T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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410.1 | | RAINBO::TARBET | | Tue Jan 24 1989 10:11 | 24 |
| Heat a shallow puddle of peanut oil in a wok on medium, toss in 2-3
dried Thai peppers (take out the seeds first) and let them blacken as
the heat comes up. Some (1 t - 1 T) Hot Bean Paste next, 1 t of
chinese cooking wine. When the HBP is fried a bit, heave in a bowl of
chopped veggies of various sorts, a few T of dark (not regular) soy
sauce, and stirfry it. When they seem close-but-not-quite ready, put
in a wee bit of cornstarch mixture for thickening and switch up the
heat to high. When the sauce starts to thicken, toss in some chunk
pineapple and some cashews or peanuts and stir just enough to coat
everything with the thickening sauce. Just before you turn out the
fire, sprinkle in some aji mirin and toss everything around one last
time. Total time about oh 20 minutes.
yummers.
=maggie
(If I need protein that day, I add chunks of quickfried dofu or chicken
just before the veggies. Using dofu roughly doubles the preparation
time and means that I also have to add just a tad of water and let the
dofu soak up the spices before I add the veggies. I also vary the
spices, sometimes using Thai "prik khing", other times an Indian
"vindaloo" mixture. Always good no matter what)
|
410.2 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:01 | 8 |
| Shepard's Pie.
Ground hamburg on the bottom of a casserole dish topped with creamed
corn and top that with whipped potatoes. Bake in the oven until the
peaks of the potatoes are brown and crispy looking.....yum yum....
Anna
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410.3 | mmmmm | NSSG::ALFORD | another fine mess.... | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:35 | 10 |
| mmmmmm breakfast....
Country ham with red-eye gravy, piping hot biscuits with 'real'
butter, couple of fried eggs, and hash browns....
mmmmm
finish it off with molasses, or honey....
mmmm
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410.4 | wash it down with a cold beer or six | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:41 | 1 |
| Anything Mexican, smothered in enchilada sauce and hot sauce
|
410.5 | | RAINBO::TARBET | | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:50 | 3 |
| <--(.4)
Yeah!! Yeah!! What Dana said!
|
410.6 | I like food! | ERLANG::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam; Full speed astern! | Wed Jan 25 1989 11:21 | 18 |
| Breakfast is not my favorite meal. Often, on weekends, the first
thing to pass my lips is the same as the last to pass my lips the
night before, ie beer. My weekday breakfast usually consists of
cheese and crackers and a coke, which is a source of amusement to
my secretary (right Tracee?).
My favorite meal is probably supper. I really like a roast chicken
with stuffing, gravy, mashed potatoes (and yes, even a vegetable).
I usually have wine with supper. I find I am acquiring a taste for
the various reds that are around. I really like Gallo Zinfandel
1981 (reserve) which is both affordable (6.50) and tasty. Of course,
I like other, more expensive wines as well, but they quickly become
toopricey for my tastes.
Another favorite is freshly grilled tuna steaks. Marvelous! Roast
beef is a perennial favorite. So is veal oscar (when I get motivated).
The Doctah
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410.7 | West Virginia is calling ! | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Wed Jan 25 1989 12:34 | 12 |
| Wouldn't it be easier to explain our un-favorite meals?? I am not
crazy about menudo (tripe with hominy). Nor do I get excited about
gelled anything. I like most everything else. Well, maybe I could
skip okra too.
I like New Mexico style Mexican with lots of green chiles. Whole
wheat pita bread with hazelnut butter and a glass of milk. But
if I were on a desert (should I say dessert) island and had to eat
the same thing for a year, it would be homemade salt rising bread
with my grandmother's apple butter and salty home churned butter.
Dondi
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410.8 | best and worst | BOEHM::C_SANDSTROM | | Wed Jan 25 1989 14:30 | 9 |
| Mostest-favoritest-reminds-me-of-Mom meal: ;-)
meatloaf, mashed potatoes, corn and a big glass of milk.
Worstest-grossest-I'll-never-eat-it-in-a-million-years meal:
anything with LIVER (yuk, pitooey, gag). :^(
Conni
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410.9 | mom's cooking | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Wed Jan 25 1989 14:45 | 4 |
| Any meal that my mother has contributed deviled eggs and macaroni
salad to. (I still can't make either like she does.)
Bonnie
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410.10 | With a big glass of Iced Tea | MUMMY::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Wed Jan 25 1989 15:03 | 15 |
| (1) Country fried steak and gravy, homemade french fries, canned
asparagus, sliced fresh tomatoes and cukes, hot buttermilk biscuits
and butter - this is my favorite childhood menu
(2) Fried pork chops, fried fresh corn, fried apples, hot buttermilk
biscuits and butter - the first "real" meal I learned to cook (no
wonder I have a weight problem
(3) Southern fried chicken, fresh green beans cooked southern style,
which means cooked _for about 2 hours or so_ with onion and salt pork
and maybe a pinch of sugar, potato salad (with mustard in it) -
favorite southern "picnic menu"
(4) Desserts: chocolate cake with chocolate frosting, pecan pie,
strawberry pie (glazed)
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410.11 | all of the above + | KOBAL::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Wed Jan 25 1989 17:03 | 16 |
|
.3 and .10 reminded me of the 5 years I lived in Virginia...
I could almost taste the red-eye gravy and the biscuits... mmmm
One of my favorites these days is crawfish etouffee - plump crawfish
in a rich, spicy sauce made with stock thickened with a dark roux,
enriched with butter and loaded with green onions (definitely comfort
food rather than health food).
Another rave goes to a Thai dish - beef red curry, made with homemade
red curry paste, fresh lemon grass, and coconut milk... among other
things.
See you later, I hear dinner calling...
Ron
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410.12 | I'm hungry now! | WEA::PURMAL | Spilt forth like playful whales | Thu Jan 26 1989 11:24 | 14 |
| My ideal lunch: A picnic consisting of a fresh loaf of french
bread, mayonaise, fresh Dungeness crab, fresh fruit, brie, and a
bottle of 1.5% residule sugar Gewurztraminer or Johanesburg Riesling.
For dessert champagne and run chocolate truffles.
A favorite dinner: Start with crab stuffed mushrooms as an
appetizer, then a salad (orange almond) or soup (Boston clam chowder),
then linguini with pesto sauce and prawns, add a nice well aged
Chardonnay to complete the picture. For desert chocolate decedance,
which is like truffle pie.
I want to create a pasta dish someday with pistachios.
ASP
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410.13 | Quick and easy! | MORGAN::MISSELHORN | | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:04 | 29 |
| Back to the unspectacular but childhood favorites:
My mom's quickie dinners:
1. Hamburger, browned, mixed with gravy and served on mashed
potatos. Served with corn.
2. What she called goulash (aka American chop suey) served
with bread and salad.
3. Meatloaf, baked potatoes and salad.
4. Porcupine meatballs with same as above.
(All these gourmet selections!)
Now, I add to my list of favorites:
1. Baked chicken, baked potato and veg/salad.
Oh, I forgot to mention Dad's favorite which we loved to:
Creamed shipped beef in sauce over mashed potato.
(I know, but he was a mid-west depression boy and this stuff
was a luxury!)
I love all the fancy foods too but plain home cooking is my favorite.
Barbara
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410.14 | Glad I don't have to choose one | 2EASY::PIKET | | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:22 | 8 |
|
Stuffed Cabbage - better than sex.
Roberta
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410.15 | Yes, I'm serious | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:37 | 23 |
| I grew up in the South, and never knew anything other than Southern
style cooking till I went off to college. I remember as a child
my very favorite meal in the whole world was
dried lima beans seasoned with fatback
cook-em-dead mustard greens (picked after the first frost so they
wouldn't be bitter) with mamma's homemade pepper sauce
fresh corn (picked that afternoon) seasoned with grease from frying
out a hunk of fatback
the fried out hunks of fatback (ummmmmmm good)
fresh out of the garden tomatoes, sliced
mamma's buttermilk cornbread
Note that there is practically no meat in the above meal. Yes, we
usually had meat every day, but when I was growing up my favorite meals
were the ones that came out of the vegetable garden. When we had the
stuff listed above, I wouldn't have eaten any roast beef if it had been
on the table!
Though I don't cook Southern style all the time today, it's still
the bestest way in the world to eat in my opinion!
Pat
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410.16 | Question from a Jewish New Yorker | 2EASY::PIKET | | Fri Jan 27 1989 11:52 | 6 |
|
What is fatback?
Thanks.
Roberta
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410.18 | The good, the warm, and the artificial | NAC::BENCE | Shetland Pony School of Problem Solving | Fri Jan 27 1989 12:43 | 27 |
|
End of summer foods -
fresh grilled swordfish with a splash of lemon
boiled lobster with lemon and unsalted butter (and LOTS of napkins)
just-picked corn on the cob
Foods for rain days -
Home-made tapioca pudding, just-made and still warm in the bowl
Indian pudding served hot with brandied hard sauce
...and that old standby - peanutbutter and grape jelly sandwiches.
And in the category of "I hate to admit this, but..."
the little sugar dots that come on long strips of white paper
Hostess chocolate cupcakes with the white-flavored filling
cathy
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410.19 | wait a minnit?!! | ERLANG::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam; Full speed astern! | Fri Jan 27 1989 14:50 | 5 |
| re .14 (Roberta)
Stuffed cabbage better than sex??!!
Sounds like you're doin 'it' wrong! :-)
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410.20 | Are you cooking it long enough? | BOLT::MINOW | Why doesn't someone make a simple Risk chip? | Fri Jan 27 1989 15:28 | 11 |
| re: .14:
> Stuffed Cabbage - better than sex.
Should we, um, trade recipes?
Perhaps we'd both be suprised.
M.
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410.21 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Mon Jan 30 1989 07:12 | 1 |
| re.20 Great chefs don't use recipes :-)
|
410.22 | Once a year... | AWARD1::HARMON | | Mon Jan 30 1989 09:46 | 7 |
| My favorite is roast center loin pork, mashed potatoes and Green
Giant corn in butter. It's not particularly healthy, but it's good.
And for desert....apple pie (but I still can't make it like my mother
did). I always asked, and got, this for my birthday dinner.
P.
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410.23 | As Christine Lavin would sing: | SALEM::LUPACCHINO | There's a world beyond this room. | Thu Feb 02 1989 07:58 | 4 |
|
"Cold pizza for breakfast."
am
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410.24 | Balanced diet? What's that?? | TSG::DOUGHERTY | | Thu Feb 02 1989 12:09 | 24 |
| Hm.. some of my favorites are:
Roast beast (_RARE_), mushed potatoes, turnip, and string beans
all smothered in LOTS and LOTS of brown gravy. :-)
Eggplant parmesian
Sundaes with hot fudge, nuts, and cinnamon-nutmeg ice cream
Veggie lasagna
Piaia (which I can't eat any more :-( due to food allergies)
Lamb Curry
Samosas
Chocolate fondu
Green salad
- Mary
New (but sorta recognizable) foods
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410.25 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Thu Feb 02 1989 12:24 | 6 |
| When I'm having a massive chocolate craving, I do up a
Samore. Does anybody remember these from when they were
a kid, or girl scouts? Actually, only one can cure all
of my chocolate or sugar cravings....
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410.27 | | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Thu Feb 02 1989 12:58 | 13 |
|
Baked ham (the real thing not a canned ham)
Baked macaroni and cheese
Broccoli
Sunshine salad (a gelatin salad with raw carrots and pineapple)
Candied sweet potatoes
Hot cross buns (home made and served warm)
This is our traditional Easter dinner and my favorite of all the
holiday meals. I can hardly wait for March 26th.:-).
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410.28 | Nothin' says lovin' like something from the oven | BARTLE::GODIN | This is the only world we have | Thu Feb 02 1989 14:46 | 16 |
| Oh, yes, S'Mores! I'll go along with that one.
I've been known to create these over the kitchen stove (gas burner
works best, but even an electric element will do when you're in
the midst of a S'More Craving).
Could be that's part of the reason I'm in the shape I am.
Also -- pizza, preferably sausage and onion
Banana splits
Home-made yeast rolls (Grandma S's recipe, raised in the warming
oven of her old wood-burning stove)
Grandma B's fried chicken and pan gravy (made with milk)
with mashed potatoes, green beans, and cranberry sauce, all followed
by her famous cherry pie a la mode.
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410.29 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:36 | 14 |
| question,
I've done this before, and it works rather well. Of course, I
only did it when it was convenient, i.e. ironing day....
Has anyone ever made themselves a grilled cheese sandwitch using
the iron? You make the sandwitch, two pieces of bread with cheese
in the middle, and then just lay hot iron on top until toasted
and flip over the sandwitch and do it again? Someone saw me do this
and laughed like hell, and one of my XSO's children refused to eat
it since her mother didn't do it that way....
try it.....Anna
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410.30 | Lazy me! | TUT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Thu Feb 02 1989 15:42 | 3 |
| re .29
I'm too lazy to want to clean the iron afterward...
|
410.31 | For the Gourmet... | SLOVAX::HASLAM | Creativity Unlimited | Thu Feb 02 1989 18:55 | 16 |
| Let's see...
For breakfast--either Swedish pancakes or German with steamed apples
and orange suzette.
For lunch--A paper thin omelet with chopped parseley, gated Parmesan
cheese, and thinly sliced mushrooms, and served with fresh homemade
French bread and hot tea to drink.
For dinner--Chicken in White Wine Sauce, steamed rice, baby peas
cooked in boullion, with orange sherbet and ginger snaps for dessert,
and served with white wine to drink.
(I used to cook a lot when I was a stay at home mother:))
Barb
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410.32 | | RUTLND::SAISI | | Fri Feb 03 1989 11:48 | 5 |
| Pizza eaten the following way:
Get a jar of peanutbutter. Eat the "body" of the slice and
then smear peanutbutter on the crust and eat that. Wash down
with lots of cold milk, and go on to the next slice.
m-m-m-m-m-m-m
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410.33 | Great on a cold rainy day. | WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZ | O, Sibili Si Ergo | Mon Feb 06 1989 12:23 | 4 |
|
Hot cream of tomatoe soup and grilled cheese&mustard sandwiches
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410.34 | Another MM-MM G-O-O-D dish! | TSG::DOUGHERTY | | Tue Feb 07 1989 11:11 | 8 |
| My latest favorite is:
Chicken with Huisan (sp?) sauce as prepared by the world famous
cuisinier Dale Hall. :-)
Hi Dale! ;-)
- Mary
|
410.35 | Mouth watering | TLE::HALVORSON | | Tue Feb 28 1989 10:06 | 8 |
| For dinner: Chicken with Cashew Nuts from a local Chinese takeout
For breakfast: Bran muffins with apple butter (Anybody know where
you can buy apple butter in MA.? I still import mine from Virginia!)
Jane
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410.36 | | RAINBO::TARBET | | Tue Feb 28 1989 10:37 | 8 |
| You can get apple butter by Idylwilde Market (I'm quite sure that's not
spelt right) in Acton, Jane. Getting there is quite easy: take 2 east
from 495, get off at the first exit (Littleton/W. Acton?) and shoot
straight down the road for oh, a mile or two. It's on your right,
largish building with parking in front. They're closed one weekday,
but I never remember which one in time not to go there :-]
=maggie
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410.37 | Idylwilde [sic] is closed Tuesdays. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Feb 28 1989 10:56 | 0 |
410.38 | | AMUN::CRITZ | A noid is annoyed | Tue Feb 28 1989 11:38 | 6 |
| RE: Apple Butter
When my wife wants apple butter, she picks some apples
with the kids and just makes it.
Scott
|
410.39 | pear butter? | NSSG::ALFORD | another fine mess.... | Tue Feb 28 1989 12:23 | 10 |
| re: last few...
Apple butter...mmmm...my grandmother used to make that wonderful
stuff. However, I have recently discovered pear butter...and like
it much better--more tartness-- unfortunately the jar I have I
bought in Pennsy. Amish country...now where can I find it???
Will look at Idylwilde (yes, I think it's been spelled right all
along) next time I'm there!
deb
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410.40 | Bolton | REFINE::TAYLOR | "Hug me, I purr!..." | Tue Feb 28 1989 17:00 | 5 |
| You can also find it in Bolton Orchards at the junction of Rt. 117 and 110 in
Bolton. Take I495 to the 117 exit. Go toword Bolton. About 4-5 miles and
Bolton orchards is on the left.
Holly
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410.41 | Food fit for Texans | HSSWS1::GREG | The Texas Chainsaw | Tue Feb 28 1989 22:09 | 19 |
|
For dinner: A slab of baby back ribs from Houston's with french
Fries and Baked Beans... and a side order of cinnamon apples.
Oh, and we mustn't forget... several glasses of iced tea. The
ribs are so tender that the meat literally falls off the bone
when you touch it with your fork (if you're inclined to use
a fork, that is). The beans are cooked with beans and bacon
in a spicy tomatoe sauce that is to die for. The fries are
skin-on, thin, and light golden brown. The apples are steaming,
and served in a sweet cinnamon goo that is devine! Of course,
you also get a salad with your choice of dressings... I recommend
the Hot Bacon or Bleu Cheese (big chunks).
YUM! All for only $15! Yes, there are some significant
advantages to living in Texas. Good food is definitely one
of them.
- Greg
(Maybe next time I`ll tell you about the Tortilla Soup.)
|
410.42 | RE: .37-.40 | BOOKIE::HALVORSON | | Wed Mar 01 1989 12:49 | 7 |
| Thank you for all the valuable info on apple butter, Maggie, Ann,
and Holly!! (My suitcases will be that much lighter next Christmas.)
Scott, I envy you your wife and kids :-). I, alas, number among the
cooking-impaired.
Jane
|