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Fourth of July Food
What did everyone eat? We had:
Grilled cheeseburgers Potato salad Baked beans Coleslaw Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found this one, which he pronounced good.) Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of salt.) Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers bar. Tara |
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Fourth of July Food
Tara wrote:
> What did everyone eat? We had: > > Grilled cheeseburgers > Potato salad > Baked beans > Coleslaw > Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon > I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found > this one, which he pronounced good.) > Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of > salt.) > > Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers > bar. > > Tara Hi Tara, It poured down rain yesterday which spoiled my plans for grilling bratwurst and yellow and zucchini squash. In fact, we had some rather severe "warnings" going on here; the NWS was suggesting straight line winds up to 70 MPH (I call that more than WIND). The storms let up but the rain didn't until well after dark. So I'll be doing my cooking out today. Looks (so far) like we won't have rain. This will be the first time in about 3 weeks we haven't had any. So, I'll be grilling the brats (yes, I'll give them the requisite simmer in beer for a few minutes first). I grill these indirectly over hot coals, turning occasionally, until they are nicely browned and cooked through. As for the squash, what I do with those is simple but delicious. After slicing off the blossom and stem ends, I cut them into quarters. I really love those Reynolds grilling sheets and use those for things like this. The squash is lightly brushed with olive oil, sprinkled with salt & pepper. (Sometimes in a fit of pique I will even sprinkle dried marjoram on them!) Grill, skin side down first, for about 10 minutes, directly over the coals (but on the foil). Then turn and grill cut side down. Brush with a little more olive oil when turned. About another 10 minutes (or as needed) until tender. The squash(es) brown a little bit on the outside and taste fantastic. I adore grilled squash. It's got a naturally sweet taste. Jill |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 GMT, Tara > wrote:
>What did everyone eat? We had: I just made spareribs (country-style). Cooked them in my little charcoal grill with some soaked mesquite chips thrown in for the smoke. If it doesn't rain, I'll do the same for lunch today since I already pulled the ribs from the freezer last night. Otherwise I'll have to cook them in the oven. Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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Fourth of July Food
Tara wrote:
> What did everyone eat? We had: > > Grilled cheeseburgers > Potato salad > Baked beans > Coleslaw > Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon > I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found > this one, which he pronounced good.) > Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of > salt.) > > Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers > bar. > > Tara > Hamburgers, bratwurst, hot dogs, marinated ham kabobs, potato salad, ribs, hot wings, shrimp, chicken tenders, French fires, onion rings, watermelon (and other melons), guacamole, salsas, dips, chips. . . jim |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 GMT, Tara
> wrote: > What did everyone eat? We had: <snip> > Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers > bar. > We picniced with friends while waiting for the fireworks to begin... the band played everything from Bob Dylan & Bruce Springstein to '40s to Cajun to Texas Two Step music, so there was something for everyone to enjoy listening to. Food: ribs asparagus tart pasta salad (with roasted baby eggplant & baby zucchini) Green salad (mixed greens with all sorts of other stuff too) topped with marinated shrimp fresh strawberries Watermelon chocolate cupcakes home made lemonade Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Fourth of July Food
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Fourth of July Food
In article >,
Tara > wrote: > Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon > I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found > this one, which he pronounced good.) And how was the watermelon that he pronounced good? -- to respond, change "spamless.invalid" with "optonline.net" please mail OT responses only |
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Fourth of July Food
"Tara" > wrote in message ... > What did everyone eat? We had: > > Grilled cheeseburgers > Potato salad > Baked beans > Coleslaw > Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon > I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found > this one, which he pronounced good.) > Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of > salt.) > > Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers > bar. > > Tara > grilled chicken, burgers, potatoe salad, corn on cob, choc cake. Was going to be homemade ice cream, but didn't quite get off the ground. Suzan |
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Fourth of July Food
"Tara" > wrote in message
... : What did everyone eat? We had: : : Grilled cheeseburgers : Potato salad : Baked beans : Coleslaw : Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon : I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found : this one, which he pronounced good.) : Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of : salt.) : : Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers : bar. : : Tara : ===================== Oktoberfest Microbrew that we brewed back in... January (?). Brats German Potato Salad Black Eyed Peas w/Green beans Red, seedless Watermelon K.C. Masterpiece Potato Chips Double Chocolate (Girl) Brownies We also had Rainbow and Pineapple Sherbet available - but I forgot they were in the Freezer -- Cyndi <Remove a "b" to reply> |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 GMT, Tara > wrote:
>What did everyone eat? We had: > >Grilled cheeseburgers >Potato salad >Baked beans >Coleslaw >Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon >I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found >this one, which he pronounced good.) >Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of >salt.) > >Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers >bar. > We had: Grilled grass-fed beef club steaks which I'd rubbed with lemon zest and cracked peppercorns (black, pink, green, and white). Grilled okra pods seasoned with soy sauce and lime juice. A salad of sliced cucumber and cherry tomatoes dressed with rice vinegar, black pepper and minced fresh basil. I had some fresh cherries for dessert, but D stayed away from them. modom "If you have a racist friend, Now is the time, now is the time For your friendship to end." -- The Specials |
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Fourth of July Food
Michael Odom > wrote in
: > Subject: Fourth of July Food > From: Michael Odom > > Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking > > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 GMT, Tara > wrote: > >>What did everyone eat? We had: >> >>Grilled cheeseburgers >>Potato salad >>Baked beans >>Coleslaw >>Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon >>I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found >>this one, which he pronounced good.) >>Homemade ice cream. (Next time, I think the recipe needs a pinch of >>salt.) >> >>Later, at the Fourth of July celebration, I ate a deep-fried Snickers >>bar. >> > We had: > > Grilled grass-fed beef club steaks which I'd rubbed with lemon zest > and cracked peppercorns (black, pink, green, and white). > > Grilled okra pods seasoned with soy sauce and lime juice. I have to try okra cooked this way! > A salad of sliced cucumber and cherry tomatoes dressed with rice > vinegar, black pepper and minced fresh basil. > > I had some fresh cherries for dessert, but D stayed away from them. > > > modom We had two menus, one for those who eat pork and one for those who don't... barbequed spareribs, rubbed and mopped potato salad coleslaw grilled filets (by request), also with cracked mixed peppercorns rosin-cooked potatoes thick slices of beefsteak tomatoes grilled corn on the cob for both desserts were sour cream raisin pie and lime cake with whipped cream -- Wayne in Phoenix If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 19:30:56 GMT, Donna Rose
> wrote: > We were supposed to do a cookout, but the folks in charge of the food > didn't get it together so we all went out for Indian food. It was the > strangest restaurant I have ever been in - a combination Indian > restaurant/Irish pub. The food (and the beer) was great). LOL! Only in San Francisco! Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Fourth of July Food
Baked chicken (I started at 7:00 a.m., pulling off skin and fat)
Baked carrots Pita Flavored sparkling water My mother brought a cake E. P. |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 21:39:53 GMT, Scott >
wrote: >In article >, > Tara > wrote: > >> Watermelon (Some old man at the grocery store rejected the watermelon >> I had put in my cart and thumped a bunch of watermelons until he found >> this one, which he pronounced good.) > >And how was the watermelon that he pronounced good? It was good! Tara |
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Fourth of July Food
Our local here in Inverness has several Indian dishes on the menu. Chicken
Tikka Masala and Chicken or Lamb Balti. Also a couple of Mexican dishes and several pastas (more or less Italian). All set against traditional pub grub. "sf" > wrote in message ... > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 19:30:56 GMT, Donna Rose > > wrote: > > > We were supposed to do a cookout, but the folks in charge of the food > > didn't get it together so we all went out for Indian food. It was the > > strangest restaurant I have ever been in - a combination Indian > > restaurant/Irish pub. The food (and the beer) was great). > > LOL! Only in San Francisco! > > > Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Fourth of July Food
Just read in the paper that we have a Turkish restaurant on West Portal Ave! I'm eager to try it - maybe tomorrow. ``````````````````` On Tue, 6 Jul 2004 20:35:13 +0000 (UTC), "Chuck" > wrote: > Our local here in Inverness has several Indian dishes on the menu. Chicken > Tikka Masala and Chicken or Lamb Balti. > > Also a couple of Mexican dishes and several pastas (more or less Italian). > > All set against traditional pub grub. > > > "sf" > wrote in message > ... > > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 19:30:56 GMT, Donna Rose > > > wrote: > > > > > We were supposed to do a cookout, but the folks in charge of the food > > > didn't get it together so we all went out for Indian food. It was the > > > strangest restaurant I have ever been in - a combination Indian > > > restaurant/Irish pub. The food (and the beer) was great). > > > > LOL! Only in San Francisco! > > > > > > Practice safe eating - always use condiments > Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Fourth of July Food
Just read in the paper that we have a Turkish restaurant on West Portal Ave! I'm eager to try it - maybe tomorrow. ``````````````````` On Tue, 6 Jul 2004 20:35:13 +0000 (UTC), "Chuck" > wrote: > Our local here in Inverness has several Indian dishes on the menu. Chicken > Tikka Masala and Chicken or Lamb Balti. > > Also a couple of Mexican dishes and several pastas (more or less Italian). > > All set against traditional pub grub. > > > "sf" > wrote in message > ... > > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 19:30:56 GMT, Donna Rose > > > wrote: > > > > > We were supposed to do a cookout, but the folks in charge of the food > > > didn't get it together so we all went out for Indian food. It was the > > > strangest restaurant I have ever been in - a combination Indian > > > restaurant/Irish pub. The food (and the beer) was great). > > > > LOL! Only in San Francisco! > > > > > > Practice safe eating - always use condiments > Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 +0000, Tara wrote:
> What did everyone eat? We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. Chicken shwarma (middle eastern gyros. For speed and convenience, we julienned and stirfried rather than spitting it.) falafel (ceci croquettes) tabbouli (parsley, mint, bulgur and tomato dressed with olive oil and lime juice) greek salad (lettuce, feta, fresh oregano, dried tomatoes and black olives, olive oil and lime juice) baklava We couldn't find decent pita in the northwest (all the brands we tried neither split nor rolled) so we used wheat tortillas. The low carb option was shwarma in low carb tortillas and greek salad. The vegan option was falafel and tabbouli. I was ready in case anybody asked about low fat "I'm sorry, you appear to be using some dialect of English with which I am unfamiliar" but they know me too well to ask. We'd been hoping to develop a remotely baklava like dessert based on Splenda sweetened flax meal but didn't have time for the research, so low carb dessert was several brands of not too bad soy meal cookies from the low carb store. Martin (215/163/165 since 4/2003) -- Martin Golding | If there were a God, DoD #236 | cocoa butter would be monounsaturated. |
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Fourth of July Food
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 +0000, Tara wrote:
> What did everyone eat? We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. Chicken shwarma (middle eastern gyros. For speed and convenience, we julienned and stirfried rather than spitting it.) falafel (ceci croquettes) tabbouli (parsley, mint, bulgur and tomato dressed with olive oil and lime juice) greek salad (lettuce, feta, fresh oregano, dried tomatoes and black olives, olive oil and lime juice) baklava We couldn't find decent pita in the northwest (all the brands we tried neither split nor rolled) so we used wheat tortillas. The low carb option was shwarma in low carb tortillas and greek salad. The vegan option was falafel and tabbouli. I was ready in case anybody asked about low fat "I'm sorry, you appear to be using some dialect of English with which I am unfamiliar" but they know me too well to ask. We'd been hoping to develop a remotely baklava like dessert based on Splenda sweetened flax meal but didn't have time for the research, so low carb dessert was several brands of not too bad soy meal cookies from the low carb store. Martin (215/163/165 since 4/2003) -- Martin Golding | If there were a God, DoD #236 | cocoa butter would be monounsaturated. |
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Fourth of July Food
>Martin "braggart" Golding boasts:
> >We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. Most people are lucky if they can count their friends on the fingers of their two hands, close freinds on the fingers of one hand and closest (best) friends no more than they have thumbs... you are either one with extremely low expectations for what constitutes a friend or a big fat liar... and I already know from past experience that you are unequivocally a big fat liar. Sixty five closest friends indeed... r u nuts, that's well beyond exaggeration... you lying SHALLOW douche bag. ---= BOYCOTT FRANCE (belgium) GERMANY--SPAIN =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- ********* "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." Sheldon ```````````` |
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Fourth of July Food
"Martin Golding" > wrote in message news > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 +0000, Tara wrote: > > > What did everyone eat? > > We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > > We made dinner for (also) about 65 people, of whom only about 10 were acutual friends. Not sure how 'close' they would be had we not been serving food and had the pool heated to the upper 80s. For lunch we had pulled pork sammiches from butts smoked the day before. I used the Dinosaur BBQ "Cajun Foreplay" rub on 'em. This was for the very few who showed up early to help set up (and swim). For dinner, I made Cornell Chicken (cooked on a 3-block-high block pit for 2 hours) - 70 halves (similar to 'Brooks BBQ" - but better), plus corn-on-the-cob & salt potatoes. We also provided 2 kegs o' brew. Several of the 'friends' brought a dish-to-pass like salads, beans, etc. My memory fails me probably because when it was time to eat, I had been flippin' chicken racks & sippin Scotch for 2 hours. I guess a good time was had by all: most threatened to come back again. In the early 80's we did this every July 4th (one year over 130 epople!) like clockwork. The first year we *didn't* have a July 4th party I got attitude from people who thought that we had had the party and didn't invite *them*! Happy weekend, all!, Van |
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Fourth of July Food
"Martin Golding" > wrote in message news > On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 13:21:10 +0000, Tara wrote: > > > What did everyone eat? > > We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > > We made dinner for (also) about 65 people, of whom only about 10 were acutual friends. Not sure how 'close' they would be had we not been serving food and had the pool heated to the upper 80s. For lunch we had pulled pork sammiches from butts smoked the day before. I used the Dinosaur BBQ "Cajun Foreplay" rub on 'em. This was for the very few who showed up early to help set up (and swim). For dinner, I made Cornell Chicken (cooked on a 3-block-high block pit for 2 hours) - 70 halves (similar to 'Brooks BBQ" - but better), plus corn-on-the-cob & salt potatoes. We also provided 2 kegs o' brew. Several of the 'friends' brought a dish-to-pass like salads, beans, etc. My memory fails me probably because when it was time to eat, I had been flippin' chicken racks & sippin Scotch for 2 hours. I guess a good time was had by all: most threatened to come back again. In the early 80's we did this every July 4th (one year over 130 epople!) like clockwork. The first year we *didn't* have a July 4th party I got attitude from people who thought that we had had the party and didn't invite *them*! Happy weekend, all!, Van |
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Fourth of July Food
PENMART01 wrote:
>>Martin "braggart" Golding boasts: >> >>We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > > > Most people are lucky if they can count their friends on the fingers of their > two hands, close freinds on the fingers of one hand and closest (best) friends > no more than they have thumbs... you are either one with extremely low > expectations for what constitutes a friend or a big fat liar... and I already > know from past experience that you are unequivocally a big fat liar. Sixty > five closest friends indeed... r u nuts, that's well beyond exaggeration... you > lying SHALLOW douche bag. > > > ---= BOYCOTT FRANCE (belgium) GERMANY--SPAIN =--- > ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- > ********* > "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." > Sheldon > ```````````` And your totals are 0, 0 and 0. Sheldon, the most shunned on usenet. jim |
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Fourth of July Food
PENMART01 wrote:
>>Martin "braggart" Golding boasts: >> >>We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > > > Most people are lucky if they can count their friends on the fingers of their > two hands, close freinds on the fingers of one hand and closest (best) friends > no more than they have thumbs... you are either one with extremely low > expectations for what constitutes a friend or a big fat liar... and I already > know from past experience that you are unequivocally a big fat liar. Sixty > five closest friends indeed... r u nuts, that's well beyond exaggeration... you > lying SHALLOW douche bag. > > > ---= BOYCOTT FRANCE (belgium) GERMANY--SPAIN =--- > ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- > ********* > "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." > Sheldon > ```````````` And your totals are 0, 0 and 0. Sheldon, the most shunned on usenet. jim |
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Fourth of July Food
PENMART01 wrote: >Martin "braggart" Golding boasts: >>We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > Most people are lucky if they can count their friends on the fingers of their > two hands, close freinds on the fingers of one hand and closest (best) friends > no more than they have thumbs... That would be unfortunate for them, unless of course they were satisfied with that. You're welcome to your near-hermitic existence, if it pleases you. I've been there, I like now better. > you are either one with extremely low > expectations for what constitutes a friend or a big fat liar... The only thing you know about me is that EVERY SINGLE TIME that you have contradicted me you have been abysmally, easily correctably, not to imply stupidly, wrong. > and I already > know from past experience that you are unequivocally a big fat liar. That's _funny_, given that EVERY SINGLE TIME that you have contradicted me you have been abysmally, easily correctably, not to imply stupidly, wrong, and at least once you've accompanied your ravings with links to data that PROVED you were wrong. Or do you not recall your misguided ravings about umami? > Sixty > five closest friends indeed... r u nuts, that's well beyond exaggeration... > you lying SHALLOW douche bag. I quote an old friend: "I'm smarter than you, better looking than you, nicer than you, and gosh darn it, people LIKE me." Deal with it. Martin -- Martin Golding | People only like us DBS #1 MAB #2 SMTC #3 KotLQ KotSM | because we have interesting friends. |
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Fourth of July Food
PENMART01 wrote: >Martin "braggart" Golding boasts: >>We made dinner for sixty five of our closest friends. > Most people are lucky if they can count their friends on the fingers of their > two hands, close freinds on the fingers of one hand and closest (best) friends > no more than they have thumbs... That would be unfortunate for them, unless of course they were satisfied with that. You're welcome to your near-hermitic existence, if it pleases you. I've been there, I like now better. > you are either one with extremely low > expectations for what constitutes a friend or a big fat liar... The only thing you know about me is that EVERY SINGLE TIME that you have contradicted me you have been abysmally, easily correctably, not to imply stupidly, wrong. > and I already > know from past experience that you are unequivocally a big fat liar. That's _funny_, given that EVERY SINGLE TIME that you have contradicted me you have been abysmally, easily correctably, not to imply stupidly, wrong, and at least once you've accompanied your ravings with links to data that PROVED you were wrong. Or do you not recall your misguided ravings about umami? > Sixty > five closest friends indeed... r u nuts, that's well beyond exaggeration... > you lying SHALLOW douche bag. I quote an old friend: "I'm smarter than you, better looking than you, nicer than you, and gosh darn it, people LIKE me." Deal with it. Martin -- Martin Golding | People only like us DBS #1 MAB #2 SMTC #3 KotLQ KotSM | because we have interesting friends. |
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