Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Serene Vannoy wrote:
> Nancy2 wrote: > >> Chipped dried beef and SOS are two different dishes. The military is >> famous for SOS which is ground beef, browned and then added to the >> white gravy. Chipped (diced) dried beef is completely different >> because it uses thinly-sliced dried beef, not ground beef. Duh. > > My dad was in the military, and says that they're both SOS. SOS, > according to him, is any gloppy garbage thrown on bread or toast. Most of > the time, he said, it was chipped beef, but sometimes it was > as you describe. > > Serene The Marines never served my Dad (who was in for 30 years) ground beef in white gravy and called it SOS. It was always chipped beef in sauce on toast. And I love it! Ground beef in white gravy doesn't sound at all appealing. If you're gonna go that route, might as well make sausage gravy ![]() Jill |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nancy2 wrote:
> On Jun 23, 4:13 pm, George Shirley > wrote: >> Nancy2 wrote: >>>> I've never eaten it and I've heard it's very salty. Do you rinse >>>> the >>>> beef, Chris? >>>> -- >> 48 years ago, they probably don't serve it anymore. The other oddity >> was fried bologna, baked beans, and hard boiled eggs for breakfast. >> Only ran into that on one ship I was on. Luckily young men will eat >> about anything so it went over pretty good.- Hide quoted text - >> > According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia > thing. Is that right? > > N. I don't know diddly about NASCAR folks but fried bologna is common throughout the south. I've seen it on diner menus as one of the meats available with eggs and grits or hashbrowns for breakfast in a number of southern states. That's not to say the idea didn't originate in Virginia... Jill |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... > >> l, not -l wrote: >>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>> >>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>> thing. Is that right? >>>> >>>> N. >>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's >>> meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and was laid >>> off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). Fried >>> baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and mush for >>> lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, sometimes we >>> even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>> >> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage shape >> with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich was a >> quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, black >> pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or an >> olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he ate >> that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a little >> mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I could >> never stomach the stuff myself. >> > > As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever we > would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on the old > narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket with devilled > ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars of Kraft), crackers, > cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We always had a gallon thermos > jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops along the road for a bite, or even > eat while driving. > > If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we arrived > home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would bake biscuits > and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to be cooked in with > the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with us, we'd often have > fried ham. > Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the dogtrot houses they lived in. Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CC wrote:
> > "George Shirley" > wrote in message > ... >> l, not -l wrote: >>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>> >>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>> thing. Is that right? >>>> >>>> N. >>> >>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>> throughout the >>> 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a sandwich (on white >>> bread >>> slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's meat dish when times >>> were lean >>> (my dad was an autoworker and was laid off often until he accrued >>> quite a >>> few years of service). Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, >>> fried baloney and mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for >>> dinner. Heck, sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on >>> toast. >>> >> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or >> an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he >> ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I >> could never stomach the stuff myself. > > George, sounds like your father may have been a coal miner, My > grandfather and > father was for several years till he left that for something else.They > were the only > ones I remember calling their lunch box a lunch bucket. It looked like > an aluminum > bucket with wire handle, about 8" round, came in three pieces. bottom > held water > for drinking and ice, if they had it, to keep the top part cool where > their sandwiches > were kept, always wrapped in wax paper and a top over it all that fit > down snug to > keep the inside clean and free of coal dust. > CC My Dad went to work in an oil refinery at age fifteen. Prior to that he worked as a teamster on a 20-mule team that drew a stone sledge in Central Louisiana, that was from age twelve to fourteen. At fourteen they moved to Beaumont, Texas and Dad became the chief lumber grader for the Neches Lumber Company. He was to small to flip the timbers so had some big laborers to do it for him. He worked in the refinery from 1926 until 1 January 1967. He retired at age 55 with over 40 years service and there were some other men who retired with him who were two or three years younger than he was. I followed him into the oil patch in 1961 and always called the steel container I carried my lunch in a bucket also. Just habit I guess as Dad said his first lunch bucket was a 3-lb lard bucket that had been well scrubbed. I still have his plastic lunch bucket with his name painted on the lid, wouldn't take anything for it. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 25 Jun 2008 05:13:52a, George Shirley told us...
> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >> >>> l, not -l wrote: >>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>> >>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>> >>>>> N. >>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's >>>> meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and was laid >>>> off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). Fried >>>> baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and mush for >>>> lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, sometimes >>>> we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>> >>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >>> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or >>> an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >>> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he >>> ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I >>> could never stomach the stuff myself. >>> >> >> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars of >> Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >> >> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >> us, we'd often have fried ham. >> > Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make > the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles > and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still > farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, > had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of > grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or > chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the > dogtrot houses they lived in. > > Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. > Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One > year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about > ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By > the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in > 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up > in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left > all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. > You are describing my paternal grandparents' and great uncles' farms in Mississippi to a "T", except that there was only smoked hams, bacon, and sausage in the smokehouse. Except for my grandfather who died at 78, all the rest lived into their nineties. My grandmother lived to 101. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Wednesday, 06(VI)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- What's a nice girl like you doing in a dirty mind like mine? ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 25 Jun 2008 05:20:21a, George Shirley told us...
> CC wrote: >> >> "George Shirley" > wrote in message >> ... >>> l, not -l wrote: >>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>> >>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>> >>>>> N. >>>> >>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>> throughout the >>>> 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a sandwich (on white >>>> bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's meat dish when times >>>> were lean >>>> (my dad was an autoworker and was laid off often until he accrued >>>> quite a >>>> few years of service). Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, >>>> fried baloney and mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for >>>> dinner. Heck, sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on >>>> toast. >>>> >>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, black >>> pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or an olive >>> loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate deviled ham >>> and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he ate that I >>> liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a little mustard. >>> Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I could never >>> stomach the stuff myself. >> >> George, sounds like your father may have been a coal miner, My >> grandfather and >> father was for several years till he left that for something else.They >> were the only >> ones I remember calling their lunch box a lunch bucket. It looked like >> an aluminum >> bucket with wire handle, about 8" round, came in three pieces. bottom >> held water >> for drinking and ice, if they had it, to keep the top part cool where >> their sandwiches >> were kept, always wrapped in wax paper and a top over it all that fit >> down snug to >> keep the inside clean and free of coal dust. >> CC > My Dad went to work in an oil refinery at age fifteen. Prior to that he > worked as a teamster on a 20-mule team that drew a stone sledge in > Central Louisiana, that was from age twelve to fourteen. At fourteen > they moved to Beaumont, Texas and Dad became the chief lumber grader for > the Neches Lumber Company. He was to small to flip the timbers so had > some big laborers to do it for him. He worked in the refinery from 1926 > until 1 January 1967. He retired at age 55 with over 40 years service > and there were some other men who retired with him who were two or three > years younger than he was. > > I followed him into the oil patch in 1961 and always called the steel > container I carried my lunch in a bucket also. Just habit I guess as Dad > said his first lunch bucket was a 3-lb lard bucket that had been well > scrubbed. I still have his plastic lunch bucket with his name painted on > the lid, wouldn't take anything for it. My parents and their siblings were all raised on farms in MS and went to country schools. They all carried their lunches to school in "molasses buckets". Those were probably about the same size as a 3-lb lard bucket. Lunch was usually some kind of fried meat, biscuits, and fresh fruit. I think they drank water from the well at school. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Wednesday, 06(VI)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Second star to the right & straight on till morning... ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 05:13:52a, George Shirley told us... > >> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>> >>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>>> >>>>>> N. >>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's >>>>> meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and was laid >>>>> off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). Fried >>>>> baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and mush for >>>>> lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, sometimes >>>>> we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>>> >>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >>>> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or >>>> an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >>>> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he >>>> ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I >>>> could never stomach the stuff myself. >>>> >>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >>> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >>> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >>> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars of >>> Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >>> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >>> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >>> >>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >>> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >>> us, we'd often have fried ham. >>> >> Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >> the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >> and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >> farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >> had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >> grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >> chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >> dogtrot houses they lived in. >> >> Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >> Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >> year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >> ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >> the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >> 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >> in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >> all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. >> > > You are describing my paternal grandparents' and great uncles' farms in > Mississippi to a "T", except that there was only smoked hams, bacon, and > sausage in the smokehouse. Except for my grandfather who died at 78, all > the rest lived into their nineties. My grandmother lived to 101. > Country folk are about all the same Wayne. Mostly good people who lived their lives sharing with family and friends. Some of us still cling to that way of life to the extent we can. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 05:20:21a, George Shirley told us... > >> CC wrote: >>> "George Shirley" > wrote in message >>> ... >>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>>> >>>>>> N. >>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>> throughout the >>>>> 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a sandwich (on white >>>>> bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's meat dish when > times >>>>> were lean >>>>> (my dad was an autoworker and was laid off often until he accrued >>>>> quite a >>>>> few years of service). Fried baloney with eggs and toast for > breakfast, >>>>> fried baloney and mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for >>>>> dinner. Heck, sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney > on >>>>> toast. >>>>> >>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, > black >>>> pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or an > olive >>>> loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate deviled ham >>>> and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he ate that I >>>> liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a little mustard. >>>> Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I could never >>>> stomach the stuff myself. >>> George, sounds like your father may have been a coal miner, My >>> grandfather and >>> father was for several years till he left that for something else.They >>> were the only >>> ones I remember calling their lunch box a lunch bucket. It looked like >>> an aluminum >>> bucket with wire handle, about 8" round, came in three pieces. bottom >>> held water >>> for drinking and ice, if they had it, to keep the top part cool where >>> their sandwiches >>> were kept, always wrapped in wax paper and a top over it all that fit >>> down snug to >>> keep the inside clean and free of coal dust. >>> CC >> My Dad went to work in an oil refinery at age fifteen. Prior to that he >> worked as a teamster on a 20-mule team that drew a stone sledge in >> Central Louisiana, that was from age twelve to fourteen. At fourteen >> they moved to Beaumont, Texas and Dad became the chief lumber grader for >> the Neches Lumber Company. He was to small to flip the timbers so had >> some big laborers to do it for him. He worked in the refinery from 1926 >> until 1 January 1967. He retired at age 55 with over 40 years service >> and there were some other men who retired with him who were two or three >> years younger than he was. >> >> I followed him into the oil patch in 1961 and always called the steel >> container I carried my lunch in a bucket also. Just habit I guess as Dad >> said his first lunch bucket was a 3-lb lard bucket that had been well >> scrubbed. I still have his plastic lunch bucket with his name painted on >> the lid, wouldn't take anything for it. > > My parents and their siblings were all raised on farms in MS and went to > country schools. They all carried their lunches to school in "molasses > buckets". Those were probably about the same size as a 3-lb lard bucket. > Lunch was usually some kind of fried meat, biscuits, and fresh fruit. I > think they drank water from the well at school. > Dad used to tell the story about seeing all the kids at the school in town eating white bread and bologna for lunch. All he and his sibs had was a lard bucket with some smoked ham on cold biscuits. One day they traded with a town kid but never made that mistake again. He said the school he went to had a spring house where they got their water and kept their buckets cool. He rode to school on the "school bus", a mule drawn wagon with a bench down each side of the wagon the length of the wagon. Also used to tease me by telling me how tough it was walking to school barefoot, in the snow, ten miles each way, all of it uphill. Took me a few years to figure out he was pulling my leg. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 20:50:17 -0700, Blinky the Shark
> wrote: >> Take a look here to see what the Armour jars look like: >> http://www.armour-star.com/products_dried_beef.html >> >> and here for the Hormel jars (available in 2 sizes): >> http://www.hormelfoods.com/brands/ho...DriedBeef.aspx > >Found that Hormel product today at my pedestrian chain supermarket. Shit >was a buck an ounce. Yow. I was surprised that it was ground up and >fabricated into slices. I figured you guys were going for a >real-not-paste meat. I think the Buddig packages are processed too. Kinda like Arby's meat. <eg> Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 03:37:32 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote: >Nancy2 wrote: >> On Jun 23, 4:13 pm, George Shirley > wrote: >>> Nancy2 wrote: >>>>> I've never eaten it and I've heard it's very salty. Do you rinse >>>>> the >>>>> beef, Chris? >>>>> -- >>> 48 years ago, they probably don't serve it anymore. The other oddity >>> was fried bologna, baked beans, and hard boiled eggs for breakfast. >>> Only ran into that on one ship I was on. Luckily young men will eat >>> about anything so it went over pretty good.- Hide quoted text - >>> >> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >> thing. Is that right? >> >> N. > > >I don't know diddly about NASCAR folks but fried bologna is common >throughout the south. I've seen it on diner menus as one of the meats >available with eggs and grits or hashbrowns for breakfast in a number of >southern states. That's not to say the idea didn't originate in Virginia... That must be a southern thing. I know loads of people who make it at home, but I've never seen it on a menu. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 18:14:16 -0400, Tara >
wrote: >On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 12:32:04 -0500, Lou Decruss > >wrote: > >>On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 13:21:22 -0400, Tara > >>wrote: >> >>>On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 10:59:11 -0500, Lou Decruss > >>>wrote: >>> >>>>We had fried bologna all the time growing up. (Chicago) I like to >>>>slice it thick, nip the edges so it doesn't cup, fry it up and make a >>>>BLT. >>> >>>My mom would let the bologna cup, then fill it with scrambled eggs for >>>my breakfast. I thought this was very elegant. >> >>You can also use pieces of deli ham in muffin tins. I don't have the >>recipe handy but IIRC you put a dab of creme fraiche in the cupped ham >>and gently break an egg in there. Season to taste and bake. It's >>been a long time since I've done it but it is a nice presentation. I >>think I served it with english muffins. You can bake them with nice >>runny yolks or more for those who like their eggs done a bit more. > > >Ham cups with eggs sound very nice and are a step up from bologna cups >with eggs. I think we would enjoy something like that with biscuits >or blueberry muffins. Yes, that would be a nice breakfast. It's also good with a square of northern style cornbread. The cornbread meeds a big glob of butter and maple syrup. > >Mom's little bloney cups looked so fancy to me when I was little. Lots of basic things have us in awe as kids. Too bad life can't stay so simple. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:13:52 -0500, George Shirley
> wrote: >Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >> >>> l, not -l wrote: >>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>> >>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>> >>>>> N. >>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's >>>> meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and was laid >>>> off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). Fried >>>> baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and mush for >>>> lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, sometimes we >>>> even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>> >>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage shape >>> with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich was a >>> quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, black >>> pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or an >>> olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >>> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he ate >>> that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a little >>> mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I could >>> never stomach the stuff myself. >>> >> >> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever we >> would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on the old >> narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket with devilled >> ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars of Kraft), crackers, >> cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We always had a gallon thermos >> jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops along the road for a bite, or even >> eat while driving. >> >> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we arrived >> home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would bake biscuits >> and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to be cooked in with >> the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with us, we'd often have >> fried ham. >> >Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >dogtrot houses they lived in. > >Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. I had a couple of uncles who were still farming when I was growing up. You never left their homes without something to eat, either fresh, canned or frozen. I sometimes wonder how my aunts felt about all of their hard work walking out the door. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 18:16:02 -0400, Tara >
wrote: >On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 14:11:09 -0500, George Shirley > wrote: > >>Goomba wrote: >>> Nancy Young wrote: >>> >>>> I'm cool with that, I'm no Paula Deen but I love butter! and the >>>> peanut butter with butter was pretty tasty as I recall. >>>> >>>> nancy >>> >>> My recently departed Mother-in-law always buttered her toast before >>> putting peanut butter on it. She made me toast that way once and I >>> thought it unnecessarily salty. I love my peanut butter, but don't feel >>> it needs any additional adornment....unless it is bacon, or banana or >>> chocolate..... LOL >>One of my favorite sandwiches used to be sliced banana on whole wheat >>with Miracle Whip on the bread on one side and peanut butter on the >>other side. Haven't had one in years though. > >I grew up eating peanut butter and banana sandwiches. I loved them. >They are healthier than peanut butter and jelly. I never liked the sandwiches, but I did like to smear PB on a banana. Nothing wrong with a drizzle of hersheys syrup on that too. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 03:33:19 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote: >Serene Vannoy wrote: >> Nancy2 wrote: >> >>> Chipped dried beef and SOS are two different dishes. The military is >>> famous for SOS which is ground beef, browned and then added to the >>> white gravy. Chipped (diced) dried beef is completely different >>> because it uses thinly-sliced dried beef, not ground beef. Duh. >> >> My dad was in the military, and says that they're both SOS. SOS, >> according to him, is any gloppy garbage thrown on bread or toast. Most of >> the time, he said, it was chipped beef, but sometimes it was >> as you describe. >> >> Serene > > >The Marines never served my Dad (who was in for 30 years) ground beef in >white gravy and called it SOS. It was always chipped beef in sauce on >toast. And I love it! Ground beef in white gravy doesn't sound at all >appealing. I have to agree with you. >If you're gonna go that route, might as well make sausage gravy So many people don't know how to make gravy. This group is not typical of the fast food crazed society we live in. A few weeks ago we were on a weekend holiday with friends. They, and Louise eat breakfast. I don't. The husband of the other couple made some eggs and breakfast sausage. He asked what he should do to clean the cast pan he did the sausage in. I told him to leave it for my lunch. Later I made gravy and put it on some toast with the leftover sausage. They were amazed at how easy it was. Many people can't cook. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 24, 4:14*pm, Serene Vannoy > wrote:
> My dad was in the military, and says that they're both SOS. SOS, > according to him, is any gloppy garbage thrown on bread or toast. *Most > of the time, he said, it was chipped beef, but sometimes it was as you > describe. My Dad, who was in the Army, said the sos thing about all variations, too... Oh, and he loved Army food, btw, especially the sos. Karen |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 15:36:35 -0500, Lou Decruss >
wrote: >On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 12:16:36 -0500, "Chris Marksberry" > wrote: > >>You know Blake, I think that "bobo's" (AKA Bryan)post is just the type of >>insult that would discourage new users of r.f.c. from ever wanting to join >>r.f.c. and therefore losing a lot of good potential posters. Bryan, of >>course, is not the lone poster of rudeness, insults, etc. I'm used to it >>and fully understand the concept of needing a thick skin when posting, but >>some people can't or won't realize that there's a real person behind who >>wrote the post. The only thing you can do is "get out of the kitchen if you >>can't stand the heat". Unfortunate though. Just my 2 cents. > >Well said. > >I don't mind someone with an opinion as long as there's a brain behind >it. If bozoboner ate as healthy as he preaches he wouldn't have that >beer belly. > >I don't see his posts and luckily very few people respond to him so I >don't see much of that either. > >Lou sorry, lou. sometimes i can't resist twit-twitting. a moral failing, i'm sure, but necessary to bolster my flagging self-esteem by derogating others. your pal, blake |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 16:02:56 -0500, "Gregory Morrow"
> wrote: > >Lou Decruss wrote: > >> On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 12:16:36 -0500, "Chris Marksberry" >> > wrote: >> >> >You know Blake, I think that "bobo's" (AKA Bryan)post is just the type of >> >insult that would discourage new users of r.f.c. from ever wanting to >join >> >r.f.c. and therefore losing a lot of good potential posters. Bryan, of >> >course, is not the lone poster of rudeness, insults, etc. I'm used to it >> >and fully understand the concept of needing a thick skin when posting, >but >> >some people can't or won't realize that there's a real person behind who >> >wrote the post. The only thing you can do is "get out of the kitchen if >you >> >can't stand the heat". Unfortunate though. Just my 2 cents. >> >> Well said. >> >> I don't mind someone with an opinion as long as there's a brain behind >> it. If bozoboner ate as healthy as he preaches he wouldn't have that >> beer belly. >> >> I don't see his posts and luckily very few people respond to him so I >> don't see much of that either. > > >The Booboo sometimes I think must be Martha Hughes in drag...you just can't >dislike something, you also have to haul off and call the person that person >"stupid". One doesn't have to blurt out *everything* that passes through >one's brain pan, as that leads to the dreaded "foot - in - mouthus" disease. > ><chuckle> again, this is pretty rich coming from you. why don't you take a vacation from cyber's pussy once in while? or least refrain from your demented descriptions of it? blake |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 25 Jun 2008 06:33:55a, George Shirley told us...
> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 05:13:52a, George Shirley told us... >> >>> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>>> >>>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a Virginia >>>>>>> thing. Is that right? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> N. >>>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a meal's >>>>>> meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and was laid >>>>>> off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). Fried >>>>>> baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and mush for >>>>>> lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, sometimes >>>>>> we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>>>> >>>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, black >>>>> pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that or an >>>>> olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also ate >>>>> deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing he >>>>> ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>>>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, I >>>>> could never stomach the stuff myself. >>>>> >>>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >>>> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >>>> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >>>> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars of >>>> Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >>>> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >>>> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >>>> >>>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >>>> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >>>> us, we'd often have fried ham. >>>> >>> Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >>> the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >>> and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >>> farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >>> had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >>> grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >>> chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >>> dogtrot houses they lived in. >>> >>> Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >>> Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >>> year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >>> ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >>> the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >>> 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >>> in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >>> all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. >>> >> >> You are describing my paternal grandparents' and great uncles' farms in >> Mississippi to a "T", except that there was only smoked hams, bacon, and >> sausage in the smokehouse. Except for my grandfather who died at 78, all >> the rest lived into their nineties. My grandmother lived to 101. >> > Country folk are about all the same Wayne. Mostly good people who lived > their lives sharing with family and friends. Some of us still cling to > that way of life to the extent we can. > It was never bred out of me, George, even though I myself never lived in the country. However, I have spent a great deal of time there. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Wednesday, 06(VI)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Half the fun of being alive is not knowing what tomorrow will bring. The other half is pretending you don't care. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 25 Jun 2008 08:25:31a, The Cook told us...
> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:13:52 -0500, George Shirley > > wrote: > >>Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>> >>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a >>>>>> Virginia thing. Is that right? >>>>>> >>>>>> N. >>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a >>>>> meal's meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and >>>>> was laid off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). >>>>> Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and >>>>> mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, >>>>> sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>>> >>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >>>> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that >>>> or an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also >>>> ate deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing >>>> he ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, >>>> I could never stomach the stuff myself. >>>> >>> >>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >>> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >>> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >>> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars >>> of Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >>> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >>> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >>> >>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >>> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >>> us, we'd often have fried ham. >>> >>Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >>the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >>and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >>farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >> had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >>grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >>chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >>dogtrot houses they lived in. >> >>Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >>Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >>year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >>ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >>the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >>1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >>in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >> all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. > > > I had a couple of uncles who were still farming when I was growing up. > You never left their homes without something to eat, either fresh, > canned or frozen. I sometimes wonder how my aunts felt about all of > their hard work walking out the door. > How true that was. There was almost always a meal, and we always lefts with home-canned jars of veggies, fruits, pickles, and jams. "No" was not in their vocabulary. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Wednesday, 06(VI)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Half the fun of being alive is not knowing what tomorrow will bring. The other half is pretending you don't care. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 08:25:31a, The Cook told us... > >> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:13:52 -0500, George Shirley >> > wrote: >> >>> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>>> >>>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a >>>>>>> Virginia thing. Is that right? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> N. >>>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a >>>>>> meal's meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and >>>>>> was laid off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). >>>>>> Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and >>>>>> mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, >>>>>> sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>>>> >>>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >>>>> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that >>>>> or an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also >>>>> ate deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing >>>>> he ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>>>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, >>>>> I could never stomach the stuff myself. >>>>> >>>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >>>> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >>>> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >>>> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars >>>> of Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >>>> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >>>> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >>>> >>>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >>>> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >>>> us, we'd often have fried ham. >>>> >>> Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >>> the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >>> and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >>> farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >>> had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >>> grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >>> chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >>> dogtrot houses they lived in. >>> >>> Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >>> Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >>> year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >>> ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >>> the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >>> 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >>> in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >>> all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. >> >> I had a couple of uncles who were still farming when I was growing up. >> You never left their homes without something to eat, either fresh, >> canned or frozen. I sometimes wonder how my aunts felt about all of >> their hard work walking out the door. >> > > How true that was. There was almost always a meal, and we always lefts > with home-canned jars of veggies, fruits, pickles, and jams. "No" was not > in their vocabulary. > We do the same with our descendants, none of them can or put up food and we do. they always go home with boxes and bags of jams, jellies, preserves, hot sauce, etc. To be fair they always bring the jars and rings back in hope of getting a refill. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed 25 Jun 2008 11:34:39a, George Shirley told us...
> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 08:25:31a, The Cook told us... >> >>> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:13:52 -0500, George Shirley >>> > wrote: >>> >>>> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>>>> >>>>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a >>>>>>>> Virginia thing. Is that right? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> N. >>>>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a >>>>>>> meal's meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker >>>>>>> and was laid off often until he accrued quite a few years of >>>>>>> service). Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried >>>>>>> baloney and mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for >>>>>>> dinner. Heck, sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried >>>>>>> baloney on toast. >>>>>>> >>>>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite >>>>>> sandwich was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white >>>>>> onion, black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. >>>>>> Carried that or an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 >>>>>> years. He also ate deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular >>>>>> basis. the only thing he ate that I liked, and still like, was >>>>>> sardines on a cracker with a little mustard. Dad ate fried salt >>>>>> pork most mornings for breakfast, I could never stomach the stuff >>>>>> myself. >>>>>> >>>>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, >>>>> whenever we would take road trips there were few places to stop for >>>>> a meal on the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a >>>>> box or basket with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often >>>>> those little jars of Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and >>>>> pieces of fruit. We always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. >>>>> We'd make short stops along the road for a bite, or even eat while >>>>> driving. >>>>> >>>>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>>>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>>>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages >>>>> to be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back >>>>> with us, we'd often have fried ham. >>>>> >>>> Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to >>>> make the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's >>>> uncles and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all >>>> still farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or >>>> the spring, had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not >>>> a blade of grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide >>>> snakes, pig or chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything >>>> tracked into the dogtrot houses they lived in. >>>> >>>> Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >>>> Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. >>>> One year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and >>>> about ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to >>>> heaven. By the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my >>>> grandmother in 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest >>>> brothers died up in their nineties just about ten years ago. The >>>> young ones that are left all live in town and have real jobs but no >>>> real food. >>> >>> I had a couple of uncles who were still farming when I was growing up. >>> You never left their homes without something to eat, either fresh, >>> canned or frozen. I sometimes wonder how my aunts felt about all of >>> their hard work walking out the door. >>> >> >> How true that was. There was almost always a meal, and we always lefts >> with home-canned jars of veggies, fruits, pickles, and jams. "No" was >> not in their vocabulary. >> > We do the same with our descendants, none of them can or put up food and > we do. they always go home with boxes and bags of jams, jellies, > preserves, hot sauce, etc. To be fair they always bring the jars and > rings back in hope of getting a refill. > Lordy, George, I wish I was one of your descendants. :-) I am capable of canning, pickling, and making jams and preserves, but I really am not up to the task of attempting to grow the vegetables and fruits in this damned desert. What little bit of the canning/preserving bit I do, I have to rely on local markets, but I often can't get the things I'd really like to have. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Wednesday, 06(VI)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Useless Invention: Steel-belted radial rubber bands. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 24, 2:02*pm, "Gregory Morrow" >
wrote: > The Booboo sometimes I think must be Martha Hughes in drag...you just can't > dislike something, you also have to haul off and call the person that person > "stupid". *One doesn't have to blurt out *everything* that passes through > one's brain pan, as that leads to the dreaded "foot - in - mouthus" disease. What ever happened to Martha, anyway? Karen |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 13:34:39 -0500, George Shirley
> wrote: >Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Wed 25 Jun 2008 08:25:31a, The Cook told us... >> >>> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 07:13:52 -0500, George Shirley >>> > wrote: >>> >>>> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>>> On Tue 24 Jun 2008 09:47:06a, George Shirley told us... >>>>> >>>>>> l, not -l wrote: >>>>>>> On 24-Jun-2008, Nancy2 > wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> According to the NASCAR folks, fried bologna (baloney) is a >>>>>>>> Virginia thing. Is that right? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> N. >>>>>>> As a child growing up in western Kentucky in the late-40s and >>>>>>> throughout the 50s, we often ate fried b'loney. Sometimes as a >>>>>>> sandwich (on white bread slathered with mayo), more often as a >>>>>>> meal's meat dish when times were lean (my dad was an autoworker and >>>>>>> was laid off often until he accrued quite a few years of service). >>>>>>> Fried baloney with eggs and toast for breakfast, fried baloney and >>>>>>> mush for lunch, pintos and buttered white bread for dinner. Heck, >>>>>>> sometimes we even had creamed strips of fried baloney on toast. >>>>>>> >>>>>> My Dad loved his baloney, had to be the type still in the sausage >>>>>> shape with the red cover. He would slice it thick. Favorite sandwich >>>>>> was a quarter inch slice of baloney, equal amount of white onion, >>>>>> black pepper, and the bread had to have mustard on it. Carried that >>>>>> or an olive loaf sandwich in his lunch bucket for 40 years. He also >>>>>> ate deviled ham and vienna sausage on a regular basis. the only thing >>>>>> he ate that I liked, and still like, was sardines on a cracker with a >>>>>> little mustard. Dad ate fried salt pork most mornings for breakfast, >>>>>> I could never stomach the stuff myself. >>>>>> >>>>> As a child growing up in the very late 40s thru the mid 50s, whenever >>>>> we would take road trips there were few places to stop for a meal on >>>>> the old narrow highways. My mother would always pack a box or basket >>>>> with devilled ham, vienna sausages, cheeses (often those little jars >>>>> of Kraft), crackers, cut up raw vegetables, and pieces of fruit. We >>>>> always had a gallon thermos jug of iced tea. We'd make short stops >>>>> along the road for a bite, or even eat while driving. >>>>> >>>>> If we were gone for a week or two to visit relatives, the night we >>>>> arrived home there was little in the house to fix a meal. Mom would >>>>> bake biscuits and scramble eggs, sometimes slicing vienna sausages to >>>>> be cooked in with the eggs. If we had brought a country ham back with >>>>> us, we'd often have fried ham. >>>>> >>>> Ahh, memories of country ham. In the forties and fifties we used to make >>>> the then laborious trip to Central Louisiana to visit my Dad's uncles >>>> and aunts, my paternal Grandmother's siblings. They were all still >>>> farming on homesteads, pulled their water from a dug well or the spring, >>>> had a privy out back and racked their stomps (yards). Not a blade of >>>> grass was allowed in the house yard as it could hide snakes, pig or >>>> chicken poop and the old aunties didn't want anything tracked into the >>>> dogtrot houses they lived in. >>>> >>>> Out back would be a good sized smokehouse that was in use all year. >>>> Generally we would get some home made sausage and at least one ham. One >>>> year we got three smoked rabbits, a smoked raccoon, two hams, and about >>>> ten lbs of sausage. We all thought we had died and gone to heaven. By >>>> the late fifties the eldest of them were all gone, my grandmother in >>>> 1983, a year after my Dad went, then her two youngest brothers died up >>>> in their nineties just about ten years ago. The young ones that are left >>>> all live in town and have real jobs but no real food. >>> >>> I had a couple of uncles who were still farming when I was growing up. >>> You never left their homes without something to eat, either fresh, >>> canned or frozen. I sometimes wonder how my aunts felt about all of >>> their hard work walking out the door. >>> >> >> How true that was. There was almost always a meal, and we always lefts >> with home-canned jars of veggies, fruits, pickles, and jams. "No" was not >> in their vocabulary. >> >We do the same with our descendants, none of them can or put up food and >we do. they always go home with boxes and bags of jams, jellies, >preserves, hot sauce, etc. To be fair they always bring the jars and >rings back in hope of getting a refill. I've told my kids that they do not get more until I get my jars back. My DIL is way ahead. I think she has brought me two boxes of quart jars she has found at yard sales or thrift stores. Plus returning the jars as she empties them. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 24, 10:56*am, Goomba > wrote:
> merryb wrote: > > On Jun 23, 10:27 pm, Goomba > wrote: > >> Wayne Boatwright wrote: > >>>> I'm not sure I've ever *seen* it in jars, much less bought it. *I'll look > >>>> for some, just to see the difference. *When I say "jars" I mean glass or > >>>> plastic containers as versus metal cans -- same with you? > >>> Glass jars, never plasic, and never metal cans or packets. > >> LOL, the small glass jars make good juice glasses. My family always had > >> a mess of them, along with the little hour glass shaped jars that small > >> frozen shrimp cocktails came in back in the 60's. > > > That's pretty funny- we used the shrimp cocktail jars for juice > > glasses!!! > > LOL and yet I can't imagine buying frozen shrimp cocktails now.. do they > even still sell them? They were tres sixties! I have no idea- I just make my own when the urge hits... |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Karen wrote: On Jun 24, 2:02 pm, "Gregory Morrow" > wrote: > The Booboo sometimes I think must be Martha Hughes in drag...you just can't > dislike something, you also have to haul off and call the person that person > "stupid". One doesn't have to blurt out *everything* that passes through > one's brain pan, as that leads to the dreaded "foot - in - mouthus" disease. What ever happened to Martha, anyway? ------------------------ GM: I dunno, AFAIK she's been off of Usenet for well over a year now... I don't know if it was that Martha was tired of Usenet, or Usenet was weary of Martha, who knows... But I'm sure she's found *some* rafter somewheres to hang upside down from... ;-) She once mentioned that she lit black candles to curse her "enemies", I wonder if there is one black candle left in the entire Bay Area. I know she used up a bunch for me, lol... I certainly miss her for her "entertainment" value... -- Best Greg |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Randy Johnson wrote:
> > On 24-Jun-2008, Blinky the Shark > wrote: > >> Found that Hormel product today at my pedestrian chain supermarket. Shit >> was a buck an ounce. Yow. I was surprised that it was ground up and >> fabricated into slices. I figured you guys were going for a >> real-not-paste meat. > > Dude, its "canned" meat; expect all "canned" (meaning "put up", like canning > tomatoes) meat to be flaked and formed, or scraped and compressed, or somes > sort of floor-scraps made into something manageable. Just 'cause it started > out as floor-scrap paste don't mean it ain't tasty. Canned ("put up") pigs feet aren't flaked/formed/scraped/compressed. ![]() > If it was the kind in a jar instead of the pouch, you have to deduct the It was the glass jar. When I wrote "found that Hormel product", up above, it was on the line after the link to Hormel jarred beef. Someone snipped that association, above. > cost of a juice glass before you calculate the cost per ounce. If you > don't drink juice, donate the glass to charity and take a 50 cent > deduction on your taxes. ![]() ![]() -- Blinky Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project --> http://improve-usenet.org Found: a free GG-blocking news *feed* --> http://usenet4all.se |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lou Decruss wrote:
> consider that a 2AM drunks meal, but back them we all loved it. Fatburger, on the way home from the saloon! Mmmmmm! -- Blinky Is your ISP dropping Usenet? Need a new feed? http://blinkynet.net/comp/newfeed.html |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lou Decruss wrote:
> I never liked the sandwiches, but I did like to smear PB on a banana. > Nothing wrong with a drizzle of hersheys syrup on that too. You seem to have forgot the ice cream underneath all that. ![]() -- Blinky Is your ISP dropping Usenet? Need a new feed? http://blinkynet.net/comp/newfeed.html |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 20:26:39 GMT, "l, not -l" > wrote:
> >On 25-Jun-2008, Lou Decruss > wrote: > >> So many people don't know how to make gravy. This group is not >> typical of the fast food crazed society we live in. A few weeks ago >> we were on a weekend holiday with friends. They, and Louise eat >> breakfast. I don't. The husband of the other couple made some eggs >> and breakfast sausage. He asked what he should do to clean the cast >> pan he did the sausage in. I told him to leave it for my lunch. >> Later I made gravy and put it on some toast with the leftover sausage. >> They were amazed at how easy it was. Many people can't cook. > >I can't believe my local grocer sells a bag of cooked and peeled hard-boiled >eggs. I've seen those. And expensive too. People freak out when I shred my own cheese. Someone said: Why don't you buy it pre-shredded? I said I didn't want the anti-caking agents in my cheese. They said: HUH? > Apparently even in some small restaurants can't or don't want to >cook. I was in Sam's Club the other day and while wandering down an aisle >spotted a gallon can of "sausage gravy"; over in the freezer case they had >frozen biscuits that you just pop in the oven. Gawd that's sad. >Guess you don't even have to cook anymore to start a crummy diner. LOL.. You just need a bunch of money and be prepared to face the fact that there's a 90% chance you'll lose it all in 12 months. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:19:34 -0700, Blinky the Shark
> wrote: >Lou Decruss wrote: > >> consider that a 2AM drunks meal, but back them we all loved it. > >Fatburger, on the way home from the saloon! Mmmmmm! Around here we have White Castle. But if I'm drinking that much these days there's no way I'd be on the road. But we can get a crave case of 30 and toss it in the fridge or freezer. We do it about once a year. The last time was last July when we moved. I'm still farting from them. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:20:31 -0700, Blinky the Shark
> wrote: >Lou Decruss wrote: > >> I never liked the sandwiches, but I did like to smear PB on a banana. >> Nothing wrong with a drizzle of hersheys syrup on that too. > >You seem to have forgot the ice cream underneath all that. ![]() Dang!!! I'm always forgetting SOMETHING!! Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 17:35:45 GMT, blake murphy
> wrote: >On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 15:36:35 -0500, Lou Decruss > >wrote: > >>On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 12:16:36 -0500, "Chris Marksberry" > wrote: >> >>>You know Blake, I think that "bobo's" (AKA Bryan)post is just the type of >>>insult that would discourage new users of r.f.c. from ever wanting to join >>>r.f.c. and therefore losing a lot of good potential posters. Bryan, of >>>course, is not the lone poster of rudeness, insults, etc. I'm used to it >>>and fully understand the concept of needing a thick skin when posting, but >>>some people can't or won't realize that there's a real person behind who >>>wrote the post. The only thing you can do is "get out of the kitchen if you >>>can't stand the heat". Unfortunate though. Just my 2 cents. >> >>Well said. >> >>I don't mind someone with an opinion as long as there's a brain behind >>it. If bozoboner ate as healthy as he preaches he wouldn't have that >>beer belly. >> >>I don't see his posts and luckily very few people respond to him so I >>don't see much of that either. >> >>Lou > >sorry, lou. sometimes i can't resist twit-twitting. Don't take it personally Blake. It's no problem. >a moral failing, i'm sure, but necessary to bolster my flagging >self-esteem by derogating others. LOL Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lou Decruss wrote:
> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:19:34 -0700, Blinky the Shark > > wrote: > >>Lou Decruss wrote: >> >>> consider that a 2AM drunks meal, but back them we all loved it. >> >>Fatburger, on the way home from the saloon! Mmmmmm! > > Around here we have White Castle. But if I'm drinking that much these If there's an end of the burger spetrum any further from FB than WC, I don't know ot. ![]() > days there's no way I'd be on the road. But we can get a crave case > of 30 and toss it in the fridge or freezer. We do it about once a > year. The last time was last July when we moved. I'm still farting > from them. Harf! ![]() fartlets through one at a time. -- Blinky Is your ISP dropping Usenet? Need a new feed? http://blinkynet.net/comp/newfeed.html |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 17:38:06 GMT, blake murphy
> wrote: >On Tue, 24 Jun 2008 16:02:56 -0500, "Gregory Morrow" > wrote: >>The Booboo sometimes I think must be Martha Hughes in drag...you just can't >>dislike something, you also have to haul off and call the person that person >>"stupid". One doesn't have to blurt out *everything* that passes through >>one's brain pan, as that leads to the dreaded "foot - in - mouthus" disease. >> >><chuckle> > >again, this is pretty rich coming from you. why don't you take a >vacation from cyber's pussy once in while? or least refrain from your >demented descriptions of it? The descriptions are probably very accurate, but I agree that we don't need to read it all the time. Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:58:50 -0700, Blinky the Shark
> wrote: >Lou Decruss wrote: > >> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:19:34 -0700, Blinky the Shark >> > wrote: >> >>>Lou Decruss wrote: >>> >>>> consider that a 2AM drunks meal, but back them we all loved it. >>> >>>Fatburger, on the way home from the saloon! Mmmmmm! >> >> Around here we have White Castle. But if I'm drinking that much these > >If there's an end of the burger spetrum any further from FB than WC, I >don't know ot. ![]() I don't know FB, but I do know WC is drunks food. It's good for hangovers too. >> days there's no way I'd be on the road. But we can get a crave case >> of 30 and toss it in the fridge or freezer. We do it about once a >> year. The last time was last July when we moved. I'm still farting >> from them. > >Harf! ![]() >fartlets through one at a time. Small? Lou |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lou Decruss wrote:
> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:58:50 -0700, Blinky the Shark > > wrote: > >>Lou Decruss wrote: >> >>> On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:19:34 -0700, Blinky the Shark >>> > wrote: >>> >>>>Lou Decruss wrote: >>>> >>>>> consider that a 2AM drunks meal, but back them we all loved it. >>>> >>>>Fatburger, on the way home from the saloon! Mmmmmm! >>> >>> Around here we have White Castle. But if I'm drinking that much these >> >>If there's an end of the burger spetrum any further from FB than WC, I >>don't know ot. ![]() > > I don't know FB, but I do know WC is drunks food. It's good for > hangovers too. > >>> days there's no way I'd be on the road. But we can get a crave case >>> of 30 and toss it in the fridge or freezer. We do it about once a >>> year. The last time was last July when we moved. I'm still farting >>> from them. >> >>Harf! ![]() >>fartlets through one at a time. > > Small? It was just a guess. ![]() -- Blinky Is your ISP dropping Usenet? Need a new feed? http://blinkynet.net/comp/newfeed.html |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 25, 3:27*pm, merryb > wrote:
> On Jun 24, 10:56*am, Goomba > wrote: > > > > > > > merryb wrote: > > > On Jun 23, 10:27 pm, Goomba > wrote: > > >> Wayne Boatwright wrote: > > >>>> I'm not sure I've ever *seen* it in jars, much less bought it. *I'll look > > >>>> for some, just to see the difference. *When I say "jars" I mean glass or > > >>>> plastic containers as versus metal cans -- same with you? > > >>> Glass jars, never plasic, and never metal cans or packets. > > >> LOL, the small glass jars make good juice glasses. My family always had > > >> a mess of them, along with the little hour glass shaped jars that small > > >> frozen shrimp cocktails came in back in the 60's. > > > > That's pretty funny- we used the shrimp cocktail jars for juice > > > glasses!!! > > > LOL and yet I can't imagine buying frozen shrimp cocktails now.. do they > > even still sell them? They were tres sixties! > > I have no idea- I just make my own when the urge hits...- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I don't remember those shrimp cocktail thingies and I was an adult in the sixties! We must have been stuck on fondue and other fun sixties things. LOL. I wish I'd seen them. I don't think they make them any more. N. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2008-06-26, Nancy2 > wrote:
> I don't remember those shrimp cocktail thingies and I was an adult in > the sixties! We must have been stuck on fondue and other fun sixties > things. LOL. I wish I'd seen them. I don't think they make them any > more. I'd be amazed if that were true. I used to buy them all the time. Came in little hourglass shaped glass jars with tin pry-off lid. Great solution to the munchies. nb |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nancy2 wrote:
> On Jun 25, 3:27 pm, merryb > wrote: >> On Jun 24, 10:56 am, Goomba > wrote: >>>> That's pretty funny- we used the shrimp cocktail jars for juice >>>> glasses!!! >> >>> LOL and yet I can't imagine buying frozen shrimp cocktails now.. do >>> they even still sell them? They were tres sixties! >> >> I have no idea- I just make my own when the urge hits > I don't remember those shrimp cocktail thingies and I was an adult in > the sixties! We must have been stuck on fondue and other fun sixties > things. LOL. I wish I'd seen them. I don't think they make them any > more. You kidding, SauSea Shrimp Cocktail! My Irish relatives would have those. I actually looked for those in the last year, I didn't see them off hand. Although I don't care for those teeny salad shrimp, I have a fondness for those little jars of shrimp cocktail. nancy |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Creamed Chipped Beef | General Cooking | |||
SOS - Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast | Recipes (moderated) | |||
Creamed Chipped Beef with Onions & Mushrooms | Recipes (moderated) | |||
Creamed Chipped Beef with Onions & Mushrooms | Recipes (moderated) |