T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1898.1 | How about... | COMET::TIMPSON | Comfortable Chair | Wed Jul 26 1989 16:01 | 3 |
| Check out note 1048 for Beef Stroganoff recipies.
Steve
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1898.2 | Apple pie with sour cream | CIM::GEOFFREY | It's my ball and I'll do what I want. | Wed Jul 26 1989 16:56 | 5 |
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Try note 103 for an apple sour cream pie recipe.
jim
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1898.3 | Add note 709.2 for a good Stroganoff | COMET::TIMPSON | Comfortable Chair | Wed Jul 26 1989 17:23 | 1 |
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1898.4 | Muffin recipe | BOOKIE::FARINA | | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:13 | 23 |
| I often substitute sour cream or yogurt for milk in bread and cake
recipes. The Domino brown sugar box used to have a recipe for
pineapple upside down cake. I substituted sour cream and it was
delicious! Also, any basic muffin recipe can take sour cream as
easily as milk. Depending on the consistency of the batter, you
usually need a little more sour cream or yogurt than you would milk.
This is from memory, but a basic muffin recipe I've used is:
2 cups flour (I usually use 1/2 whole wheat)
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/4 cup sugar (I don't like them too sweet)
1 egg
1/2 cup vegetable oil
3/4-to-1 cup sour cream
1 cup fresh fruit, cut up (or bananas, mashed)
Beat the egg, add the oil and sour cream. Stir in fruit (*plums*
are wonderful!). Add flour, bp, and sugar. Spoon into greased
or paper lined muffin cups. Bake at 400F for approximately 25 minutes.
Eat warm!
Susan
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1898.5 | PS: | BOOKIE::FARINA | | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:16 | 6 |
| Yield is one dozen. You can double the recipe, then spoon into
paper lined muffin tins. Freeze them in the tins, then pop then
out, wrap then carefully, and leave then in the freezer until you're
ready for more. Bake without defrosting, adding 5 to 10 minutes
to your baking time. This is much more successful than baking them
before freezing. They don't get dry this way. --S
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1898.7 | mashed potatos | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jul 28 1989 07:16 | 4 |
| If you make mashed potatos, use gob or two of sour cream instead of
milk.
ed
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1898.8 | FAT FREE SOUR CREAM | GENRAL::JORDAN | | Wed Sep 28 1994 19:39 | 10 |
| Have you guys tried the new fat-free sour cream?
It is really good. Now I can go crazy with the sour cream on things
like mexican food and not feel as guilty.
I tried it in a stroganoff recipe the other night, and it came out great!
I have also made a chip dip,and a baked potato topper using a large container
of sour cream and adding in 1-1 1/2 packages of ranch dressing.
Mix well, and let sit for several hours.
It comes out really good and now sort of reduced-calorie!
Lisa
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1898.9 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Wed Sep 28 1994 19:44 | 8 |
| re: .8
> Have you guys tried the new fat-free sour cream?
Is it actually fat-free, or just reduced fat? I wonder what it's made
out of?
-Hal
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1898.10 | Hmm.. Guar gum..uh textured vegetable protein..... | GENRAL::JORDAN | | Thu Sep 29 1994 01:20 | 5 |
| I pretty sure when I looked at the label it said fat free.
I would imagine that is some kind of yogurt extract.
That is kind of what it looks like.
Lisa
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1898.11 | | GOLLY::CARROLL | the courage of my contradictions | Thu Sep 29 1994 10:47 | 11 |
| there are both fat free and reduced that sour creams. All of the
reduced fat ones are pretty good in my opinion. However, I have found
most of the non-fat versions to be inedible except for Land-o-Lakes
fat-free, which is delicious. It also has twice as many calories per
serving As other non-fat sour creams, even though it has no fat;
therefore I conclude it tastes better because it has more in it. :-)
I have never tried to cook with it, only used it as a topping and
base for dips and the like.
D!
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1898.12 | | XSTACY::GRAINNE | signal (SIGCUBE, SIG_IGN); | Fri Sep 30 1994 09:40 | 14 |
|
A trick I've learned is to use the virtually fat-free Fromage Frais
instead of sour cream (the reduced-fat kind doesn't seem to have showed
up here yet - Ireland.) I imagine that Quark would work as well (that's
the bavarian skimmed-milk cheese type of Quark, not the sub-atomic
particles type of Quark :-)
PS: Its just occured to me that they even if it existed over here, they
probably aren't allowed call it 'Reduced-fat Sour Cream' if it consists
mainly of textured polystyrene or something. So maybe it *does* exist,
but is called something else ?? Any sightings ??
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1898.13 | If it's lite, how come I'm getting heavier... | CDROM::SHIPLEY | You can't catch a boat to Bolivia | Thu Nov 03 1994 20:26 | 8 |
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A method I use is to use half protions oif reduced-fat sour cream
and pad it out with plain fat free yogurt (Dannon's is very good).
You get the same creamy texture with a slighter lighter flavour
and much less calories. For a low(er) calorie blue cheese dressing
I use lite sour cream,, fat-free yogurt and lite mayo mixed with
a slice of good blue cheese...
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