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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold milk but okay with
hot chocolate as well. Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june berry). ==== |
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On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote:
>Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold milk but okay with >hot chocolate as well. >Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june berry). My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli rice. Yummy! |
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![]() "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message ... > On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: > >>Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>milk but okay with >>hot chocolate as well. >>Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>berry). > > My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli > rice. Yummy! If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? -- http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/ |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" >
wrote: > > >"The New Other Guy" > wrote in message .. . >> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >> >>>Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>milk but okay with >>>hot chocolate as well. >>>Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>berry). >> >> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >> rice. Yummy! > >If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? A fast food burger and fries (lunch, actually). But I won't eat again for a day or three. ![]() |
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![]() "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message ... > On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > > wrote: > >> >> >>"The New Other Guy" > wrote in message . .. >>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > >>> wrote: >>> >>>>Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>>milk but okay with >>>>hot chocolate as well. >>>>Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>>berry). >>> >>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>> rice. Yummy! >> >>If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? > > A fast food burger and fries (lunch, actually). > > But I won't eat again for a day or three. Right .... -- http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/ |
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On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy >
wrote: >Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold milk but okay with >hot chocolate as well. >Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june berry). >==== I love them but wouldn't waste them with peanut butter ![]() |
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On 20 Nov 2015 14:45:49 GMT, notbob > wrote:
>On 2015-11-20, > wrote: > >> I love them but wouldn't waste them with peanut butter ![]() > >A good PB&J is NEVER as waste. ![]() > >nb It is to me, I'd likely have them on their with some butter. |
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Sqwertz wrote:
> And some home made caramel corn. > > -sw STFU you obese, sawed-off woman stalker. |
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notbob wrote:
> > On 2015-11-20, > wrote: > > > I love them but wouldn't waste them with peanut butter ![]() > > A good PB&J is NEVER as waste. ![]() nb speaks the truth here. |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" >
wrote: > > >"The New Other Guy" > wrote in message .. . >> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >> >>>Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>milk but okay with >>>hot chocolate as well. >>>Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>berry). >> >> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >> rice. Yummy! > >If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? A double Crystal Palace. |
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On 11/20/2015 12:51 AM, Sqwertz wrote:
> And some home made caramel corn. > > -sw ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ost > 3/18/2011 3:49 PM Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1162 readnews.com - News for Geeks and ISPs fa35d278.newsreader.readnews.com Sorry I don't fit either of your Ideal Psycho Pal Profiles. -sw --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I'd prefer you use a sniper rifle on me from a few hundred yards away. There you go - a reason for you to buy yet another gun and ammo. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f
home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. -- |
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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > > wrote: > >> >> >> "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message >> ... >>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >>> >>>> Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>> milk but okay with >>>> hot chocolate as well. >>>> Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>> berry). >>> >>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>> rice. Yummy! >> >> If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? > > A double Crystal Palace. > Only one? |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 14:15:15 -0700, playas > wrote:
>Brooklyn1 wrote: >> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > >> wrote: >> >>> >>> >>> "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message >>> ... >>>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >>>> >>>>> Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>>> milk but okay with >>>>> hot chocolate as well. >>>>> Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>>> berry). >>>> >>>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>>> rice. Yummy! >>> >>> If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? >> >> A double Crystal Palace. >> >Only one? Usually one before dinner at about 5 PM (while watching Judge Judy), and another after dinner at about 8 PM (to relax before bedtime), but some days none... why do you ask, are you interested in a drinking contest, I gaurantee I can drink you and your twin sister under the table and then **** your twin sister, your mother, and your cowardly faggot ass. LOL |
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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 14:15:15 -0700, playas > wrote: > >> Brooklyn1 wrote: >>> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > >>> wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message >>>> ... >>>>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>>>> milk but okay with >>>>>> hot chocolate as well. >>>>>> Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>>>> berry). >>>>> >>>>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>>>> rice. Yummy! >>>> >>>> If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? >>> >>> A double Crystal Palace. >>> >> Only one? > > Usually one before dinner at about 5 PM (while watching Judge Judy), > and another after dinner at about 8 PM (to relax before bedtime), but > some days none... why do you ask, are you interested in a drinking > contest, I gaurantee I can drink you and your twin sister under the > table and then **** your twin sister, your mother, and your cowardly > faggot ass. LOL > Wait, you want to **** ass but the other guy is the faggot? Either that's the Crystal Place talking again or you're one of those AC/DC bisexed types. |
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On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote:
> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f > home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. > > Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds great. |
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Dave Smith wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: > > 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f > > home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. > > > > > > Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds > great. Grin, try home made fresh bread. This 30 second or so zap isn't an issue. If you don't have home made fresh, nuke the other part separate and place on the bread. BTW, just made this one. MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05 Title: Raisin-Rum loaf, xxcarol favorite Categories: Xxcarol, Breadmaker Yield: 12 Servings 1/2 c Sour cream 1/3 c Water 1 ea Egg 3 tb Dark rum 2 ts Butter 1 ts Vanilla powder 3 c Flour 3 tb Sugar 3/4 ts Salt 1 1/2 ts Yeast 1/2 c Dark raisins Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes out a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet like a dessert bread. Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by xxcarol From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 MMMMM -- |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 17:56:33 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: >On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: >> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f >> home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. >> >> > >Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds great. Where did I say that? -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 15:01:10 -0700, Hidalgo > wrote:
>Brooklyn1 wrote: >> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 14:15:15 -0700, playas > wrote: >> >>> Brooklyn1 wrote: >>>> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message >>>>> ... >>>>>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>>>>> milk but okay with >>>>>>> hot chocolate as well. >>>>>>> Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>>>>> berry). >>>>>> >>>>>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>>>>> rice. Yummy! >>>>> >>>>> If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? >>>> >>>> A double Crystal Palace. >>>> >>> Only one? >> >> Usually one before dinner at about 5 PM (while watching Judge Judy), >> and another after dinner at about 8 PM (to relax before bedtime), but >> some days none... why do you ask, are you interested in a drinking >> contest, I gaurantee I can drink you and your twin sister under the >> table and then **** your twin sister, your mother, and your cowardly >> faggot ass. LOL >> > >Wait, you want to **** ass but the other guy is the faggot? > >Either that's the Crystal Place talking again or you're one of those >AC/DC bisexed types. Sheldon will partake of ANY sort of sexual deviency. He comes from a family of incestuous sexual abusers. -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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sf wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 17:56:33 -0500, Dave Smith > > wrote: > >> On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: >>> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f >>> home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. >>> >>> >> >> Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds great. > Where did I say that? > -- > Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. > Although the US portrays itself as the land of equality, it unfairly targets Muslim gunmen as terrorists, even as studies show that white supremacist and radical anti-government groups pose the greatest domestic terror threat in the country. American media outlets have been reluctant to classify the Charleston, South Carolina church massacre as terrorism, despite how clearly it fits the definition of a terrorist act, defined as extreme violence intended to murder civilians and to create fear based on political and ideological beliefs. Dylann Roof, 21, the white gunman who shot nine black people dead at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston last month is an avowed white supremacist who wanted to start a race war in the US. Roof, however, has been described by mainstream media outlets and authorities as mentally ill and filled with the hatred of blacks, not a terrorist. Similarly, Craig Stephen Hicks, a white gunman who killed three Muslim American college students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in February had also been steered away from terrorism, although governments and leaders of several Muslim-majority countries deemed the shooting to be terrorism. Former Black Panther Party member and international defense lawyer John Floyd says there is no real distinction between terrorism and hate crimes, describing their differences as rhetorical. Its a distinction without a real difference, Floyd told Press TVs correspondent in Washington. A lot of the elements that if you were trying to prove that it was a terrorist act, its there; if you want to prove that its a hate crime, its there, he said. According to a recent study published last month, white and right-wing Americans present a far greater terror threat to the United States than individuals linked to the al-Qaeda or ISIL extremist groups. Most of the terror attacks carried out on US soil since the September 11, 2001 attacks have been committed by white supremacist and radical anti-government groups, according to the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. |
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sf wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 15:01:10 -0700, Hidalgo > wrote: > >> Brooklyn1 wrote: >>> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 14:15:15 -0700, playas > wrote: >>> >>>> Brooklyn1 wrote: >>>>> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:08:28 -0000, "Ophelia" > >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> "The New Other Guy" > wrote in message >>>>>> ... >>>>>>> On Thu, 19 Nov 2015 19:37:18 -0800 (PST), Roy > wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Saskatoon jelly and peanut butter sandwich...the best. Better with cold >>>>>>>> milk but okay with >>>>>>>> hot chocolate as well. >>>>>>>> Just "google" saskatoon berry for info on saskatoons (service or june >>>>>>>> berry). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> My 'snack' this evening was a 6 ounce Filet Mignon, with cheesy broccoli >>>>>>> rice. Yummy! >>>>>> >>>>>> If that was your 'snack' what did you have for your dinner? >>>>> >>>>> A double Crystal Palace. >>>>> >>>> Only one? >>> >>> Usually one before dinner at about 5 PM (while watching Judge Judy), >>> and another after dinner at about 8 PM (to relax before bedtime), but >>> some days none... why do you ask, are you interested in a drinking >>> contest, I gaurantee I can drink you and your twin sister under the >>> table and then **** your twin sister, your mother, and your cowardly >>> faggot ass. LOL >>> >> >> Wait, you want to **** ass but the other guy is the faggot? >> >> Either that's the Crystal Place talking again or you're one of those >> AC/DC bisexed types. > > Sheldon will partake of ANY sort of sexual deviency. He comes from a > family of incestuous sexual abusers. > -- > Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. > Although the US portrays itself as the land of equality, it unfairly targets Muslim gunmen as terrorists, even as studies show that white supremacist and radical anti-government groups pose the greatest domestic terror threat in the country. American media outlets have been reluctant to classify the Charleston, South Carolina church massacre as terrorism, despite how clearly it fits the definition of a terrorist act, defined as extreme violence intended to murder civilians and to create fear based on political and ideological beliefs. Dylann Roof, 21, the white gunman who shot nine black people dead at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston last month is an avowed white supremacist who wanted to start a race war in the US. Roof, however, has been described by mainstream media outlets and authorities as mentally ill and filled with the hatred of blacks, not a terrorist. Similarly, Craig Stephen Hicks, a white gunman who killed three Muslim American college students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in February had also been steered away from terrorism, although governments and leaders of several Muslim-majority countries deemed the shooting to be terrorism. Former Black Panther Party member and international defense lawyer John Floyd says there is no real distinction between terrorism and hate crimes, describing their differences as rhetorical. Its a distinction without a real difference, Floyd told Press TVs correspondent in Washington. A lot of the elements that if you were trying to prove that it was a terrorist act, its there; if you want to prove that its a hate crime, its there, he said. According to a recent study published last month, white and right-wing Americans present a far greater terror threat to the United States than individuals linked to the al-Qaeda or ISIL extremist groups. Most of the terror attacks carried out on US soil since the September 11, 2001 attacks have been committed by white supremacist and radical anti-government groups, according to the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. |
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Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: >> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f >> home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. >> >> > > Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds great. > Although the US portrays itself as the land of equality, it unfairly targets Muslim gunmen as terrorists, even as studies show that white supremacist and radical anti-government groups pose the greatest domestic terror threat in the country. American media outlets have been reluctant to classify the Charleston, South Carolina church massacre as terrorism, despite how clearly it fits the definition of a terrorist act, defined as extreme violence intended to murder civilians and to create fear based on political and ideological beliefs. Dylann Roof, 21, the white gunman who shot nine black people dead at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston last month is an avowed white supremacist who wanted to start a race war in the US. Roof, however, has been described by mainstream media outlets and authorities as mentally ill and filled with the hatred of blacks, not a terrorist. Similarly, Craig Stephen Hicks, a white gunman who killed three Muslim American college students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in February had also been steered away from terrorism, although governments and leaders of several Muslim-majority countries deemed the shooting to be terrorism. Former Black Panther Party member and international defense lawyer John Floyd says there is no real distinction between terrorism and hate crimes, describing their differences as rhetorical. Its a distinction without a real difference, Floyd told Press TVs correspondent in Washington. A lot of the elements that if you were trying to prove that it was a terrorist act, its there; if you want to prove that its a hate crime, its there, he said. According to a recent study published last month, white and right-wing Americans present a far greater terror threat to the United States than individuals linked to the al-Qaeda or ISIL extremist groups. Most of the terror attacks carried out on US soil since the September 11, 2001 attacks have been committed by white supremacist and radical anti-government groups, according to the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. |
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cshenk wrote:
> Dave Smith wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: >>> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f >>> home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. >>> >>> >> >> Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds >> great. > > Grin, try home made fresh bread. This 30 second or so zap isn't an > issue. If you don't have home made fresh, nuke the other part separate > and place on the bread. > > BTW, just made this one. > > > MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05 > > Title: Raisin-Rum loaf, xxcarol favorite > Categories: Xxcarol, Breadmaker > Yield: 12 Servings > > 1/2 c Sour cream > 1/3 c Water > 1 ea Egg > 3 tb Dark rum > 2 ts Butter > 1 ts Vanilla powder > 3 c Flour > 3 tb Sugar > 3/4 ts Salt > 1 1/2 ts Yeast > 1/2 c Dark raisins > > Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes out > a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet like a > dessert bread. > > Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! > > From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by > xxcarol > > From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 > > MMMMM > > Although the US portrays itself as the land of equality, it unfairly targets Muslim gunmen as terrorists, even as studies show that white supremacist and radical anti-government groups pose the greatest domestic terror threat in the country. American media outlets have been reluctant to classify the Charleston, South Carolina church massacre as terrorism, despite how clearly it fits the definition of a terrorist act, defined as extreme violence intended to murder civilians and to create fear based on political and ideological beliefs. Dylann Roof, 21, the white gunman who shot nine black people dead at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston last month is an avowed white supremacist who wanted to start a race war in the US. Roof, however, has been described by mainstream media outlets and authorities as mentally ill and filled with the hatred of blacks, not a terrorist. Similarly, Craig Stephen Hicks, a white gunman who killed three Muslim American college students in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in February had also been steered away from terrorism, although governments and leaders of several Muslim-majority countries deemed the shooting to be terrorism. Former Black Panther Party member and international defense lawyer John Floyd says there is no real distinction between terrorism and hate crimes, describing their differences as rhetorical. Its a distinction without a real difference, Floyd told Press TVs correspondent in Washington. A lot of the elements that if you were trying to prove that it was a terrorist act, its there; if you want to prove that its a hate crime, its there, he said. According to a recent study published last month, white and right-wing Americans present a far greater terror threat to the United States than individuals linked to the al-Qaeda or ISIL extremist groups. Most of the terror attacks carried out on US soil since the September 11, 2001 attacks have been committed by white supremacist and radical anti-government groups, according to the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. |
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On 2015-11-20 20:03, cshenk wrote:
> Dave Smith wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> On 2015-11-20 1:18 PM, cshenk wrote: >>> 2 slices of tomato, small bits of brie and placed over small cuts f >>> home made buttermilk bread. Nuked to just barely melty. >>> >>> >> >> Other than the nuking, which tends to vulcanize bread, that sounds >> great. > > Grin, try home made fresh bread. This 30 second or so zap isn't an > issue. If you don't have home made fresh, nuke the other part separate > and place on the bread. My wife rarely eats bread so it is hardly worth my effort to make bread for one meal, after which it will no longer be fresh. You don't need to tell me about fresh home made bread. I was raised on it. I am likely the only one in this group who grew up in a house where almost all the bread was home made. > > BTW, just made this one. > > > MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05 > > Title: Raisin-Rum loaf, xxcarol favorite > Categories: Xxcarol, Breadmaker > Yield: 12 Servings > > 1/2 c Sour cream > 1/3 c Water > 1 ea Egg > 3 tb Dark rum > 2 ts Butter > 1 ts Vanilla powder > 3 c Flour > 3 tb Sugar > 3/4 ts Salt > 1 1/2 ts Yeast > 1/2 c Dark raisins > > Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes out > a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet like a > dessert bread. > > Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! > > From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by > xxcarol > > From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 > > MMMMM > > |
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Dave Smith wrote:
> I am likely the only one in this group who grew up in a house where > almost all the bread was home made. Self-aggrandize much? |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 19:54:02 -0700, Hidalgo > wrote:
>Dave Smith wrote: >> I am likely the only one in this group who grew up in a house where >> almost all the bread was home made. > >Self-aggrandize much? You don't have a clue, do you. You're an asshole who thinks his shit doesn't stink. -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 12:16:39 -0500, Gary > wrote:
>notbob wrote: >> >> On 2015-11-20, > wrote: >> >> > I love them but wouldn't waste them with peanut butter ![]() >> >> A good PB&J is NEVER as waste. ![]() > >nb speaks the truth here. Where did I say that? -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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On Fri, 20 Nov 2015 09:17:22 -0700, playas > wrote:
>Sqwertz wrote: >> And some home made caramel corn. >> >> -sw > You don't have a clue, do you. You're an asshole who thinks his shit doesn't stink. -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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"cshenk" > Wrote in message:
: 12 Servings > > 1/2 c Sour cream > 1/3 c Water > 1 ea Egg > 3 tb Dark rum > 2 ts Butter > 1 ts Vanilla powder > 3 c Flour > 3 tb Sugar > 3/4 ts Salt > 1 1/2 ts Yeast > 1/2 c Dark raisins > > Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes out > a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet like a > dessert bread. > > Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! > > From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by > xxcarol > > From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 > > MMMMM > > I've never seen vanilla powder. How does it differ from extract? -- ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
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Cheryl wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> "cshenk" > Wrote in message: > > : 12 Servings > > > > 1/2 c Sour cream > > 1/3 c Water > > 1 ea Egg > > 3 tb Dark rum > > 2 ts Butter > > 1 ts Vanilla powder > > 3 c Flour > > 3 tb Sugar > > 3/4 ts Salt > > 1 1/2 ts Yeast > > 1/2 c Dark raisins > > > > Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes > > out a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet > > like a dessert bread. > > > > Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! > > > > From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by > > xxcarol > > > > From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 > > > > MMMMM > > > > > > > I've never seen vanilla powder. How does it differ from extract? Mostly, it's a powder so no liquid to the bread adjustment needed. I use this one: http://www.amazon.com/Authentic-Food...p/B0001WOLMU/r ef=pd_sim_325_2?ie=UTF8&dpID=41CZcy-zR0L&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL160_SR16 0%2C160_&refRID=1PXKMT1AXYAFCWM0MXWM There's nothing wrong with an extract, but I find this works better with baking for us. Carol -- |
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cshenk wrote:
> I find this works better http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...side/cron.html Dec. 14, 1999 + Ressam arrested near Seattle Ressam says that on the morning of Dec. 14, he called Meskini and told him he would be in Seattle that evening. That afternoon, he took a ferry from Victoria, B.C., to Port Angeles, Wash., with more than 100 pounds of explosives stashed in the wheelbed of the trunk of his rental car. His accomplice, Dahoumane, did not travel with him. At Victoria, U.S. immigration pre-clearance agents were mildly suspicious of Ressam. They made him open his trunk, but saw nothing. He presented his fake Canadian passport, and the computer check turned up no previous convictions or warrants in the name of Benni Noris. Ressam drove his rental car, with its concealed bomb, onto the ferry heading for Washington state. Upon his arrival at Port Angeles, a U.S. customs agent became suspicious of his hesitant answers to her questions, and she asked for identification. Agents began searching the car. As they discovered the explosive materials -- which they at first took to be drugs -- in the trunk of the car, Ressam tried to run away. He was caught and arrested. Aftermath and Sept. 11, 2001 After Ressam's arrest was televised, an urgent call to Meskini came from Haouari in Montreal. Haouari was recorded telling Meskini to change his phone number, beeper, and cell phone and to leave immediately. Police watched as Meskini ripped up airline receipts and bank machine slips and threw them into a nearby dumpster. The FBI retrieved the evidence, and both men were arrested hours later. Meskini entered into a plea agreement in which he admitted conspiring with Ressam and testified against him at trial. Haouari was extradited to the U.S. from Canada and put on trial in New York. On April 6, 2001, after a four-week trial in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, Ressam was convicted of nine counts, including conspiracy to commit an international terrorist act, explosives smuggling, and lying to customs officials. Facing up to 130 years in prison, Ressam agreed to cooperate with prosecutors, providing information about his activities and those of his terrorist network. As part of the agreement, he testified against Haouari at trial. His sentencing has been postponed until February 2002. Also on April 6, Ressam was convicted in absentia in France and sentenced to five years for conspiring to commit terrorist acts there. Abdelmajid Dahoumane escaped to Afghanistan. The U.S. State Department issued a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to his arrest and conviction. He was later caught by Algerian security forces and convicted on terrorism-related charges there. Just days after the terrorist attacks in the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, investigators interrogated Ressam at the federal detention center near Seattle. They reportedly showed him pictures of the 19 hijackers. He said he knew none of them but did provide other names of people in so-called "sleeper cells" in North America. Ressam has also added significant new information about Al Qaeda's interest in chemical and biological weapons. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/worl...icle-1.1324305 U.S. and Canada foil Al Qaeda terrorist plot to derail New York to Toronto passenger train, two suspects arrested The suspects, who had planned the attacks more than a year, appear unrelated to the Boston Marathon bombers. Two suspected Al Qaeda terrorists were busted Monday in Canada before they could wreak havoc on the rails by blowing up a New York-to-Toronto passenger train. |
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On Sun, 22 Nov 2015 09:29:06 -0600, "cshenk" > wrote:
>Cheryl wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> "cshenk" > Wrote in message: >> >> : 12 Servings >> > >> > 1/2 c Sour cream >> > 1/3 c Water >> > 1 ea Egg >> > 3 tb Dark rum >> > 2 ts Butter >> > 1 ts Vanilla powder >> > 3 c Flour >> > 3 tb Sugar >> > 3/4 ts Salt >> > 1 1/2 ts Yeast >> > 1/2 c Dark raisins >> > >> > Oh this is good! It's a 1.5lb loaf set to white bread. It comes >> > out a brown color as if it was a wheat bread and it's quite sweet >> > like a dessert bread. >> > >> > Needs nothing to accompany it, just slice and eat! >> > >> > From one of my breadmaker books, with powdered vanilla added by >> > xxcarol >> > >> > From the VB kitchen of xxcarol, 16JAN2008 >> > >> > MMMMM >> > >> > >> >> >> I've never seen vanilla powder. How does it differ from extract? > >Mostly, it's a powder so no liquid to the bread adjustment needed. > >I use this one: > >http://www.amazon.com/Authentic-Food...p/B0001WOLMU/r >ef=pd_sim_325_2?ie=UTF8&dpID=41CZcy-zR0L&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL160_SR16 >0%2C160_&refRID=1PXKMT1AXYAFCWM0MXWM > >There's nothing wrong with an extract, but I find this works better >with baking for us. > > Carol "> You are reaping what you sowed by feeding known trolls, dearie" -- Barbara J Llorente 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. Age 65 (Born 1950) (415) 239-7248. Background Check - Available. Record ID: 47846596. |
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