"jmcquown" wrote in message ...
On 1/7/2018 9:58 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Sunday, January 7, 2018 at 9:30:43 AM UTC-5, Ophelia wrote:
>> "Cindy Hamilton" wrote in message
>> ...
>>
>> On Saturday, January 6, 2018 at 5:04:50 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
>>> On Sat, 6 Jan 2018 16:05:02 -0500, jmcquown >
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 1/5/2018 6:13 PM, Julie Bove wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> "U.S. Janet B." > wrote in message
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Um dur, Steve. I specifically said "no egg" and "baked". So...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> No, what I replied to was this
>>>>>> Don't think I've ever had a potato croquette. How do you make them?"
>>>>>> I answered your rhetorical question.
>>>>>> Since this is a cooking group, if you were interested, I thought you
>>>>>> would be able to figure a simple work around for no egg and baking.
>>>>>> Janet US
>>>>>
>>>>> Nope. Because as I said... I have yet to find a suitable egg
>>>>> substitute.
>>>>
>>>> "Dur". Cook something else!
>>>
>>> I like croquettes. If I couldn't have eggs, I'd want to investigate
>>> eggless croquettes too. "Dur".
>>
>> In Julie's position, I would have googled "vegan croquettes baked" and
>> used my judgment as to what looked promising.
>>
>> Cindy Hamilton
>> ==
>>
>> OTOH given this is a food group ...
>
> I'm not sure I would have expected anybody here to have experience with
> baked, eggless croquettes. Everybody's eating habits seem to be pretty
> close to average. Julie is 6*sigma away from the mean.
>
> Cindy Hamilton
>
Just because this is a food ng doesn't mean we'll be able to figure out
what weird sort of croquettes Julie wants. Croquettes contain eggs.
I've never heard of baked eggless croquettes topped with tomato sauce.
Jill
==
We have now