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Posts posted by Margaret Pilgrim
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Forgive and allow me to repost Mary Risley's classic (albeit bawdy) video on How to Roast a Turkey.
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+1 on stuffing outside the bird. Two casseroles, in fact, one for the table and leftovers and one for son to take home. Which calls for rivers of gravy for TD and two households' leftover stuffing. This year= ham plus stuffing, mac and cheese, roast yams and roast carrots. Chocolate cream pie for dessert.
My parent would faint at how far from the tree we've fallen re TD menu!
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6 minutes ago, liuzhou said:
I figured out years ago how to deal with turkey and always follow my established method.
This involves never buying it or eating it. There are much better meats. In fact most, if not all, meats are better.
I had such an epiphany maybe half dozen years ago when I stood tall and announced, after some 50 years of hosting, "I have cooked my LAST turkey!"
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4 minutes ago, ElsieD said:
Neither one of us cares for turkey. We always have capon.
You send out invitations? Our group is only 6 this year...
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I love chicken, pigeon, duck and most of their friends. But I truly find turkey, be it supermarket or heritage, a holiday obligation rather than something I look forward to. When hosting, a successful holiday is when I have packaged and sent home with others all of the leftovers. Special kudos when someone opts for the carcass. Now that we understand each other, Butterball has over time provided us with the most tolerable bird. Juicy (yes, I know), tender, flavorful. Whatever evil they do with those birds, it does taste good on the plate.
Just sign me "Philistine".
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Even before @rotuts' coup, my mother gave me $20 towards Thanksgiving dinner. Instead of the turkey she had in mind, I went to Lucky and bought one at .19/lb -> $6. bird. Did not confess my larceny, but remember everyone around the table complimenting the turkey,
In later year I bought a very expensive heritage turkey that was just awful! Scrawny, stringy, tough. I mean, that bird had lead a hard life!
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According to Forbes Mag, Lubbock wines are hidden treasures. Sounds like you found a couple
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14 hours ago, gfweb said:
The Mac was actually cavatapi, for which they gain points, but it was still bland. Hot sauce would've helped.
For years I traveled with a small bottle of Cholula which was my cure-all for airline food.
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Anna via Tri2Cook: "you're heading in a bad direction and I'm not gonna let you."
An invaluable mantra for each of us and those who look to us for wisdom.
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Under "mental prep", just read how to clone a honey baked ham.
Last year, we paid just under $100 for a half a honey baked ham to take to the family Thanksgiving. This year, with just 6 of us, I'm cheaping it with a plain spiralied ham. But I thought, what, what if I could make our own honey baked ham? And it seems that I don't even have to reinvent the wheel! Others show us how! What a coup to have enjoy this at maybe a quarter of the price!
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1 hour ago, TdeV said:
Any memory of what the cooking procedures were, Margaret?
Thanks.
re "lard sandwich" in France: Very simple camp-type grill set up. Unseasoned (maybe salt) 3/16i" slices of pork belly.
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14 hours ago, ElsieD said:
I see Costco has started carrying it. A question that has often baffled me is why would anyone buy it 2 months before Christmas? Do you freeze it? If so, why not wait until a day or two before Christmas so it's reasonably fresh? Assuming it hasn't sat on a store shelf for weeks, that is.
So we can EAT it. We don't consider it only a Christmas bread, but a breakfast and tea bread. I remember a French hostess near t4e Italian border serving us panettone at breakfast during the summer.
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At a village fete in country France, a men's civic group was selling "lard sandwiches". I couldn't fathom what these would be but the line was long so I decided it was worth a "go". Turned out to be charcoal grilled pork belly. WOW! On a super fresh baguette. WOW, WOW! No condiments needed on this ultimate porky hand-feast. Never seen this offered since but I guess it's a household thing.
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Wisdom seems to have been an inheritable trait in that family. Thank you, Lynn Marie and Kerry, indeed.
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32 minutes ago, JoNorvelleWalker said:
Yesterday I showed a friend the product page for the panettone I purchased. They were sold out. I guess I ordered just in time.
I kind of wonder if October panettone are first arrivals of this year's bake or the last of the previous year.
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If you're by chance in Paris in early December, Salon Saveurs will take care of your holiday shopping. Fresh, frozen, dried, tinned, jarred, packaged, it's all here. Generous samples, a crush but not long lines. Stuff we never see here. Cheese, charcuterie, confitures, if you can eat it, it's here. Did I say foie gras? Wine and cider. All versions of preserved salmon. Herbs and spices and condiments.
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7 hours ago, blue_dolphin said:
Here's a taste test of a bunch of brands from last year:
Regardless of quality, I could never eat or even taste panettone in the way he just stuffs wads in his mouth. I also don't enjoy it cut in the traditional/correct way. I like it cut crosswise into 1/2" circles. And IMHO it should be heated slightly. We just pass it through hot non-stick pan, not quite long enough to toast.
We go through several large ones a season, so all of this reminds me that it's time to bring (a good) one home.
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I had to laugh at the emphasis on cooling time. The one time I made panetonne, I followed the directions and suspended it upsidedown to cool and drop from the mold. Dear husband came in and, not understanding the process, decided to "help" by whacking the mold a few times and nudging the loaf out with a spatula. Of course, it was so delicate that it collapsed and tore apart. Other than the fact that it was utterly unpresentable, the texture and flavor, and, yes, moistness were superb. I never revisited the recipe.
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Like many mass produced things, glaceed fruit has been cheapened to what Katie rightly calls Neon Fruit. The real thing, from small producers is a different animal. True to flavor and color of the original fruit, delicious, and expensive even at the source. Besides the fancy food halls of the grand magazins in Paris, wonderful stuff can be found at Paris' Christian Constant. Yes, those stoplight red thing are glaceed chilis!
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How very fortunate we are to have so many of Anna's observations chronicled here. She will be alive as long as we are here to reread her words.
Thank you, Kerry, for sharing your memories with us. May she always bring a smile to your and our face.
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A friend has for years extolled the virtues of Panettone by Roy , which were $50 a pop. A little rich for me.
I see that this year they are $95.
Enjoy!
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3 hours ago, weinoo said:
.... anything to do with pumpkin spice, other than pumpkin pie, can kiss my xxxxxx!
Yo, bro! Include those shops who pollute their space with pumpkin/gingerbread potpourri. Kind of excludes us from October through December.
Crab Cakes
in Cooking
Posted · Edited by Margaret Pilgrim (log)
We in NorCal are hampered by fishing regulations that limit harvest times for Dungeness crab, the ONLY crab worth the trouble/cost. 😛 Perhaps my favorite treatment id Lee Bailey's "Baked Crabmeat" which is essentially crabmeat bound with a very small amount of mayo, formed into cakes and baked on a sheet pan. I follow his instruction but also dust with panko and pan fry.
When you use dungeness, you don't need/want a lot of gratuitous ingredients. 😏
eta, crab comes in a shell, not a can.