T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2758.1 | VENISON, BEEF, GOOSE? | PARITY::HOWELL | | Mon Nov 26 1990 09:05 | 25 |
| Hi,
Have you any idea as to what you are roasting? Goose, turkey, ducks,
roast beef? Your veggies have to compliment the roast. The size of
the roast depends on the amount of guests. With a small amount of
guests you can have a roast beef or ducks. If you are going to have
12+ I would suggest a goose since most have just had turkey.
Our family usually has a roast beef and a roast venison. They are
cooked at the same temperature and length of time. This is to keep
everyone happy. They are served with the proper sauce for each. I
cook a pan of roast potatoes and a pot of wild rice. String beans
with almonds, creamed onions with sherry and nutmeg are also served,
followed by a salad. This dinner is preceded by crab on toast points
and followed, after the salad, with cheese and fruit. We take a rest
at this point while I change over the table. Then I set out the buffet
of desserts and brandies.
As you can see this meal takes a while. At least three to four bottles
of wine are served.
Hope this helps....
B.
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2758.2 | Cornish Hens or Chicken | PINION::LITTLE | | Mon Nov 26 1990 12:10 | 65 |
| Hi,
You didn't say how many people would be attending this dinner or what your
budget is like, so some of these suggestions might be a little expensive...
Beverages:
Mulled Cranberry Punch
Hot Apple Cider
Wine
Coffee or tea
Dessert Coffees - made with cordials
Appetizer Suggestions:
-variety of cheeses and crackers platter - can be made by deli and
stored in refrigerator...
-cold cut platter - can be made by deli and stored in refrigerator
-fresh vegetables such as carrot sticks, brocoli, colloflower,
mushrooms etc with several dips such as onion dip, clam dip, cottage
cheese etc. (can be served with little mini breads and mini begals or
begal chips too)
-Shrimp cocktail
-Fresh Fruit salad or Fresh fruit tray
Suggested Soups: (Can be made ahead of time and reheated)
French onion
cream of carrot
cream of brocoli/coliflower soup
vegatable
cream of corn
Main Course:
Cornish hens stuffed/or unstuffed with "Near East" brand wild or pilif rice.
(I always make double of the amount I need. You can either stuff
the hens with rice or use the rice as a bed and lay the hens on
top when serving then. When I make the pilif rice, I add diced carrots,
mushrooms, green peppers, onions, cooked left over meats such as chicken
or turkey too. This adds color and flavor to the basic rice recipe.
or
Oven Stuffer roaster - Chicken with Pilif rice mention above...
Carrots
Brocoli or any other vegetables your guests like...
Peas
Corn
Sweet Potatoes
Toss Salad
Side dish of Stuffing
Cranberry Orange Relish or Cranberry cocktail sauce
Pop-over rolls
Desserts:
Apple Crisp
Carrot Cake
Chocolate cheesecake or any cheesecake
Chocolate mouse pie
Rice Pudding
Super Chocolate chip cookies
Bananna Bread
|
2758.3 | | UPBEAT::JFERGUSON | Leading Lady | Mon Nov 26 1990 12:27 | 4 |
| Ham is always another alternative. There are some nice recipes
for it in this file as well.
Judy
|
2758.4 | a couple of more ideas | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Nov 26 1990 13:14 | 17 |
|
Roast pork is nice, too. If you get a good cut of meat, and you
have a meat thermometer, you don't need to be a "great cook" to
have this come out tasty, and it really doesn't even need a sauce,
strictly speaking. That can often be the trickiest part, if you
want to do it from scratch, you know? It also doesn't take up
that much room in the oven and just about anything goes with it.
It's a nice departure from poultry, IMO.
Another idea is lamb shanks. A friend of mine made an absolutely
fantastic dinner of lamb shanks cooked in a skillet with a tomato/
onion/pepper/etc. base. With mashed potato and vegetables - it
was very hearty, down-to-earth, and pretty foolproof, it seemed.
Everybody raved. If you're interested, I can get ahold of the
recipe.
Diane
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2758.5 | RE .2 | UTROP1::STUURMAN_M | Always look at the bright side.. | Tue Nov 27 1990 03:05 | 4 |
| RE .2
It is a dinner for 4 persons. And for a X-mas dinner I want something
special so in this case the budget do not matter much.
|
2758.6 | | COMICS::FISCHER | I've got a special purpose | Tue Nov 27 1990 07:58 | 5 |
| Chestnut roast with a red wine, tomato and sage sauce if you want
a caring Christmas.
ian
|
2758.8 | How about crown roast of pork????? | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital, thriving on chaos? | Tue Nov 27 1990 20:07 | 5 |
| There's hardly anything as pretty and impressive as a crown roast of pork.
I wouldn't have the foggiest notion how to do one, but I'm sure someone
around here could tell us...
Steve
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2758.11 | CORNISH HENS FOR THE MASSES | DECXPS::GARIEPY | | Wed Nov 28 1990 10:50 | 10 |
| Yaaaaah! The Cornish Hen idea sounds great for christmas. I have done
this for up to four people. Does anyone have an idea on how to cook 8
to 10 cornish hens (stuffed) at one time. I have recipes, but have no
idea on how long to cook such a large number for. I imagine that they
will need to bee cooked for a long time and care will have to be taken
not to dry out the legs, etc.
Does this soune like something I would be able to do??
Lee
|
2758.12 | Christmas Dinner Rx | HYEND::PALM | | Wed Nov 28 1990 16:27 | 48 |
| Another idea for a small group would be beef fondue.
We sometimes have this for our Christmas dinner since I'm usually worn
out from the last minute Christmas present wrapping and such. You
don't have to cook anything until you sit down.
You will need a metal fondue pot with a Sterno cup underneath.
I always use peanut oil to cook the tenderloin pieces cut up into
1" squares. I have the divided fondue plates which seperates the
various sauces you can dip your cooked meat into after it is cooked
in the hot oil. Long forks special for fondue make it alot easier
(maybe you could drop Santa a note and see if he could fit it in
his sack and then you could try it out Cristmas Day).
Diablo Sauce (Hot Tomato Based Sauce)
Lemon-Chives Butter Sauce
Sweet and Sour Sauce
Sour Cream and Onion Sauce or
a Worchestershire based Sauce
A side platter of mixed crudites i.e. raw veggies broccoli,cauliflower,
cherry tomatoes etc. which also
can be dipped in the sauces if
you like
Or a very special salad there have
been quite a few mentioned as in
a three leaf salad with fresh
vinegarette herbed dressing or
a Caesar Salad.
Fresh Baked Popovers (the only thing you'll have to turn the oven on
for.)
For Dessert: In the past, I usually serve lemon sorbet or sherbet
lined alternately in a parfait glass with frozen raspberries (fresh
are better but not available this time of year) and a large platter
selection of the many Christmas cookies I make.
Add a special bottle of wine to go with the dinner and maybe some
cordials to go with dessert and you have a relaxing remedy for an
overtired overworked Christmas person. Take it from Doctor "Mom".
Have a Merry One!
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2758.15 | what about 'before' the dinner | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Wed Dec 12 1990 12:30 | 12 |
|
i was wondering what everyone is serving before the christmas dinner
for appetizers and such. my family will be coming over around 10:00
ish and we will not be eating till about 3:00 so i wanted to put out
some sort of little buffet. besides cheese/crackers and
chestnuts/mixed nuts what else could i do without spoiling the
appetites of everyone?
thanks in advance,
cj
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2758.16 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Put it in Writitng.... | Wed Dec 12 1990 13:29 | 2 |
| how about a plate of raw veggies and a plate of sliced fruits, or a bowl of
grapes with yogurt for dip.
|
2758.17 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A goal is a dream with a deadline | Wed Dec 12 1990 16:02 | 12 |
| For Thanksgiving, I made the Spinach Dip that's on the back of the Knorr's
Veg. Soup Mix - basically it's sour cream, mayo, green onions, water chestnutes,
the soup mix.... I made two loaves of homemade pumpernickel, scooped one out
so that it was a bowl, and put the dip in it. Sliced up the other one.
My family went NUTS over it!!!! (They're still getting used to having
a family member that bakes bread ;-) The homemade pumpernickel really was
great!
--Sharon
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2758.18 | | RUSTIE::NALE | Accept No Limitations | Thu Dec 13 1990 11:20 | 4 |
|
My mom will have celery sticks stuffed with cream cheese. Yum!
I like them best when olives and pimentos are mixed into the
cream cheese.
|
2758.19 | yum | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Dec 13 1990 12:13 | 3 |
| Celery sticks with peanut butter are good, too.
ed
|
2758.20 | long overdue recipe | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Thu Dec 20 1990 14:25 | 24 |
|
Hi. Well, I'm finally coming through with the lamb shank recipe.
My friend was able to give me the ingredients and method, but
he basically winged the quantities and that shouldn't be hard
with this one if you have an imagination. This is no culinary
feat, but boy was it good.
Stewed Lamb Shanks
Cut off the fatty parts from the shanks, wipe them dry,
dredge them in a mixture of flour, oregano, salt, and pepper,
and brown them in oil. Set the shanks themselves aside.
In the same pan, saute' some onions, then carrots, celery,
and, optionally, mushrooms, all chopped into large chunks.
Add some garlic and thyme, canned crushed tomatoes with juice,
a little beef bouillon, and if you like, some red wine. There
should be about 3 cups or so of this mixture for every 6
shanks. Bake the shanks covered with the tomato mixture
in a big covered casserole or heavy pan at 350 for about
1 and 1/2 hours.
Serve the shanks with mashed potatoes, covering all with
the sauce.
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2758.21 | XMAS BRUNCH | WMOIS::SPENCER_DEB | | Wed Nov 13 1991 12:28 | 24 |
| Since the kids were born, my husband & I have forfeited the Xmas-Day
-Run-to-All-the-Relatives'-Houses routine, and just stay home with
our own family. One of the things I like to do is replace Xmas break-
fast & lunch with a brunch (we eat Xmas dinner in the eve). The kids
are too wired when they first get up, and the last thing they want to
do is sit down for breakfast (what! Before presents?!).
Anyways, I try to prepare as much as possible ahead of time, since
Xmas morning is hectic enough as it is. For the last couple of years,
I served something like this:
Quiche (prepared ahead of time)
Homefries (prepared ahead, then cooked in 9x13" pan in oven)
Fresh fruit/fruit juice
Banana bread or danish (made or bought ahead of time)
I think that was it (that's enough!). Anyways, I was looking for ideas
for different brunch foods this year. Preferably, it could be prepared
ahead.
Any ideas?
Deb
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2758.22 | DIR/TITLE=brunch | CAMONE::BONDE | | Wed Nov 13 1991 13:37 | 12 |
| There are already many topics on brunch recipes.
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2758.23 | Our Xmas breakfast | AKOCOA::SCHOFIELD | | Wed Nov 13 1991 13:40 | 13 |
| My Dad was always the chef on Xmas day - he used to make crepes with
sausage and apple sauce rolled up with powdered sugar on top. I can
just taste them now! You can cooke everything before hand (just put wax
paper between the crepes) then heat them (micro or oven) that morning.
Serve w/maple syrup, fruit, homefries, coffee, juice, and milk.
One year my brother (who, at the time, worked in a restaurant) made
eggs benedict. I don't have this recipe, tho. (I'm sure there's one in
this file).
Just a few ideas...
beth
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2758.24 | | CSCMA::PEREIRA | | Thu Nov 21 1991 12:38 | 5 |
| My Mom always makes Sausage bread....all it is is store bought
frozen bread dough...rolled out into a sheet stuffed with a mixture
of sausage and cheese. It's delicious. She always makes it
ahead of time and just pops it in the oven just before everyone
wakes up.
|