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srhcb

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Everything posted by srhcb

  1. I wonder if maybe "Ole" is the same person as from Sven & Ole's Pizza from Two Harbors? SB (it boggles the mind)
  2. srhcb

    Coffee Matters

    I'm sorry to "show off" my lack of digital photography skills, but .... I have several dozen mugs, but only use three regularly. At work I use a mug from a friend's bar, named Tom & Jerry's, which has cartoon pictures of, you guessed it. At home I use either a mug with the handle broken off which features a mouse hanging from a barbell and the inscription "you give me strength"; a gift from GF, or a black mug with my name in gold script and a Corvette emblem. SB (notorious for never washing his coffee mugs)
  3. I got this reply: "we have a hosting station but do not have all the funding in place. We are now looking at taping in the late fall or early winter and airing next year, early summer." SB (good thing I wasn't holding my breath?)
  4. srhcb

    Roasting a Chicken

    If you get a quality bird, t's hard to beat Sara Moulton's Blasted Chicken It's sinfully simple!
  5. The first time somebody hired two bartenders?
  6. Having caught, killed (tougher than you'd think), cleaned (again ....), and cooked a turtle, I can see where Mock Turtle Soup might be a good idea, but having grown, picked, peeled cored and cooked apples, I can't see how Mock Apple Pie makes any sense? SB
  7. srhcb

    Xanthan

    srhcb, I think you are thinking of arabic gum, that is why many brands turned to the name gum acacia. ← I should has said "false" rumor. SB
  8. srhcb

    Xanthan

    It's a good alternative thickener, but xanthan has an alternate use in gluten-free/lactose free baked products to add "mouth-feel". Don't ask me how it works though? I have a cousin who is both gluten and lactose intolerant and I tried some various baking recipes for him. An odd asside; there was a rumor that Osama bin Laden's family controlled the world's supply of the substance, which is produced in Sudan.
  9. srhcb

    Figs

    fig ice cream SB (or maybe trade somebody from MN who likes figs for some wild rice?)
  10. Now why you gotta go and be all superior, my money ain't good enough. You must have the same irrational dislike of post offices that I have. ← I really don't like to sell wild rice since I get the nicest hand parched rice the Indians reserve for personal use. Whatever I trade for I usually share with Lou. Some trades I've made in the past include home roasted coffee beans, licorice from Holland, unusual spices from places like South America, Asia and Eastern Europe, a selection of gournet mustards, home made jam and jelly, a vintage cook book, etc. There are some commercial brands I would endorse, Christmas Point and Ramy being two of them. Notice these are both gray/green in color rather than black. This is what you look for. You'll see a lot of wild rice on eBay labled as "hand parched", but I doubt if most really is since there are very few people still employing the old labor intensive methods. In any case, it's probably all superior to what you'll usually find in a gourmet shop. SB
  11. DISCLAIMER: This is neither an offer nor a solicitation I have been known to trade hand parched wild rice for interesting or unusual products from other regions.
  12. Maybe Minnesota wild rice isn't reallly "rice", but the California product is neither "rice" nor "wild"! Actually, the biggest difference is in processing. It California product seems to be more for decoration than eating. If the grains are black, they're burnt! Even most of the rice that's hand harvested here in MN is commercially processed, but some of it is pretty good, ie: not burnt. Old fashioned, hand parched wild rice is the real thing, but it's generally only available directly from the source. SB (plys his "source" with free coffee and donuts all year)
  13. I like guys like Bob.
  14. This year we had record breaking hot and dry weather this spring and summer here in Northern Minnesota. Even the oldest people I found asked couldn'r ever recall anything like it. We weren't sure what effect this would have on the wild rice crop, especially since the lake levels were so low due to the lack of rain. Just this past week my friend Big Lou was able to check out a few of his regular spots. He reports more wild rice than he's ever seen, and he's been ricing every year since he first went with his Native American relatives over forty years ago! The rice is just starting to ripen, so barring horrific rain storms or an early frost he should begin harvesting in about a week. Today wild rice is a luxury product, and many, like Big Lou, rice for traditions sake and a little extra pocket money. But it's interesting to imagine how a bumper crop like this year's would have been appreciated back when the rice comprised a significant part of the tribes' diet or, more recently, provided many families with a major portion of their yearly cash income. On a more personal level, Lou should have plenty of time for ricing. His wife has kicked him out of the house (again), and he's living in his RV, so he can be literally "on the job site" when he gets up in the morning. This is somewhat reminiscent of the "rice camps" of olden days, when the men would pitch tents on the shores near the rice beds and harvest all day and drink and tell tales all night. SB
  15. I hate to admit it, but I print them up and save them in the cupboard above my range hood. It's pretty low tech, and not very well organized, but I've never lost them in a crash.
  16. We could cover the cake with an inflated prophylactic and have an accurate rendition of the Minnesota Viking's home: the Hubert H Humphrey Metrodome! SB
  17. srhcb

    Peach Cobbler

    Personally, I don't peel the peaches, or hardly any other fruit for that matter. I like the added color, and in rustic dish like cobblers and crisps I don't think the loose peel is distracting at all. SB (waiting for his yearly fix of Frog Hollow Cal Reds!)
  18. THE Episode is on again in 15 minutes! SB (will watch again! )
  19. According to the most recent article I could find her PBS show is in production and scheduled for April 2007 airing. I've emailed Sara's web site for clarification. SB (hopeful)
  20. I can't find any mention of Sara Moulton's rumored PBS series on either her site or the PBS web page? I hope something hasn't gone wrong? SB (will be very sad )
  21. For me it's all about the camaraderie. I live in an area that might be considered a culinary backwater. Information was always available through books and magazines, and products and equipment by mail order, but the opportunity for the pleasure of learning and sharing through personal contact hardly existed before the internet. THANX SB
  22. I'm only 15 minutes into the Beirut episode. I think this is what those who invented televsion had hoped it was going to become. THANX Tony et al SB
  23. Perhaps I'm just adept at recalling subliminally planted old safety lessons, but I honestly never put anything on the stove top. I don't even set utensils I'm using on the range. SB (fortunate to have a large center island)
  24. I think you answered your own question .... No chef wants to compete against "grandma"! Interest in Eastern European food and culture is trending upward right now. Since there's been so much "cross-pollinization" of the various cultures, regardless of political boundries, I think a restaurant based on the entire region's cuisine, perhaps specializing in one particular variation, would work. As always, it comes down to location, location, location. SB (and $, $, $)
  25. Wow thanks....now I have to see it even more!...damn I have been waiting for months to see it and cant....arrgh! ← I meant it most sincerely. It had a spontaneity that works so well for Alton. You and "Jack Dunphy" are my two favorite LA cops!
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