T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3700.1 | Peanut Butter Balls! | WKEND::MACARTHUR | | Wed Dec 02 1992 09:58 | 4 |
| I have a great recipe for peanut butter balls that you dip in chocolate
that makes a lot, is easy to make, and keep for a good month or two in
an airtight container! I'll post the recipe tomorrow. I've also heard
these called doe eyes and chestnuts.
|
3700.2 | Pre-mix | SAHQ::WILLARD | REMEMBER THE PRIME DIRECTIVE | Wed Dec 02 1992 16:18 | 5 |
| >I've been making orange marmalade. You could "pre-mix" mocha mixes,
russian tea, cookie dough minus eggs, oil, water/milk and add these
when you're ready to bake.
Cynthia
|
3700.3 | Peanut Butter Balls | WKEND::MACARTHUR | | Mon Dec 07 1992 13:44 | 31 |
| Well, at long last, here is the recipe I promised to put in for peanut
butter balls. Really good stuff!
1 lb. butter or margarine
3 1 lb. boxes confection sugar (3 lbs. altogether)
2 lbs. peanut butter
2 12 oz. bags chocolate chips
1 bar parafin wax
Melt butter, then add peanut butter. In large bowl add to sugar and
mix well. Chill approximately 1-1/2 hrs.
Melt chocolate chips and parafin in double boiler (it helps to cut the
parafin into smaller pieces so it melts faster).
Form dough into balls and with toothpick dip into chocolate leaving top
open. Put on wax paper until cool. Store in refrigerator or cool
place.
Makes approx. 150
I know it sounds wierd to put the parafin in there, but it helps the
chocolate to dry quicker, and it also makes it shiny. You don't even
taste it.
Enjoy!
|
3700.4 | Need Recipes that withstand travel & heat | MRKTNG::WEINSTEIN | Barbara Weinstein | Tue Dec 08 1992 14:51 | 6 |
| Can anyone post recipes that could survive 1 month, probably under some
extreme heat part of the time?
I want to send a package of goodies to someone in the Peace Corps, and I
understand it could take up to a month to reach her. The peanut butter
ball recipe sounds like it might not withstand the heat.
|
3700.5 | I've done it | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:00 | 10 |
| I've sent things overseas and they've survived. Just wrap carefully
(saran, then foil, then put in a ziplock) and cushion with popcorn or
newspaper.
I've sent all sorts of cookies and brownie type things. Haven't sent
anything like a frosted cake, tho.
How extreme is the heat?
~beth
|
3700.6 | Don't Know About the Heat | MRKTNG::WEINSTEIN | Barbara Weinstein | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:08 | 8 |
|
Beth,
Thanks for the advice. These would be for Linda Bryant's daughter who will
be in Tanzania. I am just guessing that the package might be subjected to
extreme heat somewhere along the way, but I have no specifics.
Barbara
|
3700.7 | Not a specific pointer, but... | PINION::MARLIN::COLELLA | I feel like a nomad... | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:54 | 6 |
| Somewhere in this vast notesfile there is a bunch of notes about
goodies that could survive the trip to the Persian Gulf. If they could
travel to the Gulf, then they could probably make it to Tanzania!
Cara
|
3700.8 | | LOWELL::GUGEL | | Thu Dec 10 1992 11:54 | 9 |
|
I have a similar problem, would like to send butter cookies
(the cut-out, bake, & frost kind) to a sister in Micronesia
(tropical). I plan to pack in a flat Tupperware box to keep
the freshness & (hopefully) prevent them from arriving as a
pile of crumbs.
What do people think? Will they survive okay?
|
3700.9 | | BUSY::MANDILE | Toepick! | Fri Dec 11 1992 12:21 | 2 |
| Maybe if you wrap them in aluminum foil, and then make
sure they are tightly packed into the tupperware?
|
3700.10 | | BIGDAN::HORVAT | | Mon Dec 14 1992 12:55 | 7 |
|
My girlfriend spent 2 years in Micronesia (Peace Corps) and I always sent her
alot of baked goods. I was into making candy one Christmas and sent her a box,
it arrived unmelted and intact. The only problem was that it was STALE, she
didn't end up getting it until late January. This was 3 years ago. You may
have better luck.
Laura
|
3700.11 | | FSOA::HAMILTON | | Wed Dec 23 1992 10:47 | 8 |
| When my nephew was in the Navy my mother send him goodies every month.
When on land, they arrived fairly quickly; on ship it might take 2-3
weeks. She baked brownies and sent them flat in one sheet, NOT cut.
She also sent hermits, which seem to travel well. If there's any air
space left in the box after packing, fill with popped pop corn.
Karen
|
3700.12 | | ZAYIUS::BROUILLETTE | The best of best help the rest... | Wed Dec 30 1992 17:48 | 3 |
| I remember my godmother sent me cookies packed in popcorn
when I was in Basic Training. I asked her not to salt the
popcorn next time...
|