Posted on 11/23/2006 10:34:15 PM PST by carlo3b
Happy Thanksgiving! Got Leftovers???God Bless America!
Only in a great country like ours can we enjoy the blessings of freedom, prosperity, abundance, and still have leftovers... LOL
If your home is anything like ours, can you eat all day, and into the night, leave a tidy some of food, (like that G'dawful gooey cranberry stuff) and still have more food than what you had before you started. Look at your refrigerator, is it any room left... well is there??? LOL
Here are some suggestions for that Turkey and trimmings that are still around!.....
I loved "Like Water for Chocolate". What a fun read. Your recipe sounds great.
Have you read "Under the Tuscan Sun"? Another fun foodie book.
I tend to go for the Americanized versions as well.
I will be offline next week as I'm moving into a bigger house, getting a new computer and high speed internet!! WooHoo!!
I've been intending to, it's on my list. I've made everything in Like Water 4 Chocolate except the matches, lol! Oh, and the Fried Cream, which is still on my someday "to do" list.
I even made those Christmas Rolls with sardines, chorizo and chile pequins. And they weren't bad at all.
One of my very favorite things in the whole world is Chiles en Nogada and I was delighted that they were in the book. Her telling of how you have to rub the skins off the walnuts for the white sauce and all that rigamarole made it even more fun.
(I don't do that anymore, after being served so many Chiles en Nogada at Mexican restaurants where the white sauce is a little bit "tan," lol. Not quite the Mexican flag colors, but close!)
You missed a very humorous thread. :-)
1 1/2 cups diced cooked turkey breast
2 tablespoons bacon bits
3/4 cup peeled diced fresh tomato
1/2 cup fat free mayo
3/4 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1 teaspoon dried basil
1 can refrigerated buttermilk biscuits
Preheat oven to 375ºF.
In 8x8 pan sprayed with butter flavor cooking spray, layer turkey, bacon and tomato.
In medium bowl, combine mayo, cheese and basil. Evenly spread mix over tomato layer.
Separate biscuits and cut each into 4 pieces. Sprinkle biscuit pieces evenly over top.
Bake for 18-20 minutes or till biscuits golden brown. Lightly spray top with butter flavor cooking spray. Place dish on wire rack and let set 5 minutes. Cut into 6 servings.
I am a vegetarian who loves to cook, whose hubby eats meat only very rarely, and we both adore Quorn. The turkey-style roast is great, as are ALL their products (www.quorn.com). Hubby's favorite is the "Tenders", which are a chicken-style product that he thinks is far better than chicken. I use "Grounds" in anything that calls for hamburger (especially dirty rice), and I love the "Naked Cutlets" as well. Low in fat, carbs, and high in protein; these products really cannot be beat by any meat product or meat substitute.
Next year, your family comes to see you!
I have never seen bouillon granules in Britain only the liquid but we do have gravy granules and gravy powder I know that is probably of a lesser quality but could you subsitute that or even an oxo or bovril cube?
That sounds great saved that one for the Christmas left over turkey.
Thanks
Yep! So good.
You can buy it in a dry packet:
http://mccornbread.com/store/catalog/product_info.php/cPath/25/products_id/78
That's where I bought mine. Well, actually that product was in my local Whole Foods.
It's pretty tasty too, but I do use bread flour when making sourdough bread as it's just easier for me to deal with.
I don't think you can get Quorn Ribs in America, but definitely
in the UK you can.
No leftovers in this single guy's apartment. Had a wonderful dinner at friends.
For a potluck with a mostly 30-ish crowd of other single New Yorkers, it was an extremely well prepared and traditional meal. Turkey and stuffing, both cold and hot cranberry sauce (yum), pecan pies, pumpkin pies, breads, asparagus, salads and veggies.
Okay, someone brought sushi. I sat across from him and had to force down a piece (the wine helped).
I brought pumpkin cheesecake topped with walnuts and caramel, plus breads, cookies and a pumpkin pie.
Did I mention we had plenty of wine to go around?
We started with the reading of a Psalm of thanks, then a prayer, then a hymn. It was really beautiful.
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