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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

Happy Thanksgiving to turkeylovers



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 23-11-2007, 01:14 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
SN
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 244
Default Happy Thanksgiving to turkeylovers

i only had the ham.

sidenote: ate some yams that tasted like...black yunnan tea (a
particular one that i still have in my stash)...no, there was no
confusion... i was not drunk... the full taste spectrum (as much as i
perceive it) was there in the cooked yam... yes, it had the
consistency and texture of a yam, but the flavor of the tea...
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 23-11-2007, 03:56 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Dominic T.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 828
Default Happy Thanksgiving to turkeylovers

On Nov 23, 8:14 am, SN wrote:
i only had the ham.

sidenote: ate some yams that tasted like...black yunnan tea (a
particular one that i still have in my stash)...no, there was no
confusion... i was not drunk... the full taste spectrum (as much as i
perceive it) was there in the cooked yam... yes, it had the
consistency and texture of a yam, but the flavor of the tea...


Happy Turkey (and ham) Day to you as well. I have never been able to
choke down a yam (or sweet potato) in any form. I try, and I've tried
them a number of ways. I managed to get one sweet potato french fry
down once, and that was the extent of it. It is neat when you pick up
a familiar tea flavor in something unexpected, although I've always
been let down by foods cooked in/with tea. Mine was pretty basic with
the usuals, turkey, croissant, mashed potato, cranberry sauce, and
stuffing. I made a pretty good cornbread stuffing, and my mother had a
standout with a whole cranberry pie. Today I cook my own turkey/
stuffing for my house, I always enjoy it more when I can relax and
have it on my own terms.

- Dominic
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 23-11-2007, 07:10 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
andrei.avk@gmail.com
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 73
Default Happy Thanksgiving to turkeylovers

On Nov 23, 10:56 am, "Dominic T." wrote:
On Nov 23, 8:14 am, SN wrote:

i only had the ham.


sidenote: ate some yams that tasted like...black yunnan tea (a
particular one that i still have in my stash)...no, there was no
confusion... i was not drunk... the full taste spectrum (as much as i
perceive it) was there in the cooked yam... yes, it had the
consistency and texture of a yam, but the flavor of the tea...


Happy Turkey (and ham) Day to you as well. I have never been able to
choke down a yam (or sweet potato) in any form. I try, and I've tried


Yams are great either with baked potatoes (ratio about 3-4 potatoes to
one yam) or in soup. Either way I use very little yams compared to the
whole dish, but it adds something. I love them, they're cheap, easy to
store, last a long time, and taste really nice to me when I use them
as described. Mmm yams.

them a number of ways. I managed to get one sweet potato french fry
down once, and that was the extent of it. It is neat when you pick up
a familiar tea flavor in something unexpected, although I've always
been let down by foods cooked in/with tea. Mine was pretty basic with
the usuals, turkey, croissant, mashed potato, cranberry sauce, and
stuffing. I made a pretty good cornbread stuffing, and my mother had a
standout with a whole cranberry pie. Today I cook my own turkey/
stuffing for my house, I always enjoy it more when I can relax and
have it on my own terms.

- Dominic


  #4 (permalink)  
Old 24-11-2007, 04:22 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Shen[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 402
Default Happy Thanksgiving to turkeylovers

On Nov 23, 11:10 am, wrote:
On Nov 23, 10:56 am, "Dominic T." wrote:

On Nov 23, 8:14 am, SN wrote:


i only had the ham.


sidenote: ate some yams that tasted like...black yunnan tea (a
particular one that i still have in my stash)...no, there was no
confusion... i was not drunk... the full taste spectrum (as much as i
perceive it) was there in the cooked yam... yes, it had the
consistency and texture of a yam, but the flavor of the tea...


Happy Turkey (and ham) Day to you as well. I have never been able to
choke down a yam (or sweet potato) in any form. I try, and I've tried


Yams are great either with baked potatoes (ratio about 3-4 potatoes to
one yam) or in soup. Either way I use very little yams compared to the
whole dish, but it adds something. I love them, they're cheap, easy to
store, last a long time, and taste really nice to me when I use them
as described. Mmm yams.

them a number of ways. I managed to get one sweet potato french fry
down once, and that was the extent of it. It is neat when you pick up
a familiar tea flavor in something unexpected, although I've always
been let down by foods cooked in/with tea. Mine was pretty basic with
the usuals, turkey, croissant, mashed potato, cranberry sauce, and
stuffing. I made a pretty good cornbread stuffing, and my mother had a
standout with a whole cranberry pie. Today I cook my own turkey/
stuffing for my house, I always enjoy it more when I can relax and
have it on my own terms.


- Dominic


My sister makes an incredibly good citrus marmalade with a very nice,
strong yunnan gold which I used to glaze the turkey and mixed with the
yams, along with a bit of bourbon and
pecans....................yummmm!
Shen
 




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