T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3439.1 | Wilted Lettuce Salad | IAMOK::MARINER | | Thu Jan 30 1992 11:40 | 9 |
| I think what you are looking for is called Wilted Lettuce Salad. It is
made with bacon grease, sugar and vinegar. My mother put it on endive,
crumbled bacon, onions and probably hard boiled eggs (altho I don't
remember the egg). It was delicious and I have never been able to make
it. It always crystalized for me.
Look in your cook books for Wilted Lettuce Salad.
Mary Lou
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3439.2 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A Flounder in a Cloud | Thu Jan 30 1992 14:45 | 5 |
| There are recipes in here somewhere - I've posted our version before.
Let me know if you can't find it - I'll post it again.
--Sharon
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3439.3 | :-) REALLY | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jan 31 1992 06:02 | 7 |
| RE: "Let me know if you can't find it - I'll post it again."
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH.
171.2 in the SALAD AISLE (170-175)
ed
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3439.4 | Not exactly a recipe ... | SHALOT::KOPELIC | Quality is never an accident . . . | Fri Jan 31 1992 08:19 | 10 |
| I've never followed a recipe, but until you get one try this:
Cut raw bacon into squares and fry in a pan. When bacon is crumbly,
remove from pan, turn off heat, and put in salad bowl. Into grease in
pan put about 1/4 - 1/2 cup vinegar and maybe a tbls sugar, taste, and
adjust to your tastes. Pour over salad.
I love this, but unfortunately it's not that healthy :-)
Bev
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3439.5 | Not quite a Wilted Lettuce Salad. | BSS::A_SALE | | Fri Jan 31 1992 14:49 | 17 |
|
re .1
I don't think that it's the same as the Wilted Lettuce Salad.
I've seen recipes for this and they don't seem quite right.
The salad I'm talking about is closer to the one in 171.2,
since there is some kind of thickening in the salad dressing
although I don't think it has the horseradish and Worcestire
as in 171.2. Maybe I can play around with it and come up with
what I'm thinking of. The dressing didn't have much color,
kind of a pale pale yellow or almost clear. It was really
thick and kind of sweet so I believe it probably had sugar
in it and something tangy like vinegar.
Thanks for the replies so far!
Addie
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3439.6 | There is a brand | CSC32::D_SCHOENFELD | Reba for President in '92 | Fri Jan 31 1992 15:38 | 8 |
| I've seen a salad commercial salad dressing for this (my wife has
bought it once or twice) but I can't remember the name of it. It
comes in a jar, and is in the salad dressing section of the super
market.
Denny
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3439.7 | | BROKE::THATTE | Nisha Thatte | Fri Jan 31 1992 16:50 | 7 |
| I've had a similar salad at the Westwood in Marlborough, MA. I thought it
tasted similar to Italian Dressing that had been reduced to be thicker but
I haven't tried that yet.
-- Nisha
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3439.8 | to thicken or not... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Jan 31 1992 19:03 | 17 |
| traditionally, the warm spinach salad dressing is bacon-based, and can be
thickened (optionally)...simply add a tablespoon of flour to the bacon
grease in th pan after frying the bacon until it is crisp...and stir the
flour into the fat. Once the flour is well-incorporated with the bacon
grease, stir in a nice vinegar (I prefer white wine), approx. 1/4 cup or
less stirred into the bacon grease left from slow-frying (low temp cooking
to avoid burning the bacon) a pound of bacon. Stir well, and cook over low
heat until it is slightly thickened. pour over the spinach, toss, and eat
immediately.
They do sell bottled dressings, look for "mayonaise-style" jars in the
grocery store...I've usually seen it there.
oh yes...it isn't particularly healthy to eat much of this stuff, but for
an occasional treat, it is yummy.
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3439.9 | English Room Dressing | WMOIS::BOHNET_B | | Mon Feb 03 1992 11:36 | 6 |
| I have a dressing called Celery Seed or some may know it better as the
English Room dressing ( a little restaurant in Boston, which is now
gone). I have served it on Spinach salad, you can heat it or serve it
cold. It's also good on fruit. Has no bacon in it, but is thick.
Bon
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3439.10 | Maple Grove Farm of Vermont "Sweet & Sour" | MR4DEC::MALLEN | | Mon Feb 03 1992 13:16 | 5 |
| You might want to try "Maple Grove Farm of Vermont Inc."
"Sweet & Sour" salad dressing.
You can get it in most grocery stores...I know Idlewilds in W. Acton,
MA carries it as well as local grocery stores.
|
3439.11 | English Room Dressing, please | BSS::A_SALE | | Mon Feb 03 1992 18:23 | 15 |
| re. .8
< I have a dressing called Celery Seed or some may know it better as the >
< English Room dressing ( a little restaurant in Boston, which is now >
< gone). I have served it on Spinach salad, you can heat it or serve it >
< cold. It's also good on fruit. Has no bacon in it, but is thick. >
Sounds good. I would like the recipe please. Don't know if this is
exactly what I'm looking for but I'd still like it. Thanks!
Thanks for the replies on bottled brands. I'll try to find them, but
our selection isn't always the same in Colorado as back East. I don't
think we have as good a selection. Thanks again!
Addie
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3439.12 | Modified Poppy Seed? | CUPMK::CLEMINSHAW | Conanne | Tue Feb 04 1992 08:39 | 6 |
| I think you make it just like poppy seed dressing, but substitute
celery seeds for the poppy. I have a bottle of thick celery seed
dressing from a vermont inn, and the first ingredient is sugar, which
may be what makes it thick!
Peigi
|