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Everything posted by Darienne
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Try doing all of this in Metric as we must do in Canada. So it might mean that a package of 556 grams would be reduced to what? 539 grams or something. Right. Try making sense of that? Who can do the math? You just buy it off the shelves and grumble and complain. And get on to the next issue. T'was ever thus in some form or other.
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Wonderful, Steve.
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I have not had an onion bhaji for years now. Oh, how I remember that delicious treat! Lucky you.
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What did You Learn (To Cook) From Your Parents?
Darienne replied to a topic in Food Traditions & Culture
One thing: how to make a what used to be called French Vinaigrette salad dressing, although no one called it that then. Otherwise nothing. My Mother hated cooking and went for the first freezer plan ever on the market. That's why I grew up loathing ice cream. Cheap junk it was. My Father was one of those who could barely open a can. My DH, Ed, partly of French-Canadian heritage and with a Mother who made everything from scratch, taught me how to cook. Which I hated until about five years ago. That's my story. -
Baking cake in sheet pans and forming cake layers for tiered cake?
Darienne replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Just love your cake, StephMac. :wub: -
Looks good online. Is Robert M. already working to get us a tour??? Or something??? Go, Robert M.
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Hello Jeffery C. Welcome to the eG gang and thank you for the information and words of inspiration. You put the dessert into a useful context for me and I am likely to try making it again, but in a more useful fashion for our own needs. Interesting about cooking as I learn more and more, how the many bits and pieces come together in larger patterns. As in...you take one set of ingredients, say those in a custard, and cook them in one of several ways, and then whip them or not, and then serve them hot or cool them, and put them into, on top of or under other ingredients or not, or freeze them, churned or not. And what other ingredients you can substitute if you don't have the ones called for...and then how that becomes a useful variation of the original recipe. And if you live in a cooler or wetter or drier climate you would combine them with a different grains. And if you had easy access to cooking fuel that makes a difference in how you cook them. And so on and so on. Absolutely fascinating. Wonderful!!! I'm almost glad I never had any interest in cooking before. Allows me in my quickly approaching dotage to find a new obsession to urge me on. Which is probably more than anyone wanted to know.
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Because I am just basically learning to cook with some enthusiasm and don't have any background in cooking in the 60s, 70s, etc, etc, I don't have any real experience in the dishes of those times. (Yes, I cooked, but I also made beds, yadda, yadda.) Bought a 1987 Better Homes & Gardens:Recipes from Prizewinning Cooks the other day for a couple of dollars, thinking that it might be fun. Actually made first dessert listed last night for our weekly 'Dessert as Dinner' because it had all the necessary elements: grain (rice), dairy (cream & milk), eggs (uncooked whites), unflavored gelatin and fruit (3 cups). Plus hardly any sugar...a bonus. Made it with Blood Oranges instead of strawberries. And it was very tasty...but strange. There was only minimal rice in it!!! (Should have read it more carefully ahead of time...one of my major failings.) I realized too late that it was NOT a rice pudding at all with only 1/4 cup of rice for 4 servings. So I made scones and we spooned it on top. Too dryish. So made a quick boozy raspberry sauce to pour on top. Yumm. Looked up other 'fluff' (Fluff? What's a 'Fluff'? ) recipes online and they called for No-sugar jello, Cool Whip (ugh!), marshmallow creme (ugh again!) with some given the designation of 'diet desserts'. Can someone please give me a sense of what I have stumbled into?
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Because I couldn't access any Landies Candies website from Canada today?/for some reason?, I phoned the plant and talked to Larry, the man in charge. I was curious to know what they make and they make chocolate candies. They don't make anything else besides chocolate. Sounds good to me. They have a store front which we means we can buy goodies.
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A question: what exactly does 'panning them' mean? Thanks.
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Costco usually gives out a plethora of samples in their aisles. I've tried a number of tidbits, mostly depending upon the hour and how hungry I am. Most is processed dreck. Never anything with meat. And we have seldom bought any product based on tasting...with one incredible exception. Mary's Organic Crackers. Yummm...
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Will do. Done. Phoned and spoke to the person in charge and no, there is no store front and there is nothing for sale. They have a display of boxes in their lobby, but that is all. As she said, they are a manufacturing plant. However, they will put on a presentation and take groups on guided plant tours which are very interesting...watching cardboard and boxes being made, etc. A sort of "How it is Made" reality tour. I guess I would actually find it fascinating. However, I would not choose to go over touring a candy company. I have the name and number: Tracy Loverde, ModPac, (716) 873-0640.
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I looked at the ModPac website. Do they have a storefront sales desk sort of thing and can you buy just one or two of this and that?
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Do you think that freezing the gooseberries before you make them into jam changes the the nature of the pectin in any way? Thanks.
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Headcheese has been off the table for me for decades now (DH has a very mixed background including French Canadian and his Mother used to make it)...but I had forgotten about Scrapple. Ah yes, Scrapple. It sounded so good when friends said they were bringing it to the Dog Weekend a few years ago. Apples thought I. And crispy stuff. Not. They're from Delaware. Two huge oblong blocks of gray stuff. Fried. You never saw so many happy dogs as the horrible greasy stuff was surreptitiously slipped under the table by all but the folks from Delaware who devoured it. Is there something about Delaware? We haven't seen it since. (Maybe they did notice.)
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Sorry. That would be nice. I live in Ontario and am thankful that I even have a doctor. We don't get to 'change' doctors here. Actually, the drug snafus that I have been saved from would curl your hair, and I suspect a lot of Ontarians (I can't speak for the rest of Canada) might well have similar stories. The pharmacist is my best friend here.
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I haven't tasted a vegetarian burger since the bad old days when I thought they were truly dreadful. DH and I were vegetarians for about 25 years (as compared to 'less-meatarians' (Mark Bittman) for the last 15 or so) and during that time I ate out quite a lot on boards and suchlike. I was invariably served a salad or Fettucine Alfredo. Time after time after time in a variety of locations and restaurants and banquets. Yecch. The complete lack of imagination back then was abysmal. Thank heavens that has changed. Maybe I'll try a burger again. Maybe not.
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I would take great exception to what gfweb says here: "ask the doc". Would that it were true. In the best of all possible worlds it might be. Maybe he/she has better doctors than we do here. Ask your pharmacist would be my advice. My pharmacist has on more than one occasion saved me from the terrible mistakes that my family doctor has prescribed for me, while knowing what else is wrong with me and what meds I am already on. Doctors seem to know very little about the myriads of drugs available now. How on earth could they? My neurologist even knew nothing...NOTHING...about testing for Tegretol levels once a year. Really inspires confidence, alright. No, ask your doctor if you like...then ask your pharmacist.
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I have similar meds to take at 6 am and boy do I ever not want to eat ANYTHING. A cup of coffee please. But then I now have GERD and can't afford to disregard the warning. My pharmacist said a minimum of 150 calories should be taken. So I have tried a variety of this and that and settled on 1/2 Morning Glory Muffin and it seems to be working out. (Using the original recipe even.)
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Plus one from from St.V de P: Better Homes and Gardens: Recipes from Prizewinning Cooks. Curious...there are no front pages missing and yet there is no date and no ISBN. Found it on Amazon.com. 1986.
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Quinoa trend pricing Bolivians out of the market
Darienne replied to a topic in Food Traditions & Culture
We just began to eat quinoa last year and love it. My summer go-to salad is based on quinoa, thanks to Cathy as in What Would Cathy Eat? Any suggestions about what to do in a positive way? Are not our domestic eating corn prices somewhat of a paralle, though with much less drastic results, with the the increasing production of fuel-oriented corn crops? -
We have two grown children. The eldest, a daughter is 50 and doesn't cook. She lives in downtown Toronto and certainly doesn't have to. The youngest, a son, is married to a dear woman who doesn't cook although she does bake. He cooks, mainly on a barbecue...one of the people who use the barbecue all year around. Oh, right, he lives in Nova Scotia and they do get cold weather and some snow. (My Mother hated cooking and my husband had to teach me how to cook, which I hated for the most part until about 4 years ago when all cooking broke loose.)