• 166 happy hols + exte + come, let us feas

    From MICHAEL LOO@1:123/140 to NANCY BACKUS on Sunday, March 31, 2019 17:13:32
    It made an inexpensive main dish, and mixed well with cheese... add a veggie like broccoli, and there's a meal....
    Not what I'd call a meal!
    Ok, not what you'd call a meal... but it fed the motley crew at our
    dining table... :)
    I am quite thankful not to have to worry
    about starvation on a frequent basis.
    As in, you'd have to be starving to call that a meal...? ;) I'd not

    Yeah, pretty much, no offense.

    want to have that every meal, to be sure, but it did make a viable alternative for once in a while... ;)

    Though last night I made spaghetti agli'olio e
    peperoncini for supper, speaking of not what
    you'd call a meal. Tastes so good that I'd eat
    it until I burst and would in fact be a candidate
    for chosen last meal. Which, as it's not very
    blood-sugar-friendly, might be extra appropriate.

    Gums have 3 to 4 Cal/gram. Compare with the
    underlying cheese, which is 3.0 and zucchini,
    which has 0.17; I admit that the gums have
    maybe a little less in the vitamin department.
    On that basis, I suppose one could argue for nutrition in sawdust...
    How much caloric value is in sawdust? Not equal
    to that of cheese; I'd hope the stuff you get
    at Weggie's is better than that. Even grated Parm.
    I don't buy the grated cheese, actually... shredded or chunk,
    generally... :)

    Chunk really is best.

    I'm not sure what starts with an A and coats
    candy. cArnauba?
    There's that one... but maybe I was conflating with arabic gum,
    which I
    realize isn't the same thing.... goes in not on...
    How about gum Arabic?
    Quite possibly... is that the same then as arabic gum, or are they
    indeed different...?
    Same thing, surely.
    Oh, ok.... :)

    Looked it up, yup.

    +

    We're not the only first-world country.
    Very true... :)

    I'm in favor of countries aspiring to
    first-worldness and don't even have any argument
    with their surpassing us, just so we don't lose
    ground on an absolute scale (which there is some
    danger of, which we must fight).

    For sure; the temptation to overbuy is close to
    insuperable, especially when you can get 5 lb of
    (say) chicken thighs for $5 or 2 lb for the same
    cost or sometimes even more.
    So one brings it home and repackages most if not all of it into the freezer.... :)

    So back at Bonnie's I discover that she raided
    Whole Foods to present me with lots of good things
    to play with. Bone-in pork belly for $7/lb and a
    14-oz USDA Choice sirloin strip for $18. Consider
    that at Costco I got well-marbled Choice strips
    for $7/lb in packages of 5. The freezer option
    looks really good to me, but Bonnie is one of those
    I don't care what the price is people, which just
    cries out "sucker" to people like John Mackey and
    Jeff Bezos as well as a bevy of local tradespeople,
    alternative medicine ducks, and so on. It is true
    that a fresh Whole Foods steak is better than a
    frozen Costco steak, but it's not better than one
    fresh Costco steak, much less two fresh Costco
    steaks and three frozen ones.

    Knew better than to actually disable, I guess... ;) Just the
    bubbling
    up of the don' wanna....
    On the money.
    Figured.
    Some of the things I did well I wasn't
    super-enthusiastic about doing.
    BTDT, too... :)

    Yes we were, but I wasn't sure that was the connection...
    Aaah - if it were a subsidiary of Mondelez or
    something I'd have said so ... I think.
    I tend to prefer not to assume... ;)

    I prefer to be sufficiently explicit without
    being deadly boring explicit.

    Well, I've been suggesting (when the subject
    comes up) that Ruth avoid recipes that use
    ingredients she and Steve don't like, rather than
    try outlandish substitutes. I'd suggest that you
    find more recipes that use unsweetened chocolate!
    I'm afraid they'd tend to be outlandish recipes... especially as I'm rarely using recipes for my simple cooking... :)
    We'll find some. Ever heard of a dish called Brownies?
    Requires flour, I'm told... ;) Since I stopped baking bread, etc, that
    tends not to be on hand... Sugar's another thing there's not much of, as
    not generally used.... :)

    Eh.

    Lora Brody's Bete Noire, revised
    serves 6

    1 c sugar syrup - 1 c sugar boiled for 4 min with 1/2 c water
    6 oz bittersweet chocolate (I used Kona Vintage 1993)
    6 oz unsweetened chocolate (I used Baker's)
    8 oz unsalted butter
    6 large eggs
    1/3 c sugar

    Preheat oven to 350.

    Grate both of the chocolates as fine as your patience allows.
    Make sugar syrup, and while it's still hot add all the chocolate,
    which will seize and look terrible; do not panic. Cut the butter
    into double pats and blend it in gradually (the mixture will unseize).
    Beat eggs until ivory colored and tripled in volume, the sugar
    added in several additions. Gently fold the chocolate mixture into
    the eggs, stirring only enough to mix. Bake 25-35 min in a buttered
    8" square or 9" round pan that has been lined with buttered wax paper.
    Cake (?) should be tested after 25 min with the point of a knife -
    if the blade comes out cleanish, the dish is done (it took me 30).

    Allow to cool for 10 minutes, invert over serving dish, peel off
    wax paper, and cover until serving. If cake is served warm, it will
    have a loose pudding-cakey texture; if served cool, it will be more
    like a very dense brownie. Serve with any custard sauce if warm or
    with whipped cream if cool. P.S. I was gushing over the luxuriousness
    of this dish to my friend Nicholas, who listened carefully and then
    quietly said, "I've had that. Made by Lora Brody." Took the wind out
    of my sails, let me tell you.

    [end original sent 1/20/95 to the Shipps]

    One can learn to somewhat ignore what others do, while not doing it
    one's self....
    I've told myself a million, billion times
    not to exaggerate. Old joke.
    Like, I've repeatedly reiterated, again and again, don't be
    redundant.... ;)

    Don't never use no double negatives, nohow, neither.

    Well.... seventh heaven is somewhat a hyperbolism on the same order of
    OMG and the like....
    Not to go overboard, blub, but it has been
    part of a lot of religious lore that there
    are seven circles of heaven, and as well, some
    say, of hell. It's common enough to almost
    be a secular trope. Sort of a meme of the
    mediaeval period.
    True. It's still also a form of hyperbole... ;)

    Hyperbole can be entertaining - funner for some
    of us than superbole.

    ---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01

    Title: Bun Less Super Bowl Burger
    Categories: Ground beef, Beef, Superbowl
    Yield: 1 servings

    1/2 lb Lean ground beef 3 ts Margarine or butter
    2 md Onions Seasoned salt and
    pepper

    Make 4 rounded burgers.Peel and slice onions.Melt margarine or butter in
    skillet and add onions,frying and stirring for about 5 minutes. Remove
    then.Put burgers into skillet and brown on all sides over medium heat for
    approximately 10 minutes.Turn down heat and add cooked onions,salt and
    pepper.Serve smothered with onions. (Recommend meal served with 12 ounces
    of selected barley,malt,rice, hops and water.) Source unknown. M thinks
    the 1/2 lb is a misprint for 2 lb (for 4 servings)

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