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On Tue, 18 Mar 2008 21:18:27 -0400, Goomba38
wrote: wrote: Our little Dinner Club chose Scotland as one of its countries last year, and I must say that the colcannon was an absolute hit. I don't even like cabbage and we don't often have potatoes, but I agree. It was a really good taste and I didn't expect it, and I am glad I have had it. How does colcannon differ from bubble and squeak? I grew up eating that with leftover cabbage and potatoes, so fail to understand the difference here? I maybe be wrong, since I'm not British.... but I think the main difference is a wee bit o' meat in the bubble & squeak. -- See return address to reply by email remove the smile first |
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"James Silverton" wrote in message news:LR7Ej.4374Pictures I have seen of B&S make me suspect that the cabbage may have received the traditional British cooking (20 minutes or more) LOL true in the old days but not now )I steam all my greens very lightly |
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James Silverton wrote:
I mentioned I had not previously wanted to try colcannon and the same applied to "Bubble and Squeak". My impression is that colcannon is not fried and B&S is. My one attempt to make colcannon used sliced cabbage cooked for 5 minutes. Tho' colcannon may add other vegetables, B&S is more likely to use any left-overs and sometimes meat is added to it. Pictures I have seen of B&S make me suspect that the cabbage may have received the traditional British cooking (20 minutes or more) and then cooked agan! Now, where the name bubble and squeak comes from, I'm not inclined investigate :-) James Silverton Potomac, Maryland My mother said it came from the sound of the steam building up and causing bubbles and pipsqueak type sounds as you fried it. She always used leftover cabbage, potatoes (perhaps a few odd cooked carrots) from an Italian version of "New England boiled dinner" that we made using pepperoni instead of any other cut of meat. It was delicious the first time and then again recreated into bubble and squeak. |
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On Sun, 16 Mar 2008 17:16:00 -0700 (PDT), Sheldon
wrote: "Dan Rouse wrote: "Terry" wrote ... I am not much of a fruit or vegetable kind of guy. I eat meat and potatoes. A friend suggested those new V8 juices. ?I still have to force myself to have one, but they are quite good and good for you. Regular V8 tastes like tomato juice but the Fusion drinks are like fruit juice. According to the ingredients label, the V8 V-Fusion drinks are a reconstituted blend of vegetables (such as sweet potatoes and purple carrots) combined with a blend of fruit juices from concentrate (such as apple, white grape, pomegranite, blueberry). If I recall correctly, these are also fortified with Vitamin C (Ascorbic acid). It doesn't appear that these drinks have any added sugar either. So far, I have seen that there are four varieties of the V-Fusion drinks: Peach Mango, Strawberry Banana, Pomegranite Blueberry, and Acai Berry. The actual blend of vegetables and fruit juices varies depending on the specific V-Fusion variety. Tastewise--I would also agree, they taste more like fruit juice. Check their nutritional values... I don't think any of those products are beneficially healthful to any meaningful degree. You are much better off eating real fruit and vegies. http://www.campbellwellness.com/prod....asp?brandID=8 You gotta be pretty friggin' lazy to get your fruit as juice outta a can... don't you have teeth, I bet you haven't been to a dentist since 3rd grade... how much effort is it to peel and chew a juicy navel orange or a ruby red grapefruit. The market always has a selection of beautiful fresh fruit and veggies... and you can see what you're eating. Eating your fruit and veggies out of a can is tantamount to eating pre ground mystery meat... they gotta do something with all the buggy bruised rotting produce that's truly only fit for the composter... squish it all up, strain out the maggots, can it, and sell it to the pinheads. What a bunch of imbeciles, they'll eat shit if it's served up in a purty package. I never really got the point of telling people to eat fruit instead of drinking juice at *all*. I don't drink juice as a substitute for fruit. I eat as much fruit and vegetables as I want AND I have a glass of juice now and then because I like juice and it's healthful. A piece of fruit or vegetable is not a beverage, so it doesn't fulfill the same desire. I normally buy the V8 Fusion juices when they're on sale or the not-from-concentrate orange juices or orange-pineapple juices. I'm not big on red juices. Laurie |
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On Sun, 16 Mar 2008 18:46:10 +0000 (UTC), enigma
wrote: Terry wrote in oups.com: I am not much of a fruit or vegetable kind of guy. I eat meat and potatoes. A friend suggested those new V8 juices. I still have to force myself to have one, but they are quite good and good for you. they're not nearly as good for you as real juice. they are also *way* too sweet. They are real juice. You might be thinking of V8 Splash, which is a juice drink. I really like most of the V8 Fusion flavors (not fond of Tropical Orange but love Peach Mango), but I've only tried the V8 Splash a couple of times. I think I tried the low-cal ones. They were thin and pretty sweet; there's more body to the Fusion drinks. Regular V8 tastes like tomato juice but the Fusion drinks are like fruit juice. regular V8 tastes like a salt lick. i much prefer Knudsen's Very Veggie, if i'm not juicing my own. really, why should there be HFCS in juice? lee I like V8, but I've never tried anything else other than store brands. My mom gave me an ancient juicer, but it was missing the thing that pushes the food down, so I tried shoving celery with a knife handle and ended up with about 1/4 cup of bright-green yuck. At some point I'll try juicing at home again. I really enjoy utilizing fresh veggies. As far as HFCS, it isn't in juice of course so there isn't any in V8 Fusion. But I didn't realize it was in V8 splash. It's one thing to have it in junk products, but it's really bad when it's in stuff that's touted as healthful. Then again, I pretty much automatically consider juice drinks to be more of a soft drink than a juice. It's unfortunate that people are so in the habit of calling it *juice* when it's not 100 percent juice. I also find it bothersome that HFCS is in yogurt -- in lots of brands. I didn't do an extensive search, but I saw it on several different labels. Laurei |
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Laurie S. wrote in
: On Sun, 16 Mar 2008 18:46:10 +0000 (UTC), enigma wrote: they're not nearly as good for you as real juice. they are also *way* too sweet. They are real juice. You might be thinking of V8 Splash, which is a juice drink. I really like most of the V8 Fusion flavors (not fond of Tropical Orange but love Peach Mango), but I've only tried the V8 Splash a couple of times. I think I tried the low-cal ones. They were thin and pretty sweet; there's more body to the Fusion drinks. Regular V8 tastes like tomato juice but the Fusion drinks are like fruit juice. regular V8 tastes like a salt lick. i much prefer Knudsen's Very Veggie, if i'm not juicing my own. really, why should there be HFCS in juice? I like V8, but I've never tried anything else other than store brands. store brands will likely be relabelled V8. try finding some Knudsen's. it's really better than V8. As far as HFCS, it isn't in juice of course so there isn't any in V8 Fusion. But I didn't realize it was in V8 splash. It's one thing to have it in junk products, but it's really bad when it's in stuff that's touted as healthful. Then again, I pretty much automatically consider juice drinks to be more of a soft drink than a juice. It's unfortunate that people are so in the habit of calling it *juice* when it's not 100 percent juice. many products are touted as "healthful" in the US, even when they obviously are NOT. i just saw a 2 page ad in a women's magazine at the doctor's office that was pushing potato chips {!} as a part of a "busy family's healthy diet". ok, suuuure. V8 Splash is a junk drink. i like this from the V8 Fusion FAQ: What vegetable and fruit juices are included in V8 V-Fusion®? Strawberry Banana contains the juice of 10 vegetables and fruits: sweet potatoes, carrots, tomatoes, beets, white grapes, oranges, apples, strawberries, bananas, banana puree. that's really 9, not 10. banana & banana puree might be different ingredients but they are the same fruit. Tropical Orange contains the juice of 6 vegetables and fruits: sweet potatoes, carrots, yellow tomatoes, white grapes, oranges, pineapple. ok Peach Mango contains the juice of 8 vegetables and fruits: sweet potatoes, yellow tomatoes, yellow carrots, carrots, white grapes, oranges, peaches, mango puree. again, carrots are carrots. so one is orange & one is yellow... Pomegranate Blueberry contains the juice of 8 vegetables and fruits: sweet potatoes, purple carrots, tomatoes, carrots, apples, white grapes, pomegranates, blueberries. 2 colors of carrot again. Açai Mixed Berry contains the juice of 8 vegetables and fruits: sweet potatoes, purple carrots, carrots, apples, white grapes, açai, blueberries, limes. and again... not to mention that white grape & apple juices are both empty calorie sweeteners. funny how marketing works. I also find it bothersome that HFCS is in yogurt -- in lots of brands. I didn't do an extensive search, but I saw it on several different labels. unless it's labelled "organic", any yogurt in the US probably has HFCS. have you read your bread labels recently? i just sent Ben & Jerry's a blistering email because *all* their ice cream labels say "all natural" in a big banner at the top, but most of them contain HFCS, which is NOT a natural product & is therefore false advertising. it takes me a long time to shop for groceries because i read every damn label, even on items i've previously purchased, because you never know when a company will start using cheap crap ingredients to save a dime. pickles! HFCS in freaking pickles! sigh lee sent the child back to the cereal aisle when he brought me something with artificial sweetener, & said it didn't have HFCS... told him to get *sugar* -- Last night while sitting in my chair I pinged a host that wasn't there It wasn't there again today The host resolved to NSA. |