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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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On Sun 20 Nov 2005 07:50:49a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it TammyM?
> On 20 Nov 2005 07:20:48 +0100, Wayne Boatwright > > wrote: > >>On Sat 19 Nov 2005 11:13:01p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Dan >>Abel? >> >>> In article >, >>> Wayne Boatwright > wrote: >>> >>>> On Sat 19 Nov 2005 10:25:33p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it >>>> serene? >>>> >>>> > Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>> > >>>> >> Lately I've only been buying the gold can of BumbleBee Prime >>>> >> Fillet Solid White Albacore. After lengthy searches, it's the >>>> >> only one I've found that doesn't look like debris scraped off the >>>> >> bottom of a ship! It's a nice solid pieces of tuna that looks like >>>> >> what most tuna used to look like. >>>> > >>>> > I'm a philistine. I don't like the albacore stuff. It's not what >>>> > I'm used to. Too dry. I like the dark, mushy stuff called >>>> > "light". Go figure. >>>> >>>> We could not share a can of tuna! :-) All my life my mom wouldn't >>>> allow any kind of tuna in the house except solid white. I'm not sure >>>> back then that it was necessarily albacore, but it was a solid chunk >>>> of white tuna. Nothing else seems like tuna to me. :-) >>> >>> If I'm eating canned tuna fish, I'm gonna smush it up anyway. If it >>> is already smushed up in the can, what's the difference? >> >>To me it's a big difference. The cheap smushed up stuff is just that, >>cheap smushed up "stuff". It has a lousy texture, seems invariably to >>not be all white tuna, and is excessively juicy, leaving less actual >>tuna after draining. The solid white has a nice firm texture that can >>be flaked to any desirable size, has a better flavor, and there's a lot >>more tuna after draining. > > My feelings too, Wayne. I don't mind the other stuff in tuna > casserole (YES! I admit it, I LIKE TUNA CASSEROLE!!!!!), but for a > sandwich, my strong preference is albacore. Now mind you, we didn't > have the money for such when I was growing up, so this is a taste > developed of comparative affluence (heavily accent the comparative!) > > So. I'll share my tuna sandwich with you any day o' the week, my > friend. I'm ready for that sammich, Tammy! :-) I make Tuna Casserole exactly twice a year, and I really enjoy it when I make it. It's like Mom's comfort food. :-) -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* _____________________________________________ A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken! |
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