Posted on 06/11/2007 9:17:57 AM PDT by goldstategop
As for fish and chips my parents ran and owned fish and chip shops when I was young so for many years I did not really fancy that at all. I do a couple of times a year have cod and chips or scampi and chips from the chip shop. My favourite is deep fried battered mushrooms most chip shops sell them on a kebab stick nowadays.
Sounds like us Brits who only ever eat a kebab after a skinful :0)
Bread and Butter Pudding
When the weather I dull and dreary. Lift the spirits with this comforting old favourite (Snugs comment great for using up stale bread that you would otherwise throw out).
Butter for greasing
4 thin slices stale bread (fresh bread can too wet)
1oz butter
2oz sultanas or currants (I prefer sultanas (golden raisins because they are larger and juicer)
Pinch of ground nutmeg or cinnamon (if you the flavour add more to your own taste)
14 floz milk
2 eggs
1 oz granulated sugar
Grease a quart pie dish. Cut the crusts off the bread and spread the slices with butter. Cut the bread into squares or triangles and arrange in alternate layers, buttered side up with the sultanas or currants. Sprinkle each layer lightly with nutmeg or cinnamon. Arrange the top layer of bread in an attractive pattern.
Warm the milk in a saucepan to about 150F, do not let it approach boiling point.
Put the eggs in a bowl add most of the sugar, beat with a fork and stir in the milk.
Strain the custard mixture over the bread (I do not bother with this and it works fine for me, I just pour the mixture over without straining in fact I mostly do not bother to even warm the milk and I have not noticed any difference).
Sprinkle some nutmeg and the remaining sugar on top and leave to stand for 30 minutes.
Set the oven at 350F gas 4.
Bake for 30 40 mins until the custard is set and top is lightly browned.
Serves 4
Pressure cooker tip for those who own one and I believe certainly in the UK they are on the come back.: Use a dish that fits in the pressure cooker. Cover the pudding with foil or greased greaseproof paper, tied down securely. Cook at 15lb pressure for 9 mins. Reduce the pressure slowly. Brown the pudding under the grill (broiler).
Here is one I made a couple of weeks ago
The deep fried shrimps and crab cakes look nice
Damm, dude — that’s the best laugh I’ve had all day...
Love the KFC mashed potato bowl with extra corn and no cheese..
A sign advertising Spam lunch meat breakfast at Burger King in Honolulu, Sunday, June 10, 2007. Both Burger King and McDonalds are offering the processed meat with eggs and rice for breakfast in Hawaii only. Hawaii leads the nation in Spam consumption despite being one of the least populated states
Sambo’s was a chain (that’s probably no longer around due to political correctness). We would stop for breakfast when the bars closed (Lynchburg, VA off Fort Ave near where 29 and 460 split on south side of town).
Kate Stelnick, a petite college student weighing in at 115 pounds, took the Dennys Beer Barrel challenge on Wednesday. They almost laughed her out of the restaurant when she placed her order. Turns out she was the one laughing (and burping) on the way out.
No one had ever beaten Dennys challenge. No one had even come close. The requirements were absurdly outrageous: to eat 11 pounds of burger in under three hours, youd have to be crazy, with an iron stomach and a mouth to match.
Eric Booker fit that description. They call him Badlands, and some say he is Americas top competitive eater. This is a man who had eaten four pounds of corn beef hash in 118 seconds. For dessert, Eric once put away 49 glazed donuts in eight minutes. It took me longer to drink my cup of coffee this morning.
But even Badlands was not up to Denny Leigeys challenge. Leigey, the proprietor of Dennys Beer Barrel Pub in Clearfield, Pa., had a standing offer: finish his 11-pound burger -- the worlds largest commercially available -- and get that burger free, plus a slew of other prizes.
Badlands tried to finish the monstrous sandwich three times. The first two attempts failed miserably, but the third time was the charm. Badlands had finished the burger, but there was a catch. It had taken him over 7.5 hours to down the six pounds of beef and five pounds of fixings , well over the three-hour mark mandated by Denny.
Though Booker was the only person to ever finish the burger in one sitting, even he had not completed the challenge. Still, the accomplishment was substantial. Taking out the worlds largest burger in one sitting is a good outing even for a veteran competitive eater.
But Dennys Wall of Fame remained empty. The wall, reserved for only the theoretical possibility of anyone actually completing the challenge, stood bare since the burgers creation.
On Wednesday, a photograph was finally added to that wall.
Kate Stelnick had gotten wind of the burger the same way I had -- television. Observing the enormous entrée on the Food Network, Kate thought she could eat it. In one sitting. In three hours. And walk away.
Its hard to say how seriously her two friends took her on the ride to Dennys from the College of New Jersey, where 18-year-old Kate studies childhood education and psychology. Maybe it was a joke, a weekend lark in the waning days of winter break. But maybe, just maybe, Kate was serious about this thing. She had fasted for two days, drank "a lot" of beverages in preparation. The five-hour drive west was punctuated by the rumblings in her stomach and the determination in her eyes.
When she sat down with the burger, dancing with the devil himself, who can say if she knew she would finish it? How could anyone have suspected it, when legends have tried and legends have failed? Some call the burger the Widow(er) Maker, but luckily, Kate is not married. (She has, however, received dozens of marriage proposals after beating the burger, but as of press time has yet to accept any. Including mine.)
For over two hours Kate labored furiously to consume the beef and fixings that would make her name in history. As the vital third hour loomed, there was still beef on Kates plate. But the outcome was really never in doubt; the 18-year-old legend finished the burger with more than five minutes to spare. She wiped her face, stood up, then walked out the door and into the annals of posterity. She had just eaten a meal that was about one-tenth of her body weight.
The achievement was "pretty incredible," said pub owner Denny Leigey, "considering all the people who have attempted it."
"The skinny girls, they're just amazing at it," remarked Denny, referring to top American eater Sonya Thomas, and other slim women who've conquered lesser burgers.
Though she was overwhelmed with accolades and kudos after consuming the super-burger, Kate was afforded little respect before her attempt.
"When I first went in and kept saying I was going to do it, they'd smiled and be like 'oh yeah?'" Kate told Foodmarket.com.
"Then, during the last 25 minutes -- crunch time -- I overheard Denny's son at the bar say 'she's not going to do it,' and 'I've seen this so many times,' but I just smiled," recalled Kate.
"Little did he know he motivated me even more to do it," Kate spouted fiercely during our interview, emotionally back at the pub doing battle with the burger.
The wait staff described a similar scene. When she first walked in, we didnt think shed get even close to it, gushed Kristy, a DBB waitress. Then when we looked over, she only had a little bit left, and we all got excited, Kristy told Foodmarket.com.
When I asked Kate how she could have succeeded where Badlands Booker and countless others have failed, she said she had no particular eating strategy prepared.
"I had no strategy," admits Kate. "None. I probably should have, but I just tried to eat as much as possible before I felt full."
During the event, Kate did set time limits for herself.
"I said to myself, I must be done with the meat in one hour, 45 minutes, so I'd have enough time for the condiments," said Kate.
That strategy almost backfired, however, before she abandoned it midway through the meal. "You get sick of eating so much meat, only meat," she said. "I had to alternate."
Waitress Kristy was at a similar loss when asked how Kate had achieved the virtually unachievable.
I dont know how she did it," said Kristy. "She claims to eat eight full meals a day. Maybe thats how she was able to do it."
Kate herself admits she eats "maybe four times a day." She is known, however, as a big eater, by any measure. "My friends joke around, saying I have a fat kid living inside of me," said the slim student.
"I have a big appetite," Kate allows, "but I've never eaten this much in one sitting."
Maybe it was her big appetite. Or perhaps it was sheer will and a superhuman heart. One thing it definitely wasnt is cheating. Despite the accusations of several Internet conspiracy theorists, Kates amazing feat was not staged, and she didnt receive any illegal assistance in consuming the giant burger.
Kate told Foodmarket that she doesn't pay much attention to the rumors and unkind words scrawled on message boards around the Web.
"I just shake it off," she said," because I don't really care what people say. I'm proud I did it, and I had fun."
Denny's Beer Barrel staff vouched for the validity of her valiant effort.
We do not suspect foul play, Kristy reassuringly assured me.
"She had no outside assistance whatsoever," confirmed Denny. "She didn't even go to the restroom."
That in itself is worth the prize package, in my opinion.
Indeed, Denny made good on his word, paying for not only Kates burger, but the two others her friends ordered and could not finish. Denny also gave her a t-shirt, a $75 gift certificate, and a special plaque to hang forever on the now-vibrant Wall of Fame.
Now that the record has been broken, the challenge met, the hamburger vanquished and long-since digested, some say the legend of Dennys burger has been diminished. Now that someone has eaten it, perhaps the burger has lost some of its considerable luster.
Not so, say DBB employees.
Denny told Foodmarket.com that he plans a special edition "Kateburger," which would be slightly larger than the burger Kate herself consumed. He also may introduce vegetable and turkey-based versions of the 96-ounce beast, with identical challenge and prize structures.
Denny also attributes a revived interest in his giant burger to Kate's astounding feat, noting that her accomplishment "totally stirred up the food challengers around the world."
Waitress Kristy goes a step further, deeming it inspiring that someone so small could eat a burger so big. Hopefully more people will try it, now that they know it is possible, she gushed.
But is it really? Maybe there is another Kate Stelnick out there, just salivating over the prospect of the worlds largest cheeseburger. Maybe there is a whole range of people, large and small, willing to gamble it all on the 11-pound challenge.
But for now, today, there is only one girl who has done it, only one girl worthy of lifting her cleaned plate in triumph for the world to see. Her name is Kate Stelnick, and she is the sole resident on the Dennys Beer Barrel Pub Wall of Fame.
One can be certain that after attaining such a lofty status on Denny's wall, life for this young woman will never be the same.
"How this burger had changed my life!" Kate exclaimed.
The amount of attention astounded the once-shy, but now media-savvy university student. Kate has done interviews for newspapers, Web sites, radio stations, and television programs. Sponsors have even offered to give her all-expense-paid trips to various eating competitions with large cash prizes.
The eating competitions "sound interesting," said Kate, though she said she probably would not take the sponsors up on their offers.
"I don't think my parents would approve," she explained. "They didn't even want me to do this. I kind of snuck away for the day."
She's also been flooded with phone calls, e-mails, and instant messages since word of her mega-meal spread this weekend. "It is unreal," explains Kate. "Every time I log on, there are so many messages. It is too funny."
It's safe to say that this 11-pound burger has earned Kate a super-sized measure of fame for such a young woman. But it's fairer to say that Kate earned it herself. Though this burger has given Kate 15 minutes of fame, it's a safe bet it won't be her last time in the limelight.
One thing the burger didn't change was the plethora of ideas this young student has for her future. "I have 100 different plans," Kate gushed. Though she is studying education, she also aspires to be a professional skydiver. She's already been on a few dives, though she says eating the burger was far more difficult.
Much to the delight of the competitive eating community, Kate hasn't ruled out a return to the fork and plate of destiny. But even if she doesn't, she has already served to inspire so many not only to eat larger and larger hamburgers, but to achieve greater and greater goals.
Whod have thought one girl, six pounds of beef, and a river of mayonnaise could change the world? We may be surprised, but Kate isnt. She knew when she first saw the 96-ouncer on television that she would one day eat it. That day was Wednesday, January 12, 2005. Before then, no one had ever lived to beat the challenge.
And then, there was one.
gotcha...
Check this out....
The Hidden In-N-Out Burger (aka In and Out Burger) - The Most Accurate Secret Menu
In-N-Out Burger has a secret unpublished menu for insiders who are In-The-Know. Next time you’re at In-N-Out (i.e. tomorrow . . . or maybe tonight), order a bag of these off-the-menu specials:
“3-by-3” = three meat patties and three slices of cheese.
“4-by-4” = four meat patties and four slices of cheese.
“2-by-4” = two meat patties and four slices of cheese.
*Note: You can get a burger with as many meat patties or cheese slices as you want. Just tell the In-N-Out Burger cashier how many meat patties and how much cheese you want and that is what you’ll get! For instance, if you want 6 pieces of meat and 10 pieces of cheese tell them you want a “6-by-10.”
“Double Meat” = like a Double Double without cheese.
“3 by Meat” = three meat patties and no cheese.
“Animal Style” = the meat is cooked and fried with mustard and then pickles are added, extra spread and grilled onions are added.
“Animal Style Fries” = fries with cheese, spread, grilled onions and pickles (if you ask for them).
“Protein Style” = for all you low-carbohydrate dieters, this is a burger with no bun (wrapped in lettuce).
“Flying Dutchman” = two meat patties, two slices of melted cheese and nothing else - not even a bun!
Fries “Well-Done” = extra crispy fries . . . even better than the regular!
Fries “Light” = opposite of fries well-done, more raw than most people like ‘em
“Grilled Cheese” = no meat, just melted cheese, tomato, lettuce and spread on a bun.
“Veggie Burger” = burger without the patty or cheese. Sometimes we call this the “Wish Burger.”
“Neapolitan” Shake = strawberry, vanilla and chocolate blended together.
The friendly employees of In-N-Out Burger will take your special order without question, if you use the right terminology. The printed receipt will have your special request typed on it just as we said it.
Try it!
Mmmmmmmmmmm!
Any recipe for blue crab is a specialty here in Maryland, particularly on the Chesapeake Bay.
I suppose it is a holdover from our English forebearers -- many Southerners omit the "h" in the word "shrimp", pronouncing it "srimp". It always makes me smile when I hear that.
I’d love either one, but I can feel my chloresterol level rising just reading the description of the Slamburger. :o)
I believe they changed the name to Seasons or something close to that; everytime I read about Obama I think of that place.
I haven’t been to Denny’s in 20 years. But back in my Marine days, I had more than a few 4AM meals at Denny’s in order to sober up and get to morning formation in relatively decent shape.
LOL..in every city my friend.
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