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Weekly Cooking (and related issues) Thread
Posted on 05/21/2015 3:20:53 PM PDT by Jamestown1630
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To: kalee
I just heard of ‘killed salad’ by a neighbor here. Is it good? Sounds interesting.
101
posted on
06/23/2015 7:09:14 AM PDT
by
Hardens Hollow
(Couldn't find Galt's Gulch, so created our own Harden's Hollow to quit paying the fascist beast.)
To: Hardens Hollow
I like it. The dressing is a warm vinaigrette of bacon grease, mustard, finely minced onion, brown sugar, salt and pepper.
You can use any kind of lettuce, spinach leaves or a combination. When serving add cooked bacon pieces and sliced hard boiled egg to the salad on the plates.
My grandmother made it, but my mother never did. My mother and her friends were young wives in the early Julia Child era, they didn't cook like their mothers. Southern and Appalachian mountain cooking is under going a revival. You can find cookbooks with the old recipes in them and upscale restaurants are charging high prices for foods that were simple sustenance for our ancestors. Ramps sell for about $12.00 a pound in Wegman’s in the DC area, while my grandparents foraged for them on the their farm.
102
posted on
06/23/2015 11:11:42 AM PDT
by
kalee
To: Hardens Hollow
I would like to see the pictures. I am curious about it. We have a Bradford pear tree that is beautiful when in bloom, but just an ordinary looking tree when it leafs out, so yes, very disappointing after the brief beauty it provides in the Spring.
103
posted on
06/23/2015 11:16:16 AM PDT
by
kalee
To: newb2012
I think the Zoji was actually one of the first high-end bread machines (?)
From what I’ve learned reading reviews, Breville is a good product (we’ve been interested in their food processor).
The main thing is to understand how bread machines work, and then read lots of reviews. The most expensive one with all the bells and whistles isn’t necessarily the one you need, at least not at first.
One trade-off with a bread machine, is that the paddle(s) leave the bottom of your loaf with holes. I’ve never minded that, it’s a reasonable tradeoff for the convenience. Some of the newer ones have paddles that collapse when the kneading is done, and the holes or depressions are smaller; so you may want to look for that, and try and learn from reviews how well it actually works.
-JT
104
posted on
06/23/2015 1:07:40 PM PDT
by
Jamestown1630
("A Republic, If you can keep it.")
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