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Ophelia[_14_] Ophelia[_14_] is offline
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Default Amish Beef Roast (in foil)

"Ding - Dong Daddy" wrote in message
...

On Thursday, 9 November 2017 04:15:10 UTC-6, Ophelia wrote:
> "Cheri" wrote in message news >
>
> > What kind of dip? Not just dried onion soup I am sure ;-)

>
> Just mix a package with sour cream, very simple and a recipe from the 50's
> I
> think, but my kids love it and it's something that's always here for
> holidays. If you make your own, I think you could just add to taste with
> the
> sour cream. Here it is in two envelopes per package, and I use one
> envelope
> for the dip.
>
> Cheri
>
> ==
>
> Ahh so the onion soup mix is mixed in with sour cream! Thanks)
>
> Mine isn't in envelopes, so I guess I would just do as you say, add to
> taste
>
> What do you dip into it?


Ridged crisps...

Actually, "California Dip" is a 50's thing, Ms. O:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_onion_dip

"French onion dip or California dip is an American dip typically made with a
base of sour cream and flavored with minced onion, and usually served with
potato chips as chips and dip.

French onion dip made of sour cream and instant onion soup was created by a
French man in Los Angeles in 1954 by an unknown cook. The recipe spread
quickly and was printed in a local newspaper. The Lipton company promoted
this mixture on the television show Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts in 1955,
and early on, it was known as "Lipton California Dip", but soon simply as
"California Dip" A Lipton advertising campaign promoted it on television
and in supermarkets. The recipe was added to the Lipton instant onion soup
package in 1958. The name "French onion dip" began to be used in the 1960s,
and became more popular than "California dip" in the 1990s.

Preparation:

The original recipe consisted of sour cream and dehydrated onion soup mix.
There are now many mass-produced, pre-mixed versions, such as Ruffles French
Onion Dip and Frito-Lay French Onion Dip. Commercially prepared products
include additional ingredients to thicken, stabilize, and preserve the
mixture.

Home-made versions may use caramelized onions.

Serving:

French onion dip is often served at parties and as a "classic holiday party
offering". It has also been described as "an American classic".
It may also be used on other foods, such as hamburgers, sandwiches and
tacos.

Variants:

Alternative bases include mayonnaise and cream cheese. Common flavorings are
onion salt, salt, pepper,onion powder, garlic, garlic powder, parsley,
chives, Worcestershire sauce and others.

Worldwide:

It is now also popular in New Zealand, where it is made with reduced cream
and called "Kiwi Dip"..."

==

Thanks very much for that)




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