T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1847.1 | Beau Monde????? | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Tue Jun 27 1989 17:21 | 2 |
| Hi! What is Beau Monde seasoning. I've never seen
it here (NJ). Can it be duplicated?
|
1847.2 | | STAR::OBERLIN | | Thu Jun 29 1989 11:15 | 16 |
| Hi.
Checking in the cupboard last evening, I found that
Beau Monde seasoning is a Spice Islands brand product
that comes from Specialty Brands, Inc; San Francisco,
CA 94108. Spice Islands is a relatively common brand
of spices found here in eastern Mass and southern NH.
The following ingredients were listed (in order) on
the bottle: salt, dextrose, onion, celery seed, and
tricalcium phosphate.
Hope this helps!
-mrs o
|
1847.4 | Powdered Buttermilk? | DLNVAX::JOHN | | Wed Aug 02 1989 16:47 | 3 |
|
The Saco brand cultured buttermilk in powdered form sounds interesting.
Is it available in the Maynard/Acton area?
|
1847.5 | | STAR::OBERLIN | | Thu Aug 03 1989 09:51 | 13 |
| re: .4
I would assume you could get Saco powdered buttermilk
without much difficulty in the Maynard/Acton area; the
first time I'd ever seen the stuff was after I moved to
Mass. I buy mine from DeMoulas/Market Basket stores.
Did you try the Triple-A market on Rte 2A in Acton?
-mrs o
|
1847.6 | Saco at Finast | AKOV11::THORP | | Thu Aug 03 1989 11:13 | 4 |
| Finast in Acton on Rte 111 carries it. You'll find it at the end
of the hot chocolate isle.
Chris
|
1847.7 | Beau Monde = Seasoned Salt | RHODES::HACHE | burning my hand on the lamp | Thu Aug 03 1989 13:43 | 7 |
|
It sounds like Beau Monde is a fancy name for seasoned salt.
I'm sure it must taste good in the mixture, but I'd want to
opt for something like Mrs Dash' seasonings instead.
dm
|
1847.8 | FISHSTICK (DIET) WANTED | SPESHR::MAHON | | Wed Jan 06 1993 10:33 | 5 |
| Does anyone have a recipe for DIET FISHSTICKS? I want to make
them at home.
Thank you,
Brenda
|
1847.9 | | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Wed Jan 06 1993 11:19 | 10 |
| Brenda,
Wouldn't you just be able to cut up a (fairly thick) piece of fish,
bread it with crumbs/egg whites and then bake? I've never tried it, but
it'd be worth a shot!
I think the more fattening thing about the commercial fish sticks is
that their fried. Try baking.
~beth
|
1847.10 | Try cornmeal... | PINION::RUHROH::COLELLA | I feel like a nomad... | Wed Jan 06 1993 13:42 | 4 |
| Or use a cornmeal/flour mixture to bread it, and bake until crispy
on a cookie sheet sprayed with Pam.
Cara
|
1847.11 | Fried Fish and Chips | NAC::WALTER | | Tue Jul 25 1995 10:18 | 20 |
| I am having a hard time getting a recipe that is for the Fish and
Chips.
In all my cookbooks they are either one of the following:
Flour and Beer or..
Flour, Egg and Breadcrumbs
The results are always the same though. When I fry them, the batter
falls off. What am I doing wrong?
The flour and beer works great for onion rings and the egg, flour and
crumbs works well for scallops but for plain old schrod or haddock;
they never work! I have tried using different oils, unsalted butter,
and even baking but the baking doesn't give that fried effect that my
husband likes.
Any ideas? Thanks..
cj
|
1847.12 | from a fish restaurant... | RYNGET::PAULHUS | | Tue Jul 25 1995 16:01 | 13 |
| cj,
I used to work in a stand that sold fried seafood. For the fish we
used flour, egg and bread crumbs. Worked great. This may be a dumb
question but you are coating with flour first, then egg, then crumbs,
right?
For clams and scallops we used this pre-mixed dry batter called
Fish-chic. The clams were stored in their juice and coated right
before frying. Scallops were stored in beaten eggs to keep them wet
enough to take the coating.
-Trina
|
1847.13 | | SPEZKO::FRASER | Mobius Loop; see other side | Tue Jul 25 1995 16:22 | 9 |
| Traditional (UK) Chish and Fips is cooked in a batter as opposed
to breadcrumbs. However - in regards to to the non-stick
breadcrumb coating, do as Trina suggests with the
flour>egg>breadcrumbs (pat the fish fairly dry before the flour)
and then pla(i)ce the breaded fish in the fridge for 30 minutes
or so and you should find that the coating stays put.
Andy
|
1847.14 | Apologies in advance ;-) | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Jul 26 1995 11:23 | 11 |
| I don't have it handy, but the regular Betty Crocker cookbook has a
recipe for traditional Fish and Chips. The batter has no egg and uses a
lot of dill weed and baking powder, I believe. It also has vinegar in
it too. I think that I usually substitute beer for water with good
results. It seems to stick fairly well and fries up as a crispy batter.
For the size of my family, I sometimes have to make a double batch.
I did this once and forgot to double the water (beer) and made dill
dough accidently ;-)
Ray
|
1847.15 | I won't, I won't... ;*) | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jul 27 1995 09:17 | 0 |
1847.16 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | contents under pressure | Fri Jul 28 1995 09:11 | 1 |
| Better to make dill dough than to be one. :-)
|
1847.17 | | KAMALA::DREYER | More great memories | Fri Jul 28 1995 10:15 | 1 |
| Hahahaha!!!!!!! Love it!!!!
|