T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2342.1 | Try Lamb!! | SANFAN::MORRISJA | Even nostalgia isn't what it was! | Tue Apr 03 1990 18:57 | 15 |
| In Greece the traditional dish is Lamb spit roasted over the grape
vine prunings. The symbolism of Vine/Wine/Pastoral Lamb is very
profound, but I digress. In the absence of vine prunings you might
just barbecue a leg (or part thereof) of lamb on a Weber. Prepare
it by rubbing it with salt and freshly ground black pepper and perhaps
Rosemary. I also satisfy my insatiable desire for garlic by making
little slits in the skin of the lamb and pushing in little slivers
of peeled garlic. Or I have other recipes that call for a
boned/butterflied leg of lamb to be marinaded with a good bottle
of Zinfandel and Rosemary and Onion and Olive Oil and Garlic etc.
etc.
Hope this helps, but whatever you do don't overcook the thing!!
Jack
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2342.2 | Our traditional dinner... | NATASH::ANDERSON | | Wed Apr 04 1990 10:56 | 30 |
| Our traditional Easter dinner has always been Ham - scalloped potatoes
- sweet potatoe souffle' - rolls - shrimp in aspic - fresh asparagus and
a dish called vegetable medley...which is written below. It's simple,
delicious and I have given out the recipe many many times.
Vegetable Medley
peas
carrots
lima beans
green beans
cauliflower
broccoli
zucchini
onions
garlic
corn
tomatoes
spinach
swiss chard
etc. etc. etc. basically any vegetables that you like.
Put ALL vegetables in a big pot and add 1 large bottle of Italian
dressing....fill the bottle with water and add to the pot. If one
bottle of dressing and water isn't enough to cover the vegetables,
add another bottle of dressing and bottle of water making sure the
vegetables are covered.
Simmer on top of the stove for about an hour...serve!
|
2342.3 | | SMURF::FLECCHIA | | Wed Apr 04 1990 11:26 | 19 |
| Our Easter meal is:
Ham
Homemade Ravioli
Garden Salad
Rolls
Shrimp/cheese & crackers/veggie tray for appetizers
Chocolate cake
ice cream
cookies
We have anywhere from 15 - 40 people over. If it goes to
25+ then we also cook a turkey.
Karen
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2342.4 | Ham Wellington | AKO569::JOY | Get a life! | Wed Apr 04 1990 11:38 | 8 |
| A slight variation on a normal ham that I made once was Ham Wellington.
I don't remember the exact recipe but it was a canned ham covered with
a chopped mushroom/pate'/Dijon mustard mixture, then wrapped entirely in
phyllo and baked. It was great! I can probably dig up the recipe if you
want it.
Debbie
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2342.5 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Apr 04 1990 12:18 | 12 |
|
I'm curious - does anybody know how ham got to be "traditional" in the US (I
presume that we are discussing the US).
Here in Britain I've never envountered this. But then I'd have to say that I
grew up "High Church [of England]" and "traditional" to me as a child was
usually described as "the sort of meal the Disciples would have held on that
day" - to whit certainly not ham since it had to be kosher. This was the only
day of the year we ate to kosher rules (though on Good Friday no meat at all
is of course traditional, and I believe that meal would be kosher too).
/. Ian .\
|
2342.6 | DIR/TITLE=EASTER, for what it's worth | ORION::EPPES | Of a fictitious nature | Wed Apr 04 1990 13:56 | 17 |
| ("Eastern" included for free! :-) )
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How to Make them Goodies
Created: 18-FEB-1986 21:29 2344 topics Updated: 4-APR-1990 12:40
-< for buy/sell/swap, see note 1261 >-
Topic Author Date Repl Title
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
584 NUTMEG::RYAN 15-APR-1987 1 *** EASTER DESERT? ***
976 BASVAX::HAIGHT 3-FEB-1988 1 ITALIAN EASTER BREAD
1095 SAVAGE::FINK_MAZUR 1-APR-1988 3 EASTER DESSERT?
1221 NAC::DWYER 20-JUN-1988 7 Middle eastern recipes?
1606 CSOA1::WIEGMANN 24-JAN-1989 6 Looking for Greek Easter Bread
1680 CGVAX2::WEISMAN_E 21-MAR-1989 17 easter dessert?
1682 HAMPS::PHILPOTT_I 22-MAR-1989 13 Madhur Jaffrey's Far Eastern Cookery
1829 LINCON::BRENNER 20-JUN-1989 5 MIDDLE EASTERN
2342 LEVERS::DWYER 3-APR-1990 5 Easter Dinner Ideas??
|
2342.7 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Is any of this sinkin' in now, boy? | Wed Apr 04 1990 14:01 | 21 |
| I am not a big fan of ham, so we eschew the "traditional" easter ham whenever
possible. :-)
Over the last couple of years, we have had:
Roast prime rib of beef
Mashed potatoes w/ gravy
steamed broccoli w/garlic butter
homemade rolls
tossed salad with vinaigrette dressing
Zinfandel wine
Baked stuffed jumbo shrimp
rice pilaf
carrots sauteed with onions, garlic, butter and parsley
homemade bread
white wine
We haven't decided what this year's menu will have yet. :-)
The Doctah
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2342.8 | | RLAV::BEDNARIK | Lynn Shannon, NJCD SWS, 323-4467 | Wed Apr 04 1990 17:44 | 15 |
| This year's Easter menu will be:
Rye Bread stuffed with Seafood Dip, for starters
Home-made Manicotti (courtesy of Mom)
Crown Roast of Pork with bread stuffing
Fresh vegetable medley (stir-fried, I think)
Mashed potatoes with home-made gravy
Tossed garden salad
Grgich Hills Chardonnay
Lindy's Famous Cheesecake (courtesy of Mom)
Chocolate Decadence Cake
Coffee, Espresso, liquers
|
2342.9 | If Easter comes before Passover; Why not Ham? | RHODES::HACHE | I Like (M)Ike | Thu Apr 05 1990 11:24 | 14 |
| re: <Note 2342.5 by BRABAM::PHILPOTT "Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott">
Having grown up in a religion where they typically celebrated
Easter (the resurrection of Christ) before the Passover (which
biblically was 4 days before his death) I am not at all surprised
that we eat ham! Actually, sometime ago, someone explained to
me that Easter is determined by counting moonphases from the
begining of the year or something along those lines, maybe someone
else can expound on that. I still celebrate Easter on whatever date
is determined by traditionalists, but we eat lamb. (Not out of
concern for "true" tradition...just 'cuz we like it better.)
dm
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2342.10 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Apr 05 1990 12:44 | 16 |
|
oh what a rathole we make: Jesus and all his disciples were Jews. hence the
original meal eaten in celebration of the resurrection of Christ must have
been kosher...
And yes Passover is defined by the full moon (9th April this year). Jesus was
crucified before Passover and finally killed (spear in the side...) before the
Jewish sabbath and the climax of Passover.
But then Easter is defined by Passover ... we just move the event from ending on
the Jewish sabbath to the Christian one (Sunday).
/. Ian .\
(I like lamb too - indeed I believe it to be [biblically] traditional - ham is
fine in sandwiches, but has no other use in my kitchen)
|
2342.11 | A recipe for lamb | HPSCAD::BOOTHROYD | Buh'weet say Panky O'TAY! | Thu Apr 05 1990 13:27 | 19 |
| A good way, for those of you who plan on preparing a leg of lamb for
dinner, is to marininate the lamb first - overnight!
A good marinade is to combine a good dry red wine (remember, NEVER cook
with a wine that you won't drink), 2-3 medium/lge cloves of garlic, 1/4
(sliced)_ of a *spanish* onion, herbs (such as majoram, rosemary, basil
etc. - herbs intended for sweeter meats), a 1/4 cup or less of good
olive oil (the best is Spanish from Spain - note the golden color)
and a dash or two of, yes I know what it is I'm writing, Kaluha. Leave
well covered overnight (several hours) and roast the next day. I don't
recommend 350 or 375 degrees for lamb. I prefer to roast on a lower
temperature (325 or less) for a more juicy and tender leg of lamb.
This is a great recipe and I've had quite a few compliments on it.
Oh, almost forgot. You really wouldn't need more than a dash of
salt since wine is a great substitute but be sure to add some *freshly*
ground pepper .... the other kind in a can just doesn't cut it.
/gail
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2342.17 | more honey baked info | TOOK::CURRIER | | Fri Apr 06 1990 13:28 | 7 |
| Honey Baked Ham will ship your ham but they won't ship any of their
sauces or mustards. I serve it with exotic mustards but never with a
raisin sauce. It doesn't need to be sweetened - the honey it's cured
and baked in takes care of that.
One of my daughter's first words was HAMMMM. It was HB that inspired
her.
|
2342.18 | | SALEM::WATKEVITCH | | Fri Apr 06 1990 14:53 | 6 |
|
I know that the ham is all cooked, but can I serve it hot?
Someone just informed me that you serve it at room temp..
If so, will this conflict, with the rest of the meal being served hot?
|
2342.19 | Pass the buck!! | BARTLE::WHITCOMB | | Fri Apr 06 1990 16:16 | 6 |
| Want something enjoyable and as easy as possible? Go to your
mother's/grandmother's/aunt's house! Life is oh-so-enjoyable when
you're the one doing the enjoying! Besides... those wonderful
relatives are usually the ones that cook up a beautiful dinner. Then
volunteer to have everyone over to your place for a summer barbeque!
Summer cooking tends to be so much easier...
|
2342.20 | Hedonists, unite! | SNOC02::WILEYROBIN | The Bear | Sun Apr 08 1990 21:38 | 20 |
| Easter last year was a gathering of friends on Good Friday.
Breakfast was hot-cross buns, croissants and Yellowglen Brut Vintage
Champagne 1983. We then started watching videos - old movies from the
40's.
Lunch was ratatouille and Tolleys Pedare wood-aged Chablis 1985. Then
we watched more movies.
Dinner was Weber-roasted whole schnapper stuffed with tomato, olives,
garlic and almonds. Fish was accompanied by Weber-roasted butternut
pumpkin and hasselback potatoes. Wine was Basedows Barossa Hermitage
1982. Then we watched more movies.
Supper was Blue Castello cheese, fresh pears and Burge and Wilson
Botrytis Rhine Riesling 1980. Then we watched more movies.
This year, I think we will do it again!
-Robin.
|
2342.21 | it's fine room temp | TOOK::CURRIER | | Mon Apr 09 1990 13:39 | 8 |
| I have never heated my Honey Baked Ham. They say you can but they
don't advise it - it wouldn't be as good. I server mine room temp and
feel that hot veggies go well with it. I usually server potatoes with
sourr cream and chives, yams baked in maple syrup and brown sugar,
cheese and onion casserole, and several fresh green veggies (whatever
looks good) plain with buffer for those who are not into sauces. I
have NEVER had a guest complain that the ham wasn't hot - but then they
were all too busy eating it to say much of anything - it's really good!
|
2342.22 | Heat it, freeze it, or eat it as is... | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Apr 10 1990 20:58 | 16 |
| Way back about 10 years ago, my old roomie used to come back from a
visit home to Atlanta with a honey baked ham or two. This was long
before they came to New England.
We used to heat some of the ham by removing the slices and zapping them
on a platter. This avoided heating the whole thing just to let a lot
of it cool off again. If you look at the directions, it is easy to
remove about a third of the ham by cutting in on the lines. This makes
an easy portion for heating up. Even if you were going to do most of
the ham that day, I would recommend heating the slices on a platter,
off the bone. It would allow them to heat faster and more evenly,
without having the sugar crust burn.
You can also freeze a bunch of slices and defrost later. We used to
freeze the remains that were not sliced, along with the bone, and use
it for pea soup later.
|
2342.23 | PINEAPPLE-RAISIN SAUCE FOR HAM | MCIS2::DUPUIS | | Wed Apr 11 1990 09:43 | 19 |
| in response to .14
1 tablespoon cornstarch
3/4 cup brown sugar
2 teaspoons dry mustard
1/2 teaspoon ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground gloves
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg
1 8+1/2-ounce can crushed pineapple
1/2 cup pineapple or orange juice
1/4 cup raisins
Stir together first 6 ingredients. Add crushed pineapple, juice and
raisins. Heat to boiling, stirring often. Reduce heat and continue
cooking 5 minutes. Use to baste a 3-pound ham, and serve remainder as
a sauce. Makes 2 cups.
|
2342.24 | No Ham Wellington recipe | AKO569::JOY | Get a life! | Wed Apr 11 1990 16:38 | 11 |
| For those of you who are interested in the Ham Wellington recipe I
mentioned in an earlier reply, unfortunately I seem to have lost the
magazine the recipe was in. I'm pretty sure it was in a Bon Appetit in
either 1982 or 1983, so if anyone has a copy of those you might check
it out. After reading thru a Beef Wellington recipe, I've discovered
that the one I used was almost identical except you substitute a canned
ham for the beef filet and phyllo for the puff pastry. You might give
it a try if you have a beef recipe and are adventurous!
Debbie
|
2342.25 | HERE'S OUR MENU.. | BIZNIS::WHITNEY | | Wed Apr 11 1990 17:11 | 23 |
| See Note 2038 - Marinated Lamb with Artichoke Hearts
We also love lamb at Easter and serve approximately the
following menu:
Raw Veggie Assortment with Selected cheeses
Marinated Lamb with Artichoke Hearts
Steamed Brussels Sprouts (If you like Brussels Sprouts)
Whipped Potatoes
Gravy
Stuffed Mushroom Caps
Mint Jelly and Cranberry Sauce
Yorkshire Pudding
Assorted favorite yeast rolls and breads
Dessert does not follow immediately,
but a selection of fresh fruit is brought
out.
Later, we serve a pastry type dessert with
coffee or tea.
|
2342.26 | I have too much food and not enough volunteers | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Mon Apr 05 1993 15:06 | 26 |
| Any new ideas for this weekend?
My family has invited my in-laws and they consist of 10 adults and 2
children. I didn't want my mom to have to cook for all of my "other"
family and thought that if each person/couple brought something that
she would only have to do the main entree which we thought would be
two of the three:
Turkey Breast, Ham or Leg of Lamb
Unfortunately, I am stuck now with more things to bring then people.
I thought we would need:
Appetizer
Soup and Bread
Entree
Vegetable
Potato
Dessert
Any ideas? Much thanks,
cj
|
2342.27 | Confused... | MARLIN::RUHROH::COLELLA | Computers make me ANSI. | Mon Apr 05 1993 17:49 | 7 |
| I would say the most "portable" things to ask people to bring are wine,
the appetizers, the bread, a salad, and the dessert. Veggies and potatoes
are probably best made by the host/hostess, along the with main course.
Are you looking for suggestions as to *what* to bring??
Cara
|
2342.28 | alittle more on 93 buffets | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:57 | 30 |
| You know, yesterday was a bad day for me :)
Actually, I was looking at ideas for anything to bring. I thinking
that we would need appetizers, vegetables, and desserts. Casserole
type things like scalloped potatoes I always found easy to bring to
dinners such as this.
However, we have decided to go really casual with a buffet. I was
thinking if this starts around 12:00ish that appetizers wouldn't be
necessary and we could ask the people to bring salad and desserts. I
can whip up the vegetables, bread and forget any soup.
Any new ideas on buffets for 93? What type of condiments, if any,
would be needed for the following buffet?
1993 Buffet
-----------
Salad (what kind?)
Oatmeal Mollasses Bread
Smoked Turkey Breast with Cranberry Sauce
Maple Ham with Applesauce
Scalloped potatoes
Asparagus
Candies Carrots
Desserts?
|
2342.29 | | POWDML::MANDILE | with an e | Wed Apr 07 1993 11:21 | 13 |
| Nothing like a simple "garden" salad to go with a meal...
Freshly rinsed Iceberg lettuce torn into bite size pieces
Freshly rinsed spinach leaves (ditto)
Purple cabbage thinly shredded
Tomatoes
carrots
cukes
radishes
diced celery
thin sliced Bermuda onion rings
Oil & vinegar for dressing
|
2342.30 | Pear bunnies? | TARKIN::VAILLANCOURT | | Fri Mar 22 1996 15:51 | 6 |
| Has anyone ever made 'bunny faces' out of canned pear halves?
I remember a friends mom made them for us one Easter when we
were young, and now that I'm a mom would love to remember what
they were decorated with to make them look like a bunny. I
believe that the whiskers were carrot peels, but have no idea
what was used for the ears, eyes, etc....any ideas?
|
2342.31 | I think... | JUMP4::JOY | Perception is reality | Mon Mar 25 1996 12:40 | 7 |
| I think I have this in my FIRST cookbook - Betty Crocker's Cooking for
Kids. I'll check tonight if I remember, but I think the eyes were
raisins, ears were slices of pear and the mouth/nose a couple thin
slices of maraschino cherry?
Debbie
|
2342.32 | Mice, smiling bug | NIOSS1::LEE | | Mon Mar 25 1996 16:47 | 17 |
| It was in my first cookbook too! "Better Homes and Gardens
New Junior Cookbook" I still use it!
Twin mice:
Put 2 canned pear halves on a lettufe-lined plate. Put 2 whole cloves
on each for eyes. 2 rasins for noses, and carrot curls for tails.
For the ears, cut a marshmallow into slices with kitchen scissors.
Attach to pear halves with toothpicks.
Smilling bug:
Canned peach half for body, raisins for eyes, cherry stems for
antennae, and half a maraschino cherry slice for the mouth.
Put carrot curls all around for legs (like a spider).
|
2342.33 | oops | NIOSS1::LEE | | Mon Mar 25 1996 16:49 | 5 |
| Oops! I gave directions for mice and bugs but not bunnies..
I bet the same stuff would work, though..
Good luck!
|