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Everything posted by Darienne
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Onion bahji. My very favorite. No Indian food in Moab, Utah, unless I make it.
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No, no Kerry. Not in Moab. There's a Kroger's here but it lacks candy making stuff...which I bring from home. And a lot of other things too. Buff tourists do not back. No Lorann here. And certainly no Michael's. There's an Alco...and it's closing. That's it. Moab is two hours from anywhere. Two hours north and east is Grand Junction...you could get it there. Two hours south and east is Cortez. Both are in CO. I have no idea what you can get in Cortez. Not much I think. Now if you wanted cliff climbing equipment or bicycle tires or jeeping stuff...you could get it here. ATVs, river rafts, hiking boots. Yes. Motorcycles even. But not foodstuffs. Remember the young man who had to cut his arm off with a penknife to survive? That was just outside of Moab.
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Thank you CatPoet. And Kerry and Anna I'm in the middle of not much in Utah. I even bring my own mint when we come here. Lots of red rocks and blue skies but not a lot of anything else.
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I'll have to buy the whipping cream...no problem...but exactly how does one measure a litre of flour? Would it be 4 cups? I doubt I can get oil of lemon where we are, but I could add lemon zest.
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Cat Poet, I would like the recipe also. Rolling balls is just about my speed of cookie making.
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Hooray for you Shelby!!! Have a good rest. You deserve it.
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Baking over housecleaning any day!!
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Your Daily Sweets: What are you making and baking? (2014)
Darienne replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
ninagluck, I second what Smithy said. Each year I make the crescent cookies from a recipe in an old Fanny Farmer cookbook, using the pecan variation. Also, I'm too lazy and clumsy to do that lovely shape. They just get made into elongated ovaly things. Then I dip one end into chocolate or drizzle chocolate over them. Love them. -
CatPoet, your efforts have really come through for you. Those finished lussekatter look delicious. Such fun to learn of holiday feasts in other lands. Thank you for all your troubles. Have a good rest.
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Twenty-four 1/2 pound boxes of Enstrom copy-cat toffee ready for delivery tomorrow morning at the Moab Humane Society Dog Adoption Morning for the society's Volunteers for Christmas. Whew! Done. Not an exciting photo, but still significant.
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Well, my first commitment is finished. 24 boxes of Enstrom copycat toffee. It's the world's best. Trust me. I never even like toffee until I tasted this one. But 4 batches for an old lady trying at the same time to settle into a strange house is just too much. You will notice that the boxes sport NO ribbons, bows or other furbellows.
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Shelby, you are a Christmas angel. Me? The Christmas grump...I've decided that two stickers is enough and am refusing to do the bow thing. This is on one of the stickers, my favorite Christmas Moose. I have used this sticker on a round label on my Christmas givings for years now and I still adore him.
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Our Christmas festivities are as of now pretty much unplanned. We are 2500 miles from home in Utah in my favorite place in the entire world...not that I've seen much of the world...Moab where the rocks are red and the skies are blue and the sun is almost always shining. Ed WILL make his tortieres and I WILL make shortbread cookies from my dear friend's Mother's recipe. Where or with whom or for that matter with anybody? we will share a meal is not known. I am mid-Humane Society Volunteers Christmas boxes (25) of Enstrom KopyKat toffee but after this...who knows?
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Ah! Making the bows...my least favorite part of the entire procedure. Packaging is not my thing. I've started on 25 boxes for the Moab Humane Society volunteers, Chocolate coated, almond sprinkled, toffee. 1/2 pound boxes for each. That's 4 batches. 6 boxes packed, stickered, awaiting ribbons. Batch #2 awaiting its reverse side to be coated and sprinkled. DH cut the waxed paper for me. To be finished by this Saturday. I like the feeling of doing it. Well, all except the ribbon part...
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Made the toffee for the local chums and it was well received. Well, duh...And now we are 2500 miles away in Utah and I have just finished batch #1 for the local Humane Society volunteers Christmas gifts. Three more batches to go. Not to mention the less enjoyable boxing and ribboning.
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DH Ed makes his own traditional tortiere each year. He favors allspice. Half lean ground and half lean pork ground. He used to make the pie crust...using 7up but now settles for premade frozen stuff. My specialty is short bread cookies...the best I've ever eaten. The recipe was given to me by a friend who no longer wants to make them and she got it from her Mother and so on and so on. Contains brown sugar. Otherwise we are just plain North American types.
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I do go through periods of obsessive cooking of this and that. Recently it has been Mexican food. However, for decades now, I would have to say that chickpeas remain a constant and endless favorite. Just made a pot of Harira this morning which of course contains chickpeas. And there is always a container of hummus in the fridge.
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Hi Daymia, True, it is expensive...but then you or your friends or neighbors can eat it all, mistakes or best pieces. And such a lot of friends you will have!
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Our dining room table is very large and I don't think I could afford to buy a tablecloth to cover it and so I have made my own. And they are solid color only, a lighter color if you scaled terra cotta back. And something like this color range. Thus the napkins are from the same material and are solid. Mostly we don't use them except for special occasions, but use the dinner type commercial paper napkins. Not much help I fear.
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Welcome to eGullet and to this family of food enthusiasts who, as you say, help each other so much. I have certainly been the recipient of much help over the years and trust that you will be too. I'd like to know more about herbs in desserts...
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We absolutely love food from the Indian subcontinent and cook a few dishes at home. We have only two restaurants in our city with Indian food, both owned by the same man, quite expensive. We were devastated when the inexpensive restaurant closed down. We did come across in our travels, a truck-stop on the eastern edge of New Mexico on I 40 which carries Indian food ingredients and snack foods. Talk about in the middle of nowhere but we were glad. I should ask the family where in Indian they come from. There we were, eating samosas at 9:30 am.
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We are just two old 'crocks' with our kids totally grown up, but I am very keen on watching this site. Food which can sit for a few hours without spoiling sounds interesting. What do YOU serve?
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Love the reindeer. Is it milk chocolate? From a two piece mold?