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  #121 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Oh pshaw, on Sat 03 Nov 2007 08:41:26p, Dan Abel meant to say...

> In article >,
> Janet Baraclough > wrote:
>
>> The message 4>
>> from Wayne Boatwright > contains these words:
>>
>> > Oh pshaw, on Fri 02 Nov 2007 08:00:50a, Sqwertz meant to say...

>>
>> > > On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 07:52:08 +0200, ravenlynne wrote:
>> > >
>> > >> Sqwertz wrote:
>> > >
>> > >>> You need to killfile everything posted from Google. Show no
>> > >>> mercy to those Google-whiners. If somebody gets offended, spit on
>> > >>> them.
>> > >>
>> > >> Really, you should teach seminars. ;-)
>> > >
>> > > I'm thinking of starting my own religion - Wertzism.
>> > >
>> > > -sw
>> > >

>>
>> > Would our followers be called Wertzites or Wertzians?

>>
>> just "Suckers" :-)
>>
>> Join my religion; after the 10 dollar eternal-registration fee no
>> further effort or input is required. Paid-up members can say, do and
>> think what the hell they like with a guaranteed zero risk of frying
>> alive or doggybag-doom.

>
>
> No, join mine instead. For only US$25 a month, I promise eternal
> salvation in heaven after you die. And it's a money-back guarantee.
> After you die, if you don't end up as I promised, just send me an Email
> and I will refund everything you paid.
>


Wow, how could you go wrong!

--
Wayne Boatwright

(to e-mail me direct, replace cox dot net with gmail dot com)
__________________________________________________ ____________

It's lonely at the top, but you eat better.





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Sqwertz squirts:

> On Thu, 01 Nov 2007 19:03:07 GMT, Ted Campanelli wrote:
>
> > The moderator of this forum needs to step in and do something about all
> > the posts for "EVERYTHING EXCEPT FOOD RELATED ITEMS".

>
> OK, Jill. Now you can come in and cry, "Troll!" (watch her come
> in and give a serious response)



Stolen any tri - tip roasts out of a poor old lady's cart lately,
Steve...???

--
Best
Greg

"I am smarter than you think I am"
- Maryanne "Loafhead" Kehoe to me
in alt.gossip.celebrities



  #123 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Sqwertz wrote:
> On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 20:47:16 -0700, Leonard Blaisdell wrote:
>
>> In article >,
>> hahabogus > wrote:
>>
>> From the Yield: This recipe yields about 100 meatballs.
>>
>> That's fifty meatballs per pound of meat. The rest of the ingredients
>> don't bulk things up much. It's also roughly three meatballs per ounce
>> of meat. When does a meatball classify as a bb? I think the yield is
>> wrong.

>
> I get about 75 little meatballs from a pound of meat (+25% by
> weight of other ingredients) when I make wedding soup, so 100
> meatballs from 2lbs of meat isn't really hard to visualize.
>


ooh! I need too make this, too. I always read recipes of it and think I
should make it, but never do.

>


--

Sarah Gray
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> Oh pshaw, on Sat 03 Nov 2007 03:17:25p, Sqwertz meant to say...
>
>> On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:44:18 GMT, Wayne Boatwright wrote:
>>
>>> Oh pshaw, on Sat 03 Nov 2007 12:44:24p, Janet Baraclough meant to say...
>>>
>>>> Join my religion; after the 10 dollar eternal-registration fee no
>>>> further effort or input is required. Paid-up members can say, do and
>>>> think what the hell they like with a guaranteed zero risk of frying
>>>> alive or doggybag-doom.
>>> LOL! I like yours a lot better!

>> Wertzizm only costs $8 to join, and it comes with a free e-book
>> worth over $60.
>>
>> -sw
>>

>
> Wow! What a bargain!
>


Is the e-book Thai recipes?


--

Sarah Gray
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"Dan Abel" > wrote
>
> I've know a few people to eat catsup as a savory condiment. I've never
> met anybody who claims it is anything else. The stuff is really sweet
> with a little tang. My wife puts it on hot dogs. I plan to disavow any
> knowledge of her.
>
> I fail to see a significant difference between hot dogs with catsup, and
> meatballs with grape jelly and chili sauce, except that meatballs taste
> a lot better than hot dogs. You are free to disavow me.


It's ketchup you pretentious dickhead.





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On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 10:37:52 -0700, sf wrote:

>On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 16:46:59 GMT, blake murphy >
>wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>take a look under options; posting preferences; spelling and you can
>>set it so spell-check is automatic when you hit 'send.' it's
>>sometimes irritating (although you can 'teach' it new words), but it's
>>good to catch typos or if you have words you chronically misspell (i
>>have a few).

>
>
>Aha! There is was, unchecked. We'll see how it works now. Thanks
>for the tip!


you're welcome, honey.

your pal,
blake
  #127 (permalink)   Report Post  
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On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:41:26 -0700, Dan Abel > wrote:

>In article >,
> Janet Baraclough > wrote:
>
>> The message 4>
>> from Wayne Boatwright > contains these words:
>>
>> > Oh pshaw, on Fri 02 Nov 2007 08:00:50a, Sqwertz meant to say...

>>
>> > > On Fri, 02 Nov 2007 07:52:08 +0200, ravenlynne wrote:
>> > >
>> > >> Sqwertz wrote:
>> > >
>> > >>> You need to killfile everything posted from Google. Show no
>> > >>> mercy to those Google-whiners. If somebody gets offended, spit on
>> > >>> them.
>> > >>
>> > >> Really, you should teach seminars. ;-)
>> > >
>> > > I'm thinking of starting my own religion - Wertzism.
>> > >
>> > > -sw
>> > >

>>
>> > Would our followers be called Wertzites or Wertzians?

>>
>> just "Suckers" :-)
>>
>> Join my religion; after the 10 dollar eternal-registration fee no
>> further effort or input is required. Paid-up members can say, do and
>> think what the hell they like with a guaranteed zero risk of frying
>> alive or doggybag-doom.

>
>
>No, join mine instead. For only US$25 a month, I promise eternal
>salvation in heaven after you die. And it's a money-back guarantee.
>After you die, if you don't end up as I promised, just send me an Email
>and I will refund everything you paid.


pfft. the church of the subgenius offers triple you money back.

http://www.subgenius.com/pams/pam2p1.html

your pal,
'bob'
  #128 (permalink)   Report Post  
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blake murphy wrote:
>
> pfft. the church of the subgenius offers triple you money back.
>
> http://www.subgenius.com/pams/pam2p1.html
>
> your pal,
> 'bob'


and "slack"!

--
-Gina in Italy

http://www.myspace.com/ravenlynne1975
I'm a blogger: http://ravenwolflodge.blogspot.com
  #129 (permalink)   Report Post  
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In article
>,
Dan Abel > wrote:

> In article >,
> Melba's Jammin' > wrote:
>
>
> > sauce for cocktail meatballs. The combination of the sweet jelly and
> > the tangy and slightly vinegary chili sauce doesn't sound any worse to
> > me than any other sweet-sour type sauce. I think it's that most people
> > only think of sweet spreads as bread spreads or as a component of a
> > dessert or cookie recipe.

>
>
> I've know a few people to eat catsup as a savory condiment. I've never
> met anybody who claims it is anything else. The stuff is really sweet
> with a little tang. My wife puts it on hot dogs. I plan to disavow any
> knowledge of her.
>
> I fail to see a significant difference between hot dogs with catsup, and
> meatballs with grape jelly and chili sauce, except that meatballs taste
> a lot better than hot dogs. You are free to disavow me.


Heck, no, Dan. I'd never disavow you. Do you put anything on a hot
dog? Are you gonna disavow your wife because of the ketchup or because
of the hot dog?
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007
  #130 (permalink)   Report Post  
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In article >,
Sqwertz > wrote:

> On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:53:18 -0500, Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
> > In article >,
> > Sqwertz > wrote:
> >
> >> I get about 75 little meatballs from a pound of meat
> >> -sw

> >
> > Tha's a lot! How big are these little suckers? Marble size?

>
> Wedding soup meatballs are pretty small. You snipped
> that part :-)
>
> -sw


I guess. I was thinking only of how big they'd be to get 75 of them
from a pound, not so much about what they'd be used for. Do you measure
the meat and roll or just eyeball it? Do you roll 'em with your hands?
I think I'd be sorely tempted to roll a log about 3/4" diameter and cut
'coins' about 1/2" thick and call it a meatball.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007


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In article >,
Melba's Jammin' > wrote:

> In article
> >,
> Dan Abel > wrote:


> > I fail to see a significant difference between hot dogs with catsup, and
> > meatballs with grape jelly and chili sauce, except that meatballs taste
> > a lot better than hot dogs. You are free to disavow me.

>
> Heck, no, Dan. I'd never disavow you. Do you put anything on a hot
> dog? Are you gonna disavow your wife because of the ketchup or because
> of the hot dog?


Because of the catsup. I used to put catsup on my hot dogs, but now I'm
all growed up. I put mustard on. My wife can't stand mustard. She
went to the In&Out with a friend. The friend said to try the hamburger
"animal style". My wife was sick all afternoon. When I explained that
"animal style" meant that they put mustard on it before frying it, she
understood why she had gotten sick.
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On Sun, 04 Nov 2007 19:59:42 +0200, ravenlynne >
wrote:

>blake murphy wrote:
>>
>> pfft. the church of the subgenius offers triple you money back.
>>
>> http://www.subgenius.com/pams/pam2p1.html
>>
>> your pal,
>> 'bob'

>
>and "slack"!


give me slack or kill me!

your pal,
blake
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In article >,
Sqwertz > wrote:

> On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:56:54 -0500, Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
> > Val Whitmore started Chili Dog's Kitchen when she was still in
> > Minneapolis studying criminology (I think that was her major). Nice
> > woman! She came to the first Twin Cities cook-in in about 1996. Now
> > she's in Texas.

>
> Interesting. Way back in the early 90's there was somebody here
> (and in other groups) always peddling their CD full of recipes,
> and I thought this was a take-off of that.
>
> Did she ever try marketing CD's?
>
> -sw


I don't think so. I believe you're thinking of Stephanie daSilva.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007
  #134 (permalink)   Report Post  
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In article >,
Dan Abel > wrote:

> In article >,
> Melba's Jammin' > wrote:
>
> > In article
> > >,
> > Dan Abel > wrote:

>
> > > I fail to see a significant difference between hot dogs with catsup, and
> > > meatballs with grape jelly and chili sauce, except that meatballs taste
> > > a lot better than hot dogs. You are free to disavow me.

> >
> > Heck, no, Dan. I'd never disavow you. Do you put anything on a hot
> > dog? Are you gonna disavow your wife because of the ketchup or because
> > of the hot dog?

>
> Because of the catsup. I used to put catsup on my hot dogs, but now I'm
> all growed up. I put mustard on. My wife can't stand mustard. She
> went to the In&Out with a friend. The friend said to try the hamburger
> "animal style". My wife was sick all afternoon. When I explained that
> "animal style" meant that they put mustard on it before frying it, she
> understood why she had gotten sick.


Eeww. I like both catsup and moutard on my hot dogs; usually just
ketchup on my burgers. Unless I get one at Mickey's.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007
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In article >,
Sqwertz > wrote:

> On Sun, 04 Nov 2007 22:17:01 -0600, Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
> > In article >,
> > Sqwertz > wrote:
> >
> >> On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:53:18 -0500, Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> >>
> >>> In article >,
> >>> Sqwertz > wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> I get about 75 little meatballs from a pound of meat
> >>>> -sw
> >>>
> >>> Tha's a lot! How big are these little suckers? Marble size?
> >>
> >> Wedding soup meatballs are pretty small. You snipped
> >> that part :-)
> >>
> >> -sw

> >
> > I guess. I was thinking only of how big they'd be to get 75 of them
> > from a pound, not so much about what they'd be used for. Do you measure
> > the meat and roll or just eyeball it?

>
> I just pinch off a piece. After 10 or so, you get the idea of
> how much you need.
>
> > Do you roll 'em with your hands?

>
> Last time I did.
>
> > I think I'd be sorely tempted to roll a log about 3/4" diameter and cut
> > 'coins' about 1/2" thick and call it a meatball.

>
> So where was this suggestion 2 weeks ago?


Right here, darlin', but I di'n want to deprive you of your much-needed
therapy. '-)
>
> Once I started, I just figured I'd grin and bear it. It was
> therapeutic in a way.
>
> -sw


I made a vat of beef broth on Friday and was considering making some
marble-size meatballs and dropping them into the broth to cook but then
fishing them out to use in another dish. Even if I rolled them into
balls, starting out from the log-and-coin would be a good plan. You'd
be tempting me but I had the good sense to freeze the ground beef I
didn't use for last night's burgers.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007


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In article >,
Sqwertz > wrote:

> On Sun, 04 Nov 2007 22:17:01 -0600, Melba's Jammin' wrote:


> > I think I'd be sorely tempted to roll a log about 3/4" diameter and cut
> > 'coins' about 1/2" thick and call it a meatball.

>
> So where was this suggestion 2 weeks ago?


> -sw


This method -- log roll-and-cut works great for cookies, too, btw.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007
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In article 1>,
"Michael \"Dog3\"" > wrote:

> Melba's Jammin' > dropped this
> : in
> rec.food.cooking
>
> > I made a vat of beef broth on Friday and was considering making some
> > marble-size meatballs and dropping them into the broth to cook but
> > then fishing them out to use in another dish. Even if I rolled them
> > into balls, starting out from the log-and-coin would be a good plan.
> > You'd be tempting me but I had the good sense to freeze the ground
> > beef I didn't use for last night's burgers.

>
> Did you roast the bones for the broth? I'm just asking because you
> inquired what method a couple of us used to roast bones for stock and
> stuff.
>
> Michael


<Barb hangs head in mortal shame and tries to disappear beneath her
computer> I did not. Too damn lazy and not enough time before I had to
be out the door. I thought about it, though . . . . .
I just finished bagging about nine 2-cup bags of chicken broth. I
didn't roast the chicken backs, either. I added powdered/paste base
to both the beef and the chicken.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Notes about our meals in Tuscany have been posted to
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com; 10-16-2007
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Melba's Jammin' wrote:

>
> I was thinking only of how big they'd be to get 75 of them
> from a pound, not so much about what they'd be used for. Do you measure
> the meat and roll or just eyeball it? Do you roll 'em with your hands?
> I think I'd be sorely tempted to roll a log about 3/4" diameter and cut
> 'coins' about 1/2" thick and call it a meatball.



You are brilliant. That wouldn't have occurred to me in a million
years, but it's a terrific solution. That might also work for cookies
shaped by hand that take forever to roll.

gloria p
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Melba's Jammin' > wrote in
:

> In article >,
> Sqwertz > wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 20:53:18 -0500, Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>>
>> > In article >,
>> > Sqwertz > wrote:
>> >
>> >> I get about 75 little meatballs from a pound of meat
>> >> -sw
>> >
>> > Tha's a lot! How big are these little suckers? Marble size?

>>
>> Wedding soup meatballs are pretty small. You snipped
>> that part :-)
>>
>> -sw

>
> I guess. I was thinking only of how big they'd be to get 75 of them
> from a pound, not so much about what they'd be used for. Do you
> measure the meat and roll or just eyeball it? Do you roll 'em with
> your hands? I think I'd be sorely tempted to roll a log about 3/4"
> diameter and cut 'coins' about 1/2" thick and call it a meatball.


I spread the meat out in a rectangular casserole dish to an even
thickness and then mark out a grid pattern with a knife and use the grid
pattern to create same sized meatballs. A Martha Stewart trick.

--

The house of the burning beet-Alan

It'll be a sunny day in August, when the Moon will shine that night-
Elbonian Folklore

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