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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking:
What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. Dimitri |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > >What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > >Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese >Pascha, Rice Pilaf >Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > >Dimitri I answered your post before you posted this. My paternal grandmother (southern): Sweet potato pie and yeast rolls. Fried chicken. Wine jelly. Christine |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese > Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > My grandmother used to make a type of oatmeal cookies that we rolled out and cut with cookie cutters with date filling. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri > wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese > Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. None of the above. -sw |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 13, 5:32*pm, "Dimitri" > wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > .... One of the grandmothers raised rabbits in pens in the backyard. Sold the pelts and fried the rabbit. I liked it better than fried chicken. -aem |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dimitri" > wrote in message ... > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri My grandmother never cooked. -- mompeagram FERGUS/HARLINGEN |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri My grandma used to make chick and homemade noodels. I miss them. And her. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: The only meatloaf I've ever had was made by my father's mother. I never knew my mother's mother, because she died when I was about four or five. There is a picture of her holding me when I was baby, but I think that was the only time we ever met. My grandmother's meatloaf, as I recall, was palatable. But I've never been tempted to make one myself. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun 13 Jul 2008 05:32:40p, Dimitri told us...
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri Amalgamation Cake, Fresh Orange Cake, Fresh Coconut Cake, Chicken and Dumplings, Cornbread Dressing, Tomato Dressing, Banana Ice Cream... I have all of her recipes and they turn out well, but there's always something "missing" because *she* didn't make them. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Sunday, 07(VII)/13(XIII)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Friends come and go, enemies accumulate. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun 13 Jul 2008 05:40:33p, Christine Dabney told us...
> On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" > > wrote: > >>OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >> >>What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >> >>Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >>Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter >>cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf >>Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >> >>Dimitri > > I answered your post before you posted this. > > My paternal grandmother (southern): Sweet potato pie and yeast rolls. > Fried chicken. Wine jelly. > > Christine Oh, I forgot about my grandmother's Sweet Potato Pie. I should have added that to my list. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Sunday, 07(VII)/13(XIII)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- If you can't see the fnords, they can't eat you. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dimitri" > wrote in message ... > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri I got the recipe for the the Easter cheese from my grandmother before she died, and now I get to make it every year. My mom, aunt, and uncle always say "it tastes just like Grandmom's!" She also made killer nut rolls and little cream cheese dough turnover cookies filled with lekvar or almond paste, I forget what they are called. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: Chum. -- Blinky Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org Need a new news feed? http://blinkynet.net/comp/newfeed.html |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dimitri" > wrote in message ... > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: English: Hot cross buns, which it seems she was always just taking out of the oven when we arrived at her home on Good Friday for the Easter holidays. Since we were driving from New York to Washington DC, and since she was baking on a wood stove, I never could figure out how she pulled it off. Italian: Pasta sauce, which she somehow was "just making" if, as a small child who lived four houses away, I called her when I came home from school and didn't like what was on the menu at home. Ain't grandmother's grand? Felice |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message 6.120... > On Sun 13 Jul 2008 05:32:40p, Dimitri told us... > >> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >> >> What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >> >> Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >> Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter >> cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf >> Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >> >> Dimitri > > Amalgamation Cake, Fresh Orange Cake, Fresh Coconut Cake, Chicken and > Dumplings, Cornbread Dressing, Tomato Dressing, Banana Ice Cream... > > I have all of her recipes and they turn out well, but there's always > something "missing" because *she* didn't make them. Amalgamation Cake? Felice |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Meatloaf is so easy! lb ground beef,chop some onions, salt and pepper,
little Oregano and basil 1 egg, bread crumbs, push together in form of loaf, cover w. wax paperr. put in microwave fo about 15 min. You got meatlaf! |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun 13 Jul 2008 07:49:13p, Felice told us...
> > "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message > 6.120... >> On Sun 13 Jul 2008 05:32:40p, Dimitri told us... >> >>> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >>> >>> What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >>> >>> Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >>> Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter >>> cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf >>> Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >>> >>> Dimitri >> >> Amalgamation Cake, Fresh Orange Cake, Fresh Coconut Cake, Chicken and >> Dumplings, Cornbread Dressing, Tomato Dressing, Banana Ice Cream... >> >> I have all of her recipes and they turn out well, but there's always >> something "missing" because *she* didn't make them. > > Amalgamation Cake? > > Felice I'll have to dig for the paper recipe if you want it, as I've never put it on computer. Essentilly, it is a 3-layer white cake lightly flavored with vanilla and almond extract. The filling is made from milk, sugar, and butter, that is cooked to the soft ball stage. Into that mixture is stirred coarsely broken pecans, dark raisins, coconut, crushed pineapple, and vanilla extract. The filling goes between the layers and on top. The sides are frosting with an egg white beaten stiff with granulated sugar. There are recipes on the web where the filling contains a high proportion of egg yolk. This is *not* the way my grandmother made it, and I don't like those versions. Let me know if you'd like my grandmother's recipe. I'll be happy to look it up, type it up, and post it. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Sunday, 07(VII)/13(XIII)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > >What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > >Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese >Pascha, Rice Pilaf >Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > >Dimitri Mom's mom... PIES - her crust was to die for (mine will never be like hers) my favorite fillings were rhubarb and currant (not together) both were home grown in grandpa's garden chicken and rice Dad's Mom Swedish "dollar" pancakes with lingonberry sauce pork tenderloin medallions in a sherry and sour cream sauce cucumbers in sweet & sour vinegar Mom's dad made the BEST baked beans ever! breakfast was a man's job ![]() Mom's dad made steel cut oats, the double boiler method Dad's stepdad cooked on a wood fired stove in the winter so we'd know how he grew up smoked sausage and eggs fried mush served up with butter and maple syrup (YUM!) -- I never worry about diets. The only carrots that interest me are the number of carats in a diamond. Mae West |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 18:40:33 -0600, Christine Dabney
> wrote: >On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" > >wrote: > >>OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >> >>What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >> >>Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >>Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese >>Pascha, Rice Pilaf >>Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >> >>Dimitri > >I answered your post before you posted this. > >My paternal grandmother (southern): Sweet potato pie and yeast rolls. >Fried chicken. Wine jelly. > Oh, you reminded me... Dads mom made strawberry jam using the Ball recipe for freezer Jam. It was delicious and tasted just like fresh picked strawberries. I could probably do it too, but I've never tried. It's nice just to think about it and her. Maybe I'll do it next year and make some memories for my grandson. -- I never worry about diets. The only carrots that interest me are the number of carats in a diamond. Mae West |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > >What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > >Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese >Pascha, Rice Pilaf >Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > Nanaw made wonderful cornbread dressing. And dark roux gravy to make the dressing better. But that was holiday food. With day-to-day cooking, I'd say her blackberry cobblers were a knockout. -- modom ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"modom (palindrome guy)" > wrote in
: > On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 17:32:40 -0700, "Dimitri" > > wrote: > >>OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >> >>What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >> >>Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >>Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter >>cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf >>Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >> > Nanaw made wonderful cornbread dressing. And dark roux gravy to make > the dressing better. But that was holiday food. With day-to-day > cooking, I'd say her blackberry cobblers were a knockout. > -- > > modom > ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** > But here's the important question...Did she wear army boots? -- The house of the burning beet-Alan |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dimitri" > ha scritto nel messaggio
... > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri I would like to borrow yours. My English one died years before I was born, and although the French one survived into my childhood, rearing many children wore her out so the remaining ones at home cooked when we visited. My mother, however, being no one's fool, watched and measured everything as my GM cooked and wrote it down so that we ate GM's cookery once removed. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article >,
"Dimitri" > wrote: > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese > Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. Spice fingers. We'd probably call them Linzer Squares or something these days. Should see if one of my aunties has the recipe. Miche -- Electricians do it in three phases |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri Unfortunately, I never knew either of my grandmothers; both died before I was born. Mom's Mom died when she was only 9 y/o, so she doesn't remember much about Grandma's cooking either. Must be nice to have such great memories, tho'. -- Cheers Chatty Cathy Egg tastes better when it's not on your face... |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article >,
"dejablues" > wrote: > I got the recipe for the the Easter cheese from my grandmother before she > died, and now I get to make it every year. My mom, aunt, and uncle always > say "it tastes just like Grandmom's!" > She also made killer nut rolls and little cream cheese dough turnover > cookies filled with lekvar or almond paste, I forget what they are called. Sounds maybe like a version of kolachky. How is your "Easter cheese" made? -- -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ rec.food.cooking Preserved Fruit Administrator "Always in a jam. Never in a stew." - Evergene |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon 14 Jul 2008 05:16:44a, Melba's Jammin' told us...
> In article >, > "dejablues" > wrote: > >> I got the recipe for the the Easter cheese from my grandmother before >> she died, and now I get to make it every year. My mom, aunt, and >> uncle always say "it tastes just like Grandmom's!" >> She also made killer nut rolls and little cream cheese dough turnover >> cookies filled with lekvar or almond paste, I forget what they are >> called. > > Sounds maybe like a version of kolachky. Yes, it does, indeed. Several of my friends back in Ohio use a cream cheese dough for their kolachky. Most of them use fillings of lekvar, thick apricot or raspberry jam, or a nut/sugar/egg whie mixture. > How is your "Easter cheese" made? > -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Monday, 07(VII)/14(XIV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Death benefits = oxymoron. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article 0>,
Wayne Boatwright > wrote: > Yes, it does, indeed. Several of my friends back in Ohio use a cream > cheese dough for their kolachky. Most of them use fillings of lekvar, > thick apricot or raspberry jam, or a nut/sugar/egg whie mixture. Mom's nut filling was wonderful. She made a soft meringue and folded in ground walnuts and a little vanilla. She used the same filling in her nut rolls. -- -Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ rec.food.cooking Preserved Fruit Administrator "Always in a jam. Never in a stew." - Evergene |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon 14 Jul 2008 05:44:12a, Melba's Jammin' told us...
> In article 0>, > Wayne Boatwright > wrote: > >> Yes, it does, indeed. Several of my friends back in Ohio use a cream >> cheese dough for their kolachky. Most of them use fillings of lekvar, >> thick apricot or raspberry jam, or a nut/sugar/egg whie mixture. > > Mom's nut filling was wonderful. She made a soft meringue and folded in > ground walnuts and a little vanilla. She used the same filling in her > nut rolls. I bet that's how they made theirs. Old Slovak families, so traditions are similar I imagine. When I've made kolachky, I've only used lekvar and jams. I should try the nut filling this Christmas. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Monday, 07(VII)/14(XIV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Cats need to be petted *every* time the cat eats. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter > cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri Salmon with "succulent sauce". I need to find that recipe!!!!! -- Jean B. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message 6.120... > On Sun 13 Jul 2008 07:49:13p, Felice told us... >> Amalgamation Cake? >> >> Felice > > I'll have to dig for the paper recipe if you want it, as I've never put it > on computer. > > Essentilly, it is a 3-layer white cake lightly flavored with vanilla and > almond extract. The filling is made from milk, sugar, and butter, that is > cooked to the soft ball stage. Into that mixture is stirred coarsely > broken pecans, dark raisins, coconut, crushed pineapple, and vanilla > extract. > > The filling goes between the layers and on top. The sides are frosting > with an egg white beaten stiff with granulated sugar. > > There are recipes on the web where the filling contains a high proportion > of egg yolk. This is *not* the way my grandmother made it, and I don't > like those versions. > > Let me know if you'd like my grandmother's recipe. I'll be happy to look > it up, type it up, and post it. Thanks, Wayne, but you've given me enough of a description that I don't need the recipe. This sounds very much like a cake I recall from days of yore, but I think that had a different name. Felice |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most When my father's mother was visiting, she would wait until my mother was out of the house. Then she'd make hamentaschen with my brother and me. By the time my non-baking mother got home, the entire operation would be done, kitchen cleaned and only the cookies remaining. Grandma encouraged creativity. She'd made the standard tri-cornered ones with lekvar filling. My brother and I made sculptured cookies with filling, layers, rounds, shapes, little turnovers, the works. I wish I had the recipe. My aunt remembers that her mother liked Mazola oil. I know the dough had a lot of eggs in it. (I hated eggs so much that I was grossed out watching them go into the dough. I had to leave the room until the flour went in.) I know my maternal grandmother must have cooked at some point, but I don't recall what. Plain broiled chicken comes to mind, but the memory is murky. --Lia |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Felice wrote on Mon, 14 Jul 2008 10:25:57 -0400:
> "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message > 6.120... >> On Sun 13 Jul 2008 07:49:13p, Felice told us... >>> Amalgamation Cake? >>> >>> Felice >> >> I'll have to dig for the paper recipe if you want it, as I've >> never put it on computer. >> >> Essentilly, it is a 3-layer white cake lightly flavored with vanilla >> and almond extract. The filling is made from milk, >> sugar, and butter, that is cooked to the soft ball stage. Into that >> mixture is stirred coarsely broken pecans, dark >> raisins, coconut, crushed pineapple, and vanilla extract. >> >> The filling goes between the layers and on top. The sides >> are frosting with an egg white beaten stiff with granulated >> sugar. >> >> There are recipes on the web where the filling contains a >> high proportion of egg yolk. This is *not* the way my >> grandmother made it, and I don't like those versions. >> >> Let me know if you'd like my grandmother's recipe. I'll be >> happy to look it up, type it up, and post it. > Thanks, Wayne, but you've given me enough of a description > that I don't need the recipe. This sounds very much like a > cake I recall from days of yore, but I think that had a > different name. Interesting name! There are recipes available by googling but no indication why it is called "Amalgamation Cake". Does any know if it commemorates some historical occasion? -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Dimitri wrote: > > OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: > > Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, > Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter cheese > Pascha, Rice Pilaf > Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. > > Dimitri Never met the paternal grandparents so no help there. On the maternal side, all the usual classic German, Swiss and Dutch dishes she made as home cooking. My mother never learnt to make most of them, so having to rediscover them on my own. We have cookbooks from Germany and the Netherlands but nothing from any part of Switzerland ![]() |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 14 Jul 2008 15:17:52 GMT, "James Silverton"
> wrote: >Interesting name! There are recipes available by googling but no >indication why it is called "Amalgamation Cake". Does any know if it >commemorates some historical occasion? I think the name commemorates what it is, James. It's an amalgam of ingredients. amalgamate: to unite in or as if in an amalgam; especially : to merge into a single body -- I never worry about diets. The only carrots that interest me are the number of carats in a diamond. Mae West |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dimitri wrote:
> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: > > What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: I didn't know my maternal grandmother, but I love the foods my mom makes that she learned from her mother. I only met my paternal grandmother a few times, and she was a terror. The only thing she ever cooked was some seven-layer brownies one time. They were good. Serene -- "I think I have an umami receptor that has developed sentience." -- Stef |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 22:49:13 -0400, "Felice" >
wrote: > >"Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message 86.120... >> On Sun 13 Jul 2008 05:32:40p, Dimitri told us... >> >>> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >>> >>> What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most: >>> >>> Russian Stroganoff, Stuffed Cabbage, >>> Greek Avgolemano soup, Loukomathes, cutlets & Greek/Russian Easter >>> cheese Pascha, Rice Pilaf >>> Step Grandmother - Pasta Sauce, Spaghetti Carbonara, & Gnocchi. >>> >>> Dimitri >> >> Amalgamation Cake, Fresh Orange Cake, Fresh Coconut Cake, Chicken and >> Dumplings, Cornbread Dressing, Tomato Dressing, Banana Ice Cream... >> >> I have all of her recipes and they turn out well, but there's always >> something "missing" because *she* didn't make them. > >Amalgamation Cake? > >Felice > sounds like something you'd make for some kind of borg celebration. your pal, six of half-a-dozen ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message 6.120... <snip> >> Amalgamation Cake? >> >> Felice > > I'll have to dig for the paper recipe if you want it, as I've never put it > on computer. > > Essentilly, it is a 3-layer white cake lightly flavored with vanilla and > almond extract. The filling is made from milk, sugar, and butter, that is > cooked to the soft ball stage. Into that mixture is stirred coarsely > broken pecans, dark raisins, coconut, crushed pineapple, and vanilla > extract. > > The filling goes between the layers and on top. The sides are frosting > with an egg white beaten stiff with granulated sugar. > > There are recipes on the web where the filling contains a high proportion > of egg yolk. This is *not* the way my grandmother made it, and I don't > like those versions. > > Let me know if you'd like my grandmother's recipe. I'll be happy to look > it up, type it up, and post it. > > -- > Wayne Boatwright > Will this help: These are all in my data base as Amalgamation Cakes; -- Old Scoundrel (AKA Dimitri) # 1 --CAKE:-- 3/4 c. butter 3 eggs 1 c. sugar 1 (16 oz.) jar strawberry preserves 1 tsp. allspice 1 tsp. cinnamon 1 tsp. ground cloves 1/2 c. buttermilk 1 tsp. baking soda 2 c. flour --TOPPING:-- 4 egg yolks 1 c. sugar 3/4 c. butter 1 pkg. pecans 1 pkg. coconut Evaporated milk to thin Mix all cake ingredients by hand in the order given. Bake in 2 or 3 round cake pans that have been greased and floured at 350 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes; cool. FOR TOPPING: Mix together in 2-quart saucepan, egg yolks, sugar and butter. Cook on low heat until glossy, adding small amounts of evaporated milk to thin to an icing consistency. Add pecans and coconut. Layer topping on first cake then on top; be sure to let it drip down and over the sides. 1/2 cup raisins are optional and can be added to the cake mix - 1 cup optional added to topping. # 2 CAKE: 2 1/2 c. sugar 1 c. shortening 3 1/2 c. plain flour 6 egg whites (beat first) 5 tsp. baking powder 1 c. milk, 1/2 c. boiling water 2 tsp. vanilla flavoring Cream shortening and 2 cups sugar, mix and sift flour and baking powder; add alternately with the milk to the creamed mixture. Beat the egg whites until stiff and fold in the remaining 1/2 cup sugar. Fold this into batter, then add 1/2 cup of boiling water. Add flavoring. Bake in slow 350 degree oven for 25 to 30 minutes or until done. Makes 4 to 5 layers.FILLING: 9 egg yolks 2 c. sugar 1 c. coconut water (or water) 2 c. grated coconut 1 tsp. vanilla 1 c. chopped walnuts 1 c. chopped pecans 1 c. raisins 1 lb. butter Bring sugar and water to a boil, in a heavy pan. Set off stove and add butter. Beat egg yolks and add to sugar mixture. Cook over low heat until thick, 10 to 12 minutes. Cool. Add remaining ingredients. Stack. # 3 9 egg yolks 2 c. sugar 1 3/4 c. milk 1/4 lb. butter (or oleo) 1 box raisins 1 1/2 c. mixed nuts (I use pecans and 1 c. English walnuts) 1 big coconut, grated Beat egg yolks well. Then add sugar, milk, and oleo. Mix well. Cook on medium heat until thickened slightly. Add raisins and nuts. Cook until thick. Add coconut last. Heat well. Louise says that Granny (Georgia Schumpert Armstrong) used 1 cup of pecans and 1/2 cup of scalybarks or hickory nuts when she made the filling.BATTER; 3 eggs (or 9 egg whites) 1 1/2 c. sugar 1 c. milk 2 tsp. baking powder 2 1/2 c. plain flour 1 tsp. flavoring 1/2 c. Crisco Cream sugar and Crisco well. Add eggs. Then mix milk, flour, and baking powder. Add flavoring. Bake at 325 degrees. Makes 3 nine inch layers. # 4 From the recipe book of Ruby Armstrong Posey.BATTER: 8 egg whites 2 c. sugar 3/4 c. shortening (if butter, 1 c.) 4 c. flour (presifted) 4 level tsp. baking powder 1 c. milk 1 tsp. vanilla 1/4 tsp. salt Cream shortening and sugar. Add flour and milk alternately (having sifted flour and baking powder together two or three times.) Add vanilla. Fold in stiffly-beaten egg whites. Bake at 375 degrees until cake falls away from sides of pans. Makes three layers.FILLING: 8 egg yolks 1 c. butter 1 c. sugar 1 c. white Karo 1 c. raisins 1 c. pecans 2 c. coconut # 5 1 white cake mix FILLING: 8 egg yolks 2 c. sugar 2 sticks margarine 1 sm. can crushed pineapple 1 1/2 c. raisins 1 c. coconut 1 c. pecans Cook cake mix according to directions. Make 3 layers. Filling: Melt margarine. Add sugar and beaten egg yolks before it gets too hot. Cook slowly on low heat until thickened. Add raisins, pineapple, cooking all along. When it seems thick enough to spread, add coconut and nuts. Cook another few minutes. Spread over layers. # 6 1 c. Crisco 3 c. flour 1 c. sweet milk 8 egg whites 2 c. sugar 2 tsp. baking powder Cream sugar and Crisco. Add milk, flour and baking powder. Beat egg white stiff and add to batter. Beat well. Bake in layer cake pans, 4 layers.FILLING: 1/2 lb. butter 8 egg yolks 2 c. sugar 1 c. white raisins 1 c. pecans 1 c. coconut Juice from 2 lemons Cream butter and sugar, add the egg yolks beaten well and the lemon juice. Cook in double boiler until thick. Cool. Add fruit and nuts and spread in layers. # 7 2 c. sugar 1 1/2 c. butter 2 tsp. baking soda 6 eggs 4 c. flour 1 c. ground raisins 1 tbsp. cinnamon 1 tbsp. allspice 1 tbsp. ground cloves 1/2 tsp. salt 2 c. buttermilk 1 pt. seedless blackberry jam Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Mix all dry ingredients, then add beaten eggs, butter, buttermilk, and jam. Bake in a floured, greased cake pan for about 1 hour.FILLING: 8 egg yolks 2 c. ground raisins 2 c. grated coconut 1 tsp. salt 1/2 c. butter 2 c. sugar 2 c. chopped pecans 1 c. evaporated milk Mix sugar, salt, butter, milk and egg yolks in a double boiler and cook for 30 minutes. Add raisins, coconut and pecans. Spread over cooled cake. Excellent for Christmas holidays. # 8 2 c. sugar 1 1/2 c. shortening 1 c. buttermilk 2 tsp. soda 4 c. flour, sifted 6 whole eggs, unbeaten 1 tbsp. cinnamon 1 tbsp. allspice 1 tbsp. cloves 1 pt. jam or preserves 1 c. raisins FILLING: 8 egg yolks 1 1/2 c. margarine 2 c. sugar 2 c. coconut 2 c. chopped nuts 2 c. ground raisins (or finely chopped) Cream sugar and shortening. Add eggs, buttermilk, jam, raisins and dry ingredients; beat as for any layer cake. Bake at 375 degrees for about 35 minutes. Makes 4 layers. (Instead of a 4 layer cake you can make 2, 2 layer ones or 1 two layer and a sheet cake.) Let layers cool then put filling between layers and on top. Filling: Cook egg yolks, butter and sugar in double boiler until thick. Beat until cool. Stir in the coconut, raisins and nuts. Note: It takes up to 24 hours for the filling to set so you may have to keep putting it back on the cake from time to time until it does set. This cake can be kept in refrigerator for several weeks or frozen. END |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon 14 Jul 2008 11:21:00a, Dimitri told us...
> > "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message > 6.120... > > <snip> > > >>> Amalgamation Cake? >>> >>> Felice >> >> I'll have to dig for the paper recipe if you want it, as I've never put it >> on computer. >> >> Essentilly, it is a 3-layer white cake lightly flavored with vanilla and >> almond extract. The filling is made from milk, sugar, and butter, that is >> cooked to the soft ball stage. Into that mixture is stirred coarsely >> broken pecans, dark raisins, coconut, crushed pineapple, and vanilla >> extract. >> >> The filling goes between the layers and on top. The sides are frosting >> with an egg white beaten stiff with granulated sugar. >> >> There are recipes on the web where the filling contains a high proportion >> of egg yolk. This is *not* the way my grandmother made it, and I don't >> like those versions. >> >> Let me know if you'd like my grandmother's recipe. I'll be happy to look >> it up, type it up, and post it. >> >> -- >> Wayne Boatwright >> > > Will this help: These are all in my data base as Amalgamation Cakes; > > Thanks for posting these, Dimitri. Actually, I do have her recipe, but it's in a binder rather than on the PC. Scanning through the recipes you posted, the cake part is quite similar to some of those, but the filling is distinctly different, in that it has absolutely no egg yolk or white in it. I will check it out tonight and post my grandmother's recipe. Thanks again! -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Monday, 07(VII)/14(XIV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- If only women came with pulldown menus and online help. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon 14 Jul 2008 09:45:34a, told us...
> On Mon, 14 Jul 2008 15:17:52 GMT, "James Silverton" > > wrote: > >>Interesting name! There are recipes available by googling but no >>indication why it is called "Amalgamation Cake". Does any know if it >>commemorates some historical occasion? > > I think the name commemorates what it is, James. It's an amalgam of > ingredients. > > amalgamate: to unite in or as if in an amalgam; especially : to merge > into a single body > > I think you're right, Barbara. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Monday, 07(VII)/14(XIV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- If only women came with pulldown menus and online help. ------------------------------------------- |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message 6.120... > On Mon 14 Jul 2008 11:21:00a, Dimitri told us... > >> >> "Wayne Boatwright" > wrote in message >> 6.120... >> >> <snip> > Thanks for posting these, Dimitri. Actually, I do have her recipe, but > it's in a binder rather than on the PC. Scanning through the recipes you > posted, the cake part is quite similar to some of those, but the filling > is > distinctly different, in that it has absolutely no egg yolk or white in > it. > > I will check it out tonight and post my grandmother's recipe. > > Thanks again! > > -- > Wayne Boatwright You're welcome. Dimitri |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Julia Altshuler" > wrote in message ... > Dimitri wrote: >> OK the "Who taught you to cook" post got me thinking: >> >> What did your grandmother cook that you miss the most > > > When my father's mother was visiting, she would wait until my mother was > out of the house. Then she'd make hamentaschen with my brother and me. By > the time my non-baking mother got home, the entire operation would be > done, kitchen cleaned and only the cookies remaining. > > > Grandma encouraged creativity. She'd made the standard tri-cornered ones > with lekvar filling. My brother and I made sculptured cookies with > filling, layers, rounds, shapes, little turnovers, the works. > > > I wish I had the recipe. My aunt remembers that her mother liked Mazola > oil. I know the dough had a lot of eggs in it. (I hated eggs so much > that I was grossed out watching them go into the dough. I had to leave > the room until the flour went in.) > > > I know my maternal grandmother must have cooked at some point, but I don't > recall what. Plain broiled chicken comes to mind, but the memory is > murky. > > > --Lia > I used to watch my mom cook but she never let us get involved. I basically taught myself. Even though I still make things she did. Mom got to be a lousy cook in old age. I wouldn't eat anything she made. -- mompeagram FERGUS/HARLINGEN |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Grandmother's recipes | General Cooking | |||
What do you wish you could have learned from your mother/grandmother? | General Cooking | |||
rec: Grandmother's [Mincemeat] Relish | General Cooking | |||
Grandmother's Doughnuts | Recipes | |||
Grandmother's Bread Pudding | Recipes (moderated) |