On Tue, 11 Dec 2018 21:28:14 -0000 (UTC), Wayne Boatwright
> wrote:
>On Tue 11 Dec 2018 12:25:00p, l not -l told us...
>
>>
>> On 11-Dec-2018, wrote:
>>
>>> On Thursday, August 11, 1994 at 6:35:04 PM UTC-4, Mary Prenaveau
>>> wrote:
>>> > Recently I found a recipe for a vegetarian chile. However, it
>>> > calls for yellow hominy in a can. All I can find is Quaker
>>> > Quick Hominy Grits and it's bleached. Can they be used
>>> > interchangeably? Does anyone know where you can find yellow
>>> > hominy in a can? My supermarket does carry some pretty unique
>>> > food items, but I guess this one got by them!
>>> >
>>> > MaryP
>>> >
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I dont much like hominy and I'm part amercian indian.
>> My heritage is mostly British and I hate hominy. To the best of
>> my knowledge, my ancestors had nothing to do with India or native
>> Americans.
>>
>
>IMO hominy is a "love or hate" type of food. I happen to like it
>when prepared in Mexican chili flavored dishes. Not so much when
>it's served with some butter and salt and pepper. I certainly don't
>hate it. I don't think your ancestry has very much to do with
>whether or hot you like hominy.
>
>Thinking about it, I have eaten it when it has been fried in butter
>or ven bacon fat. ON its own it does have a distinctive flavor, but
>a rather bland flavor.
I think it is difficult to find a source for 'corny' tasting hominy
(dried) I had one that sent me some from New Mexico but they moved.
The stuff I get from Winco is pretty tasteless. I'm about to send for
some from Amazon because of recommendations there.