have invented syntax for compilers in the past and survived
by correcting it).
pete
|
1351.71 | Chocolate Gravy | BSS::NOTTINGHAM | | Thu Jun 08 1989 19:19 | 10 |
| Well, my grandmother grew up in East Texas (near Arkansas) and Sunday
morning breakfast at her house was never complete without the chocolate
gravy for the biscuits. It's a little sweeter and a little thinner
than chocolate pudding - Sausage and biscuits aren't the same without
it.
My mother makes wonderful salmon patties and she liked them with
white Karo syrup on top - sounds awful, but I can't eat salmon
patties without it.
|
1351.72 | ... and mole | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Fri Jun 09 1989 09:37 | 4 |
| Hmm, that reminded me instantly of the Mexican mole sauce - a spicy
chocolate sauce not at all considered sweet. Mole certainly fits the
description (for most Northeasterners, at least) of an unusual flavor
combination. Mmmm, good.
|
1351.73 | karo on salmon wins! | BENTLY::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Fri Jun 09 1989 20:17 | 5 |
| Whoa....I can handle the mole', but I'm not up for karo on salmon patties...
This one gets the "wierdest" prize for this year..8^}
But then, my peanut butter and dill pickle sandwiches are seldom appreciated
by other gourmets...
|
1351.74 | Don't forget the pickles | TOLKIN::ELLIOTT | | Wed Jun 21 1989 18:49 | 22 |
|
I haven't heard of anyone eating mayonnaise & pickle sandwiches
yet..... I think I'll have one when I get home.... Or cucumber &
mayo on pumpernickel bread, toasted.... And there's only one way
to eat french fries, with ketchup & mayo mixed together... Yummy
ferrrrr surrrrrre...... Oh & tartar sauce with fried onion rings
has got to be the only way to enjoy onions..... Wow I'm getting
hungry just thinking of all this good food..
I always put potato chips & pickles on my tuna fish sandwiches..
No white bread will do when the sandwich is that good....
***** DEADHEAD LEFTY *****
|
1351.75 | feeling impish this morning... | ODIHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Jun 22 1989 06:26 | 14 |
|
ah yes pickles...
but do you mean pickled onions (which is the default in Britain),
or pickled Gherkins, or...?
only joking, but this is very much a matter of the culture of the
writer, and pickles with tuna fish is a personal favorite, but then
of course I mean pickles, not cucumber in vinegar :-) and I actually
prefer pickled herring to the tuna but thats another story.
/. Ian .\
|
1351.76 | | ODIHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Jun 22 1989 06:28 | 5 |
|
Incidentally in parts of Yorkshire (northern england) strawberry
jam is frequently spread on fried fish...
/. Ian .\
|
1351.79 | Not true... | HOTAIR::SIMON | Hugs Welcome Anytime! | Wed Jun 28 1989 19:06 | 11 |
| Re: .77
Not entirely true about "only in England". I had some fish with
Strawberry jam on it at the Greenhouse in Harvard square once.
The fish was sauteed rather than fried but the flavor was pretty
interesting (and good). It would have been better had I not been
paged 6 times during the meal but that's a price one pays for being
dedicated (what a crock, huh?).
Denise
|
1351.80 | How about hot fudge sundaes and fries? | DOCTP::FARINA | | Fri Oct 13 1989 20:55 | 31 |
| Boy, did this note bring back a lot of memories! Bread, butter, and
sugar sandwiches; bologna, cheese, and catsup sandwiches; tuna fish and
potato chip sandwiches; saltines and milk; wow!
There are a few that weren't mentioned, though. Like graham crackers
and milk for breakfast (crushed in a bowl); leftover rice and butter
with warm milk and sugar for breakfast; creamed tuna fish with mashed
potatoes and peas. This last one must be made with a medium white
sauce (using 2% milk), with the tuna warmed in the sauce. Then make a
"well" in the mashed potatoes, put your peas in the well, and pour the
creamed tuna over the top (like a volcano!). For me, *that's* comfort
food!
Oh, yes, I mustn't forget hot fudge sundaes with mint chocolate chip
ice cream, served with salty french fries and catsup. Not only
comfort food, but PMS food as well!
My roommate still loves this one her father used to prepare (it makes
me gag to think about it!). Take a *tall* glass, rip up a piece of
white bread into the glass, add two soft boiled eggs, butter and salt.
Eat with an iced tea spoon. She still eats them, but only if her
father makes them for her. These, by the way, are called "Googies."
With regard to the mashed potato salad: Do you eat that cold? YUK!!
But then, I don't like regular potato salad, either (one of the few
foods I can't eat cold).
Well, my stomach's growling. I think I'll go home and make some
creamed tuna!!!
Susan
|
1351.81 | It's Gigi! | WMOIS::D_SPENCER | | Mon Oct 16 1989 13:41 | 14 |
| Re. .80
I have found memories of eating a piece of soft bread, torn up and
mixed with a poached egg, except in our house it's not called Googie,
its called Gigi. I assume this is derived from a child's pronunciation
of the word "eggy". Anyways, it goes back to at least my grandmother,
and my 14 month old son loves it, too! To each his own (personnally,
ice cream & french fries makes me gag!).
Oh, yeah, I like mayo on corned beef hash (this one makes my husband
gag!).
Deb
|
1351.82 | Peanut butter family | CSG002::SCHOFIELD | | Mon Oct 16 1989 14:08 | 15 |
| I used to eat Peppermint Stick ice cream with Black pepper on it.
(What the heck, it's the same name, must be tasty!)
In my family, we were practically weaned on Peanut butter. Growing
up we all (except Dad, who thought we were gross) ate peanut butter
on our cereal. (Just wipe a glob on the side of the bowl and scoop
some while your scooping cereal!) My big brother used to put sugar
on top of the glob of pb. Mom eats peanut butter on Ice Cream
(preferably Maple Walnut). The same brother still makes pb-cookie
sandwiches. You get two choc. chip cookies (which must NOT be browned,
they have to be bendable) and put pb inbetween them to make a sandwich.
My sister-in-law (same brother) - she definately married into the
right family - actually likes pickles and peanut butter......
beth
|
1351.83 | | RHODES::HACHE | Pulling Out the Stops | Tue Oct 17 1989 10:35 | 7 |
|
How about a peanut butter and bannana sandwich? Open faced, under
the broiler for a minute. MMMMMmmmmmm.
dmh
|
1351.84 | And Bacon, too. | DIXIE1::WITMAN | Mickey Mouse FOREVER | Tue Oct 17 1989 10:44 | 5 |
| I've tried peanut butter, banana and bacon. Next time I'll try it open
face and grilled.
Sounds good to me.
|
1351.85 | | NECVAX::OBRIEN_J | at the tone...... | Tue Oct 17 1989 10:55 | 5 |
| My 5-year old had me peel a banana 3-quarters of the way down and
then put the pb on it. Do you know how had it is to put pb on a
banana. I thought it looked pretty disgusting, she said it was
delicious and ate it all.
|
1351.86 | Peanutbutter Banana Treat | RHODES::HACHE | Pulling Out the Stops | Tue Oct 17 1989 13:11 | 8 |
| Take the whole banana out of the peel, slice it lengthwise, spread
peanut bu one half, sprinkle with raisins, sunflower seeds, mini-
chocolate chips, coconut, nuts, or anything else, drizzle with honey,
maple syrup, sweetened condensed milk, chocolate sauce/syrup etc.
put the other half of the banana on top, wrap in saran wrap and
put in the refridgerator to firm up, and serve.
dm
|
1351.87 | peanut butter and ... | LEDS::BLODGETT | The fjords are calling me... | Tue Oct 17 1989 13:23 | 5 |
| I get a lot of funny looks when I make/eat these but they're really
good.
Wheat toast with peanut butter and bacon.
Or another one, celery with peanut butter.
|
1351.88 | Weird food -- good practice? | DOCS::DOCSVS | | Tue Oct 17 1989 13:51 | 16 |
| Celery with peanut butter and soft-boiled eggs on toast were part
of my childhood, too!
My college cafeteria used to serve a peanut butter and banana salad
for lunch, and it was great. Slice the bananas and mix with peanut butter.
Add chopped walnuts and mix. Great stuff, and an amazingly good
source of protein and energy when you have fifteen minutes between
classes for lunch.
My father and brother were probably the kings of the gross food
combinations. My dad likes eating leftover baked beans with potato
chips (Boston nachos??). My brother liked peanut butter and sardine
sandwiches when he was little, but now he's a culinary school graduate.
(There's some irony there...)
--Karen
|
1351.89 | PMP Sammies | DYO780::NORMAN | Teri Norman DYO | Wed Oct 18 1989 15:48 | 9 |
| As a kid I use to beg for Peanut Butter, Mayonaise and Pickle Relish
sandwiches. As an adult I just tell my kids about this mess to gross
them out.
I fix my kids the egg in bread thing and call them Birds nest's.
I learned both of the above from my Mom.
--Teri
|
1351.90 | Other Interesting Combinations | SWAPO::WAGNER | | Thu Oct 26 1989 18:41 | 23 |
| Boy this got me thinking what strange combinations I eat and I thought
of a few that haven't been mentioned:
bread, butter and radish sandwich (best when radishes are homegrown)
peanutbutter mixed with light Karo syrup
potatoe chips with cottage cheese as the dip
peanutbutter, banana and honey (must use chunky peanutbutter)
cucumbers with salt and vinegar
cottage cheese and tomatoes
My mom always put ketchup in her chicken noodle soup which grossed
out the rest of us. I also remember when I was sick as a child,
when you started feeling better you got either toast with sugar
and cinnamon (which I still use now) or graveyard stew - which is
toast with butter and scalded milk poured over it. I know it sounds
awful but it tastes great when you haven't been able to keep down
food, plus my mother always said that the scalded milk helps to
coat the stomach and heal it. I don't usually eat this but I do
occasionally crave the scalded milk after I've been sick.
I have just one more combination to add that my cousins used to
eat that looked awful in my eyes: peanutbutter, mayo and bologne.
Yuck!
|
1351.91 | More PB Combos | AKOV11::THORP | | Wed Nov 01 1989 16:30 | 5 |
| A friend used to (I think she finally gave them up) eat peanut butter
and onion sandwiches. My son and his friends like peanut butter and
pepperoni sandwiches.
Chris
|
1351.92 | Kids | NECVAX::OBRIEN_J | at the tone...... | Wed Nov 01 1989 16:57 | 3 |
| My daughter (5 years old) dips dill pickle chunks in applesauce!
I wouldn't try it, she said it tasted great. Gross
|
1351.93 | som dum & ice cream | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Nov 02 1989 08:02 | 13 |
|
Whilst not on the same plate: my Mother-in-law's restaurant sells a combination
of Som Dum (Chilli, Papaya and shrimps mixed - a sort of fiery salad), and
Thai ice cream.
As far as I can tell this is the local (to North East Thailand that is)
equivalent of the British tea and scones "cream tea".
Served with plenty of hot or iced Thai coffee...
It isn't as outrageous as it sounds
/. Ian .\
|
1351.94 | Peanut Butter & Bacon Sandwiches | BSS::PARKS | | Mon Nov 20 1989 11:58 | 5 |
| My brother-in-law swears by Peanut Butter and Bacon sandwiches. He
learned about them in a truck stop he used to work in. They must be
good, since my sister now likes them. I haven't tried them myself yet!
Renee
|
1351.96 | aahhh memories | ROULET::BING | The midnight train is whinin' low | Tue Nov 21 1989 06:53 | 8 |
| re.71 chocolate gravy w/ biscuits
I have'nt had that since I was a small boy living in Kentucky.
My gandmother and my aunts all used to make it and I loved it!
We also used to have pig brain and scrmbled eggs. Sounds gross
but it tasted like spam.
Walt
|
1351.97 | skiers sandwich | DECXPS::SLAVALLEE | | Mon Mar 05 1990 13:42 | 8 |
| My boyfriend wanted me to add onto the list with his new skiing
sandwich delight. Wheat bread spread with peanut butter, raspberry
preserves (Smuckers of course) and cheddar cheese Goldfish.
Hey I just made it, I didn't eat it.
Sandi
|
1351.98 | | VAOA01::WRAY | The Shadow Knows | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:27 | 19 |
| My favourite "sick" food is wholewheat toast with butter & Marmite
(*good stuff*) which you cut into strips and dip into a soft boiled
egg. Yummy
My husband thinks its gross, but I do up a mixture of PB, butter,
brown sugar. choc chips, sesame seeds, wheat bran, and whatever
else I feel like at the time and freeze it. Then I cut it into
little squares. Lovely!
Another one - a marmite, cheese & alfalfa sprout toasted sandwich.
My father grossed us all out when we were kids by cooking scrambled
eggs with ketchup - he called them bloody scrambled eggs! He was
the only one who would eat it though.
My husband is a syrup-on-eggs person, and we are constantly arguing
over which is grosser, his perversion or my PB on celery and (gasp)
Marmite addiction. Its a draw so far.
|
1351.100 | | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike @ZKO, Nashua NH | Wed Jun 20 1990 17:33 | 15 |
| Marmite's close cousin, Vegemite, is discussed in note 2158, and I
think there was a gigantic debate in another conference, maybe
ASKENET.
First of all, like live grubs, it's an acquired taste, to be sure.
It's a thick, brown spread made from yeast, which has a very strong
flavor and is supposedly very healthy (high in protein, B-vitamins,
etc). People who've grown up in countries where it's popular (UK, Oz,
Canada, Kiwis) love it, and other people either hate it or learn to
love it, though if you hate it, I don't know what would make you want
to learn to love it (though I managed to somehow :-).
So given that there are actually people who love Marmite, what's so
strange about whole wheat toast with butter and Marmite, dipped in
soft-boiled egg? Sounds pretty normal to me :-).
|
1351.101 | Slight! exaggeration.... | STAR::KROCZAK | | Thu Jun 21 1990 20:17 | 1 |
| ...not EVERYONE who grew up in the UK developed a love of Marmite...
|
1351.102 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Fri Jun 22 1990 08:51 | 5 |
| re .98
I also love eggs with ketchup...but not scrambled (which is quite common...
ask any trucker). I love a good ketchup on sunnyside eggs. I mix it with the
yolk. I'd have to say I've even managed to gross out a few diner waitresses.
|
1351.104 | My hubbie grues at these! | AYOV18::TWASON | | Tue Jun 26 1990 07:17 | 13 |
| I should have added this on to the bottom - but i forgot.
Has anyone tried any of the following (these are some of my faves)
1 mashed banana with Heinz salad cream
2 a cheese and apricot jam sandwich
3 weetabix spread with butter and sprinkled with sugar (yum)
Tracy
|
1351.105 | | PEKING::FLEMINGH | | Wed Jun 27 1990 08:44 | 10 |
|
Yummmmmmy! Marmite and boiled eggs is hot stuff. Have you tried
a marmite, cheese and sliced tomato toasted sarnie? Now that is
really good.
My sister was once into cheese and jam sandwiches at one point in
her life, but I think she's grown out of it. That's nearly as
disgusting a thougt as peanut butter and jam isn't it?
Heather.
|
1351.106 | Another weetabix weirdie (and others)}!{ | VANFOR::AMBLER | 100,000 lemmings can't be wrong..... | Wed Jun 27 1990 09:34 | 16 |
|
Weetabix spread with butter and marmalade was a favourite when I was at
school (rather a long time ago).
How about peanut butter and marmite on toast (drool!)
or
chedder cheese and raspberry jam sandwiches...
I recall that fishcakes with butter and marmalade were very popular (not one of
my favourites) with friends!
Happy munching,
Judith.
|
1351.107 | I've got the munchies just reading this! | AYOV18::TWASON | | Wed Jun 27 1990 11:34 | 14 |
| My husband likes toast and condensed milk. (yeukk.)
My dad likes a sandwich with cold mince or (has anybody tried a
Scotch Pie) a roll with a pie in it and my sister when we were young
used to spread a slice of bread with tomato sauce.
Howz about a beefburger spread with peanut butter in bun (mmmmmmmmm)
The list is endless.
Tracy
|
1351.108 | LIVER and WHAT???!!! | CSG002::MILLER | Ubi dubium, ibi libertas | Wed Jun 27 1990 15:15 | 19 |
| I was brought up to love these combinations:
Oreos and buttermilk....can't have one without t'other!!
Fried calves liver with grape jelly (ala turkey and cranberry
sauce) ......excellent....I loved it as a 10 year old!!!!
Salmon croquettes with grape jelly...ditto....
(Mom had to disguise a lot of foods, I guess)
also, some not so strange, but different:
Chicken pot pie with strawberry preserves slathered on.
Chicken wings fried in maple syrup
Egg (salad) and olive sandwiches
=-=-=-=-=-=-=gary=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
1351.109 | Cream cheese & olive | CSC32::R_GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Wed Jun 27 1990 15:57 | 8 |
| One that everyone in my family thinks is "gross" is;
Cream cheese and green olive sandwiches..
This is excellent..!!!
Bob G.
|
1351.111 | well, not normal, but... | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Wed Jun 27 1990 17:21 | 8 |
| or peanut butter stuffed celery sticks(everyone BUT me it seems),
mayonaise, garlic salt, onion slice sandwiches (if you REALLY want to be
alone - my grandpop),
cottage cheese sprinkled with sugar (my father),
tomato slices sprinkled with sugar (again, Dad),
cold baked beans, mayonaise, mustard sandwich on dark rye (me, and it's
yummy),
tomato and dill pickle, mayo, mustard on white toast sandwich (me)
|
1351.113 | ... | MCDONL::GONSALVES | Serv | Thu Jun 28 1990 12:15 | 5 |
| Chocolate Chip cookies "dunked" in spaghetti sauce. (my wife cringes
every time I do this.)
Serv
|
1351.114 | | DELREY::UCCI_SA | | Thu Jun 28 1990 15:27 | 5 |
| Re: 1351.109
Yeah for cream cheese and olive sandwiches......
Especially on DATE NUT bread. Yuuuummmmmmm
|
1351.115 | Smurkee - Family Favorite | CGHUB::OBRIEN_J | at the tone...... | Fri Jun 29 1990 16:08 | 6 |
| .109 If you like that you'll love this, bar of cream cheese, 2
hard boiled eggs, half chopped onion, and green olives with
pimento chopped, Dash salt. Smush all together --- yummy!
Use this to make sandwiches, stuff celery, dip raw veggies,
spread on crackers, the large dip Fritos
|
1351.116 | Baloot anybody? | KERBER::GWYN | | Fri Jul 06 1990 12:46 | 5 |
| What about "BALOOT", a delicacy from the Philippines which is a boiled
duck egg, the catch being the egg is fertilized. It took me ages to
muster the courage to try one but once I did I was hooked. Yummy!!!
Phil.
|
1351.118 | another tuna fish sandwich idea | ISLNDS::BROUGH | | Tue Jul 24 1990 14:11 | 15 |
| Okay, here's something that no-one has mentioned yet, and (as
the ole saying goes) don't knock it until you've tried it. How
about a tuna fish and yogurt sandwich? I mean take a can of tuna
fish (preferably in water), drain the water, rinse off the tuna
fish with water, place the tuna in a bowl, add about 1-2 tablespoons
of PLAIN yogurt, mix, then place on 2 slices of your favorite bread.
I think that it takes a heck of a lot better than tuna fish with
mayo, AND it has a lot less fat and cholestrol. This is making
my mouth water as I type, jeeze and I don't have any plain yogurt
at home. I guess that I'll have to stop at the local grocery store.
Oh yeah, any brand of tuna works, but I think that the best tasting
tuna fish is the "Three Diamonds" brand - the one in the black can.
Like I said, don't knock it until you've tried it. I thought
that it sounded gross, but I at least tried it and I like it.
|
1351.119 | and another.... | WMOIS::VAINE | Are we having fun yet? | Wed Jul 25 1990 08:55 | 7 |
| This is basically along the same line... I take the HiddenValley Ranch
"Take Heart" dressing (little or no fat) and just mix that with tuna,
or spread on bread any time you would use mayo. I also use it to make
pasta salad, too.
Lynn
|
1351.120 | Tuna! | MARKS::POIRIER | | Wed Jul 25 1990 13:36 | 2 |
| I love my tuna (made the usual way with mayo) with french dressing.
Pour it over the tuna under the bread!
|