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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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Gary wrote:
> jmcquown wrote: > > Sure, it's easy to make from scratch mashed potatoes. Not so easy > > to use up even a 2 lb. bag of potatoes in my house before they > > start to sprout. > > I always buy potatoes in 3-5 pound bags. They are fine for 2-3 weeks. > If I see they are getting too old, I'll just cook the rest and freeze > them. Never any fresh potato loss here. > > I like the potato flakes too occasionally. I just discovered a small > pack in my pantry. Will use them today or tomorrow. Cooking some up shortly. It's odd here but buying a 7lb bag is cheaper than a 3-5lb bag. Oh well. I find a use for them and seldom need to toss any out. It's a side effect of us not being real high on the meat eater scale. Definately, DEFIANTLY not vegetarian but today's meal is as was yesterday's. Tomorrow, a bean pot set to cooking today will be ready and it has about 8oz home made sausage in it. So far this week, we had seafood Monday (shrimp), Thursday (Catfish). Friday we ate the rest of the catfish. Just happened to be no beef/pork or pultry this week but assuridly they show up in time. |
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On 5/2/2021 2:52 PM, cshenk wrote:
> Gary wrote: > >> jmcquown wrote: >>> Sure, it's easy to make from scratch mashed potatoes. Not so easy >>> to use up even a 2 lb. bag of potatoes in my house before they >>> start to sprout. >> >> I always buy potatoes in 3-5 pound bags. They are fine for 2-3 weeks. >> If I see they are getting too old, I'll just cook the rest and freeze >> them. Never any fresh potato loss here. >> >> I like the potato flakes too occasionally. I just discovered a small >> pack in my pantry. Will use them today or tomorrow. > > Cooking some up shortly. It's odd here but buying a 7lb bag is cheaper > than a 3-5lb bag. Oh well. I find a use for them and seldom need to > toss any out. It's a side effect of us not being real high on the meat > eater scale. Definately, DEFIANTLY not vegetarian but today's meal is > as was yesterday's. Tomorrow, a bean pot set to cooking today will be > ready and it has about 8oz home made sausage in it. > > So far this week, we had seafood Monday (shrimp), Thursday (Catfish). > Friday we ate the rest of the catfish. Just happened to be no beef/pork > or pultry this week but assuridly they show up in time. The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I ate a lot of potatoes in November... lol |
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On 5/6/2021 1:24 AM, Michael Trew wrote:
> The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other > varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes > give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they > mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were > on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I ate > a lot of potatoes in November... lol Your Idaho potatoes should also come with a specific potato name, like maybe Russets. Anyway, your sale deal...20 pounds of potatoes for $5? That's the best potato deal I've heard of in many years. They can also be cooked and frozen for future meals if they start to go bad. |
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On Thu, 6 May 2021 08:09:23 -0400, Gary > wrote:
>On 5/6/2021 1:24 AM, Michael Trew wrote: >> The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other >> varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes >> give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they >> mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were >> on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I ate >> a lot of potatoes in November... lol > >Your Idaho potatoes should also come with a specific potato name, like >maybe Russets. > >Anyway, your sale deal...20 pounds of potatoes for $5? That's the best >potato deal I've heard of in many years. They can also be cooked and >frozen for future meals if they start to go bad. Potatoes here are often 5 pound BOGO. To prevent spoilage I turn some into latkes or potato nik. https://www.markbittman.com/recipes-1/potato-nik Rather than grating potatoes I put them through my meat grinder with a large hole plate... fast and no bloody knuckles... grind the onion last after draining some potato liquid. Latkes and nik freeze well. I like potato nik cold from the fridge. |
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On 5/6/2021 8:09 AM, Gary wrote:
> On 5/6/2021 1:24 AM, Michael Trew wrote: >> The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other >> varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes >> give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they >> mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were >> on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I ate >> a lot of potatoes in November... lol > > Your Idaho potatoes should also come with a specific potato name, like > maybe Russets. > > Anyway, your sale deal...20 pounds of potatoes for $5? That's the best > potato deal I've heard of in many years. They can also be cooked and > frozen for future meals if they start to go bad. > > > Yes, I was surprised at that sale too. I guess the store stocked up on too many for Thanksgiving. Perhaps they were Russets, I'm not sure. Just regular looking baking potatoes. |
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On 5/6/2021 11:32 PM, Michael Trew wrote:
> On 5/6/2021 8:09 AM, Gary wrote: >> On 5/6/2021 1:24 AM, Michael Trew wrote: >>> The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other >>> varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes >>> give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they >>> mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were >>> on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I ate >>> a lot of potatoes in November... lol >> >> Your Idaho potatoes should also come with a specific potato name, like >> maybe Russets. >> >> Anyway, your sale deal...20 pounds of potatoes for $5? That's the best >> potato deal I've heard of in many years. They can also be cooked and >> frozen for future meals if they start to go bad. >> >> >> > > Yes, I was surprised at that sale too.Â* I guess the store stocked up on > too many for Thanksgiving.Â* Perhaps they were Russets, I'm not sure. > Just regular looking baking potatoes. Probably russets. The expectation is that most people make mashed potatoes to go with Thanksgiving dinner. Probably not 10 pounds worth unless they have a huge family gathering. Purely a guess on my part, they fully expected the pandemic to be over so they over-bought potatoes and had to do the BOGO thing. Jill |
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On 5/7/2021 5:05 PM, jmcquown wrote:
> On 5/6/2021 11:32 PM, Michael Trew wrote: >> On 5/6/2021 8:09 AM, Gary wrote: >>> On 5/6/2021 1:24 AM, Michael Trew wrote: >>>> The 10 pound bag of Idaho potatoes are regularly cheaper than other >>>> varieties sold in 5 pound bags. 10 LBS of Idaho's it is. I sometimes >>>> give some away to family members who don't buy potatoes because they >>>> mainly cook garbage instant foods, if have too many potatoes. They were >>>> on sale, buy one get one free 10 LB bags for $5 on Thanksgiving... I >>>> ate >>>> a lot of potatoes in November... lol >>> >>> Your Idaho potatoes should also come with a specific potato name, like >>> maybe Russets. >>> >>> Anyway, your sale deal...20 pounds of potatoes for $5? That's the best >>> potato deal I've heard of in many years. They can also be cooked and >>> frozen for future meals if they start to go bad. >>> >>> >>> >> >> Yes, I was surprised at that sale too. I guess the store stocked up >> on too many for Thanksgiving. Perhaps they were Russets, I'm not >> sure. Just regular looking baking potatoes. > > Probably russets. The expectation is that most people make mashed > potatoes to go with Thanksgiving dinner. Probably not 10 pounds worth > unless they have a huge family gathering. Purely a guess on my part, > they fully expected the pandemic to be over so they over-bought potatoes > and had to do the BOGO thing. > > Jill That's probably about right. I wish I though of freezing some. I ended up just giving the other bag away. |
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