![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Father Ignatius wrote:
For an annual event, surely it is worth phoning the butcher for suet, as I have just done, and doing it properly? It seems you are prepared to go to a great deal of trouble -- perhaps to more trouble than using suet would take? -- to avoid doing so. I have nothing to offer in the area of substituting butter and so forth other than to report a sharp hiss of horror at your blasphemous intent. I conjecture, however, that butter might go rancid, and the consistency of the pud would be not up to standard. Suet can go rancid too. Trust me, I know this. Obaue: I've never seen conjecture used as a verb before. How common is it? The OED suggests it's obsolete. |
|
|||
|
On Tue 11 Apr 2006 01:16:50a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Linz?
Father Ignatius wrote: For an annual event, surely it is worth phoning the butcher for suet, as I have just done, and doing it properly? It seems you are prepared to go to a great deal of trouble -- perhaps to more trouble than using suet would take? -- to avoid doing so. I have nothing to offer in the area of substituting butter and so forth other than to report a sharp hiss of horror at your blasphemous intent. I conjecture, however, that butter might go rancid, and the consistency of the pud would be not up to standard. Suet can go rancid too. Trust me, I know this. Indeed it can. I had some in the freezer from last year, intending on using it for mincemeat. It had a very rancid smell when I opened it, but I didn't taste it. -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
|
|||
|
Linz wrote:
Obaue: I've never seen conjecture used as a verb before. How common is it? The OED suggests it's obsolete. It's alive and well as far as I'm concerned. I conjecture that the OED entry is overdue for revision. -- Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org Please note the changed e-mail and web addresses. The domain eepjm.newcastle.edu.au no longer exists, and I can no longer reliably receive mail at my newcastle.edu.au addresses. The optusnet address still has about 4 months of life left. |
|
|||
|
On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 22:28:06 -0400, Roberta
wrote: Al in Dallas wrote: On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 22:23:07 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: Al in Dallas wrote: On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 19:36:07 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: [...] Grass-feeding, as well as producing better-flavoured and healthier meat, Given that I've seen retailers brag that their meat came from corn-fed cattle and that wild animals taste gamey, I'm not sure that grass-feeding would produce better-flavoured meat. Well, a matter of taste, of course, but in my experience it does. Corn-fed beef is baby food. Ever tasted venison? That's game, and people love it. There's good gamey, and unfit for consumption gamey! Most hunters I know process venison into spicey sausage to *hide* its flavor. It completely depends on where the venison is from. I grew up in Michigan - big big deer hunting there. The venison is FANTASTIC! Almost a sweet flavor. Has to be my favorite thing to eat. Venison steak - yum yum. I have had venison that was hunted in Georgia - it is tougher with a more peppery flavor. Not even close to the dame flavor, not nearly as good. I guess it's a bit off topic from free range beef *G* It's something I was unaware of until I took my first bite of Georgia venison ick(guess I just never gave it much thought) At least you didn't say it tastes like chicken *G*! -- Al in St. Lou |
|
|||
|
Linz wrote:
Father Ignatius wrote: For an annual event, surely it is worth phoning the butcher for suet, as I have just done, and doing it properly? It seems you are prepared to go to a great deal of trouble -- perhaps to more trouble than using suet would take? -- to avoid doing so. I have nothing to offer in the area of substituting butter and so forth other than to report a sharp hiss of horror at your blasphemous intent. I conjecture, however, that butter might go rancid, and the consistency of the pud would be not up to standard. Suet can go rancid too. Trust me, I know this. Obaue: I've never seen conjecture used as a verb before. How common is it? The OED suggests it's obsolete. The NSOED entry marks as obsolete only two usages of the verb, those with "of" and "at". Alan Jones |
|
|||
|
Al in Dallas wrote: On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 22:23:07 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: [...] is presumably going to become inescapable. We can't go on much longer feeding grain (and fish, but that's a separate problem) to cattle when it will be needed to feed people. But upland pastures and other marginal areas that will never be able to produce grain will continue to produce the much smaller amounts of meat people are going to have to get used to eating. [snip] Then I'll just point out that Malthus was wrong and that free markets will keep desired goods available so long as they aren't heavily distorted by those who use the government to distort them. Well, I'll just point out that meat is even in our lifetime becoming steadily more expensive, and there is no real-terms mechanism which can stop the increase. In Britain, for example, beef is already fairly severely rationed by price: this very day I bought myself some fillet steak as a very rare treat because it was marked down to £7.96 a pound -- my piece weighs just under 7 ounces. The same market forces which will always ensure a supply of meat for those who can afford it must also make it scarcer as grains, and grass for that matter, also become more expensive. -- Mike. |
|
|||
|
On 11 Apr 2006 09:55:39 -0700, "Mike Lyle"
wrote: Al in Dallas wrote: On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 22:23:07 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: [...] is presumably going to become inescapable. We can't go on much longer feeding grain (and fish, but that's a separate problem) to cattle when it will be needed to feed people. But upland pastures and other marginal areas that will never be able to produce grain will continue to produce the much smaller amounts of meat people are going to have to get used to eating. [snip] Then I'll just point out that Malthus was wrong and that free markets will keep desired goods available so long as they aren't heavily distorted by those who use the government to distort them. Well, I'll just point out that meat is even in our lifetime becoming steadily more expensive, and there is no real-terms mechanism which can stop the increase. The textbook answer is that other suppliers coming on line should halt, and maybe reverse, the price increases. If new suppliers aren't starting up when the prices go up, I'd say it's time to look for those market distortions I referred to. In Britain, for example, beef is already fairly severely rationed by price: this very day I bought myself some fillet steak as a very rare treat because it was marked down to £7.96 a pound -- my piece weighs just under 7 ounces. The same market forces which will always ensure a supply of meat for those who can afford it must also make it scarcer as grains, and grass for that matter, also become more expensive. I know that meat prices seem insane compared to what they were when I was young. However, that changes significantly when inflation is taken into account. There should be a UK equivalent to our CPI published somewhere over there. -- Al in St. Lou |
|
|||
|
Mike Lyle wrote: this very day I bought myself some fillet steak as a very rare treat because it was marked down to £7.96 a pound -- my piece weighs just under 7 ounces. The same market forces which will always ensure a supply of meat for those who can afford it must also make it scarcer as grains, and grass for that matter, also become more expensive. -- Mike. The Eye fillet I buy here in Brisbane (Australia) retails at around $38/Kg And it's worth every cent...IMHO. But I figure life is too short to eat poor quality steaks (or drink rubbish wine for that matter)! LadyJane -- "Never trust a skinny cook!" |
|
|||
|
LadyJane wrote:
The Eye fillet I buy here in Brisbane (Australia) retails at around $38/Kg And it's worth every cent...IMHO. But I figure life is too short to eat poor quality steaks (or drink rubbish wine for that matter)! Wait a sec.... I have to do some conversions here.... that works out to about $32 Canadian..... still really expensive compared to what I pay for beef filet. |
|
|||
|
Al in Dallas wrote:
On 11 Apr 2006 09:55:39 -0700, "Mike Lyle" wrote: Al in Dallas wrote: On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 22:23:07 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: [...] is presumably going to become inescapable. We can't go on much longer feeding grain (and fish, but that's a separate problem) to cattle when it will be needed to feed people. But upland pastures and other marginal areas that will never be able to produce grain will continue to produce the much smaller amounts of meat people are going to have to get used to eating. [snip] Then I'll just point out that Malthus was wrong and that free markets will keep desired goods available so long as they aren't heavily distorted by those who use the government to distort them. Well, I'll just point out that meat is even in our lifetime becoming steadily more expensive, and there is no real-terms mechanism which can stop the increase. The textbook answer is that other suppliers coming on line should halt, and maybe reverse, the price increases. If new suppliers aren't starting up when the prices go up, I'd say it's time to look for those market distortions I referred to. Not if the textbook knows that population (governing demand) is increasing, while land area (governing supply) is finite. In Britain, for example, beef is already fairly severely rationed by price: this very day I bought myself some fillet steak as a very rare treat because it was marked down to £7.96 a pound -- my piece weighs just under 7 ounces. The same market forces which will always ensure a supply of meat for those who can afford it must also make it scarcer as grains, and grass for that matter, also become more expensive. I know that meat prices seem insane compared to what they were when I was young. However, that changes significantly when inflation is taken into account. There should be a UK equivalent to our CPI published somewhere over there. But it's not all inflation: even if it isn't happening like this already (and in terms of land values it is), the cost of meat _must_ rise in real terms in the long run, driven up by increasing production costs. -- Mike. |
|
|||
|
Mike Lyle wrote:
Al in Dallas wrote: On 11 Apr 2006 09:55:39 -0700, "Mike Lyle" wrote: Al in Dallas wrote: Then I'll just point out that Malthus was wrong and that free markets will keep desired goods available so long as they aren't heavily distorted by those who use the government to distort them. Well, I'll just point out that meat is even in our lifetime becoming steadily more expensive, and there is no real-terms mechanism which can stop the increase. The textbook answer is that other suppliers coming on line should halt, and maybe reverse, the price increases. If new suppliers aren't starting up when the prices go up, I'd say it's time to look for those market distortions I referred to. Not if the textbook knows that population (governing demand) is increasing, while land area (governing supply) is finite. I can understand that land could be a limiting factor in Britain. The Australian experience is a little different. (And that could be relevant to you, because Australia is a major meat exporter.) The land is there, but instead of "other suppliers coming on line" we have farmers abandoning the land. Their business has become uneconomic, mostly because of climate change. Another way of looking at it, I suppose, is that previously useful land is turning into useless land, so in that sense the supply of available land is shrinking. Yet another way of looking at it is that the cattle population has grown faster than the available grass supply. Did someone mention Malthus? The problem with textbook answers, especially those of the free-market persuasion, is that they assume an infinite supply of raw materials. Where Malthus went wrong was that he assumed an equitable distribution over the population. In particular, he didn't foresee "globalisation", whereby a privileged class could maintain its comfortable lifestyle at the expense of the less privileged. The USA, for example, passed its "Malthusian limit" some time ago. (Not so much in terms of food, as in other raw materials.) It managed to keep going anyway by using up the resources of poorer nations. If you want to see Malthusian crises in action, take a look at those countries that have lost the ability to pillage their neighbours. There are plenty of examples in north Africa. -- Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org Please note the changed e-mail and web addresses. The domain eepjm.newcastle.edu.au no longer exists, and I can no longer reliably receive mail at my newcastle.edu.au addresses. The optusnet address still has about 4 months of life left. |
|
|||
|
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
On Tue 11 Apr 2006 01:16:50a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Linz? Suet can go rancid too. Trust me, I know this. Indeed it can. I had some in the freezer from last year, intending on using it for mincemeat. It had a very rancid smell when I opened it, but I didn't taste it. I didn't notice a smell, made some dumplings to go in some chicken soup, and we nearly threw up when we tasted them. |
|
|||
|
On Wed, 12 Apr 2006 09:40:54 +0100, "Linz"
wrote: Wayne Boatwright wrote: On Tue 11 Apr 2006 01:16:50a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Linz? Suet can go rancid too. Trust me, I know this. Indeed it can. I had some in the freezer from last year, intending on using it for mincemeat. It had a very rancid smell when I opened it, but I didn't taste it. I didn't notice a smell, made some dumplings to go in some chicken soup, and we nearly threw up when we tasted them. It's putting it in the freezer that is the problem, it does something to fat so that it goes off over a period of months. The same thing happens to bacon and oily fish. If I put my home made bacon in the freezer it tastes a bit off after two or three months, but if I hang it up in the laundry in a muslin it keeps indefinitley. We've eaten, with great pleasure, two year old Christmas puddings that have been kept in the cupboard, but they are a bit drier than ones that have been maturning for only a month. Mike Page Kill the monkeys for email |
|
|||
|
In ,
Mike Page typed: We've eaten, with great pleasure, two year old Christmas puddings that have been kept in the cupboard, but they are a bit drier than ones that have been maturning for only a month. [sharp hiss of horror] I realise that I don't seem to post any more except on the theme of "more brandy", but... yagodda top 'em up periodically (two or tree times a year) with brandy. -- Nat Wooster: Jeeves, I'm sure that nothing is further from your mind, but you know you have a way of saying "Indeed, sir" which gives the impression that it's only a feudal sense of what is fitting which prevents you from substituting the words "Says you." Jeeves: I'm distressed to hear this, sir. |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Freezing Yorkshire Puddings | Daisy | General Cooking | 14 | 18-12-2005 03:02 AM |
| yorkshire puddings | ireardon@waitrose.com | General Cooking | 8 | 09-09-2005 08:25 PM |
| yorkshire puddings | ireardon@waitrose.com | General Cooking | 0 | 03-09-2005 07:38 PM |
| Tapioca-my new secret delight | Goomba38 | General Cooking | 32 | 06-04-2004 12:28 AM |
| Little Sticky Toffee Puddings | MOMPEAGRAM | Recipes (moderated) | 0 | 01-12-2003 06:34 PM |