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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() "notbob" > wrote in message news:%tg5d.259575$Fg5.246184@attbi_s53... > On 2004-09-25, Jack Schidt® > wrote: > >> one lobster each for some 20 bucks a pound, I'd probably say same. But >> tain't so round here. > > Do you take boarders? > > nb Yes. Jack Landlord |
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On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 14:46:35 GMT, "Peter Aitken"
> wrote: >"elaine" > wrote in message news:4154a7b5$1_2@aeinews.... >> --Whoa! Not just 'lobster meat on a bun". >> >> First you have to have the right kind of bun - down East Maine or N.B. >> comes split in the middle -- all the more room to put the lobster in. Mix >> the lobster with mayonnaise (I like Hellmans). No lettuce necessary, but >if >> you like lettuce it's not a big deal- then a little bit of celery and red >> onion. >> It really depends who you talk to. Some of my friends like it without the >> addition of 'filling' e.g. celery/onion. >> >> Personally, I like the addition of celery & onion - I just add more >lobster. >> >> Elaine >> >> > >IMO lobster ralls are way overrated. Most places serve you second rate >lobster meat drowned in cheap mayo with lots of filler like celery added, >and it's on a Wonder-bread style roll. The best places use good lobster and >decent bread but it's still just a lobster and mayo sandwich. Worth trying, >to be sure, but there are so many more interesting things you can do with >lobster. > Like a tomato sandwich on white bread with mayo is just a tomato and mayo sandwhich. There may be more interesting things that one can do with tomatoes or lobster but there isn't anything _better_ when the star ingredient is perfect! Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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In article >, "Jack
Schidt®" > wrote: > "notbob" > wrote in message > news:fe45d.360724$8_6.38460@attbi_s04... > > On 2004-09-24, Jessica V. > wrote: > >> > >> At most restaurants in Maine a lobster roll is knuckle and claw > >> lobster > >> meat mixed with a tiny amount of mayo, served on a toasted hot dog > >> roll > >> and a wee bit of iceburg lettuce. > > > > Stop, for the lovagawd! Lobster meat on a hotdog bun? Geez, you gotta > > eat > > an awful lot of lobster meat to become so jaded you'd eat cold lobster > > on > > a > > piece of bread. A Craby Patty, maybe. Lobster? Barbarians! > > > > nb > > It's not as awkward as you think, nb. A, good lobster is plentiful > around > here, so it's not some rare delicacy, and B, the NE hotdog bun is a step > up > from the normal squishy bun. Oh, and C, together, they make for a > fantastic > treat. Yeah, if the lobster boat showed up once a year and we all > received > one lobster each for some 20 bucks a pound, I'd probably say same. But > tain't so round here. > > The same hot dog bun is used to make clam rolls, using fried clams, > either > strips (cheaper) or whole clams (the real deal). > > Jack Abbots > > Ya know - I don't know why, but I really don't care for either the NE hotdog bun (of course, I grew up in Michigan) or lobster. Like shrimp a lot, and crab, but not lobstah. Ah, well - more for you. :-) Oh, and whole clams are just odd to me. They taste like fishy liver, which in essence, they probably are. I love liver, but not whole clams. -- Nancy Howells (don't forget to switch it, and replace the ![]() |
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 21:33:15 -0400, "Jessica V." > wrote:
>> Best one I ever had was at a seaside place up in Lincoln, Maine. > >Are you sure? Lincoln is inland as is only known for it's very smelly >papermill. THere is a place about 10 miles outside of Lincoln that >makes a darned good lobster roll, it's a foot long and about $14, a meal >in itself. Well, I thought I was, til I asked my mother. She said it was Camden. but hey - I went into labor shortly after leaving there and had to drive all the way home to RI, so I'm thinking I lost a few braincells on the way ![]() Kimba -- "It's a god-eat-god world." -- (Terry Pratchett, Small Gods |
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![]() "Curly Sue" > wrote in message news:41559f4f.13548808@news-addition of 'filling' > Like a tomato sandwich on white bread with mayo is just a tomato and > mayo sandwhich. There may be more interesting things that one can do > with tomatoes or lobster but there isn't anything _better_ when the > star ingredient is perfect! > > Sue(tm) > Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! Spot on, Curly Sue. Lobster on its own (well, a bit of mayo to hold the chunks together in the roll) is perfection, as is lobster just boiled and served with butter. Don't go messin' around with it! Felice |
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And to make it even better (like Howard Johnson's used to do with their
hotdogs), butter the sides and grill lightly on each side. To die for! "ScratchMonkey" > wrote in message . .. > "Jack Schidt®" > wrote in > : > >> A cold lobster roll is more like a salad, with lobster meat mixed with >> celery and mayo, served on a New England hot dog bun. > > The important thing being *New England* hot dog bun. Not the crust-swathed > things found in the rest of the US, but the soft-sided ones found only in > New England. I keep hoping someone from a New England bakery will take the > creation to the rest of the nation. As a college student in Cambridge > decades ago I loved getting my daily hot dog for lunch at a push cart > outside my dorm. The bun really makes the difference. |
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Felice Friese wrote:
> Spot on, Curly Sue. Lobster on its own (well, a bit of mayo to hold the > chunks together in the roll) is perfection, as is lobster just boiled and > served with butter. Don't go messin' around with it! Which is better, steamed lobster or boiled? I read recently (or saw on the Food Network) that boiling lobster saps the flavor out of the lobster and just leaves well-flavored water, whereas steaming keeps the flavor in. Any thoughts? -- Rick |
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Steamed, of course, but only use a bit of water. That way you can watch the
little critter as its legs begin to redden try to scramble up the side of the pot. And then with a mournful cry, slide back to the bubbling water and die. "Rick" > wrote in message ... > Felice Friese wrote: > >> Spot on, Curly Sue. Lobster on its own (well, a bit of mayo to hold the >> chunks together in the roll) is perfection, as is lobster just boiled and >> served with butter. Don't go messin' around with it! > > Which is better, steamed lobster or boiled? I read recently (or saw on > the Food Network) that boiling lobster saps the flavor out of the > lobster and just leaves well-flavored water, whereas steaming keeps the > flavor in. Any thoughts? > > -- > Rick |
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Steamed, of course, but only use a bit of water. That way you can watch the
little critter as its legs begin to redden try to scramble up the side of the pot. And then with a mournful cry, slide back to the bubbling water and die. "Rick" > wrote in message ... > Felice Friese wrote: > >> Spot on, Curly Sue. Lobster on its own (well, a bit of mayo to hold the >> chunks together in the roll) is perfection, as is lobster just boiled and >> served with butter. Don't go messin' around with it! > > Which is better, steamed lobster or boiled? I read recently (or saw on > the Food Network) that boiling lobster saps the flavor out of the > lobster and just leaves well-flavored water, whereas steaming keeps the > flavor in. Any thoughts? > > -- > Rick |
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GoombaP wrote:
> Steamed, of course, but only use a bit of water. That way you can watch the > little critter as its legs begin to redden try to scramble up the side of > the pot. And then with a mournful cry, slide back to the bubbling water and > die. I'm a huge ****ing hypocrite: I could never bring myself to cook a lobster, whatever method used, but will allow whoever's in the kitchen to do so. I keep trying to convince myself that it's true that lobsters feel no pain, but sometimes I just know that's not true. So anyway, my question was aimed more at ordering it in a restaurant than at actually cooking it myself. -- Rick |
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On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 16:04:24 GMT, "Jack Schidt®"
> wrote: > >"notbob" > wrote in message >news:%tg5d.259575$Fg5.246184@attbi_s53... >> On 2004-09-25, Jack Schidt® > wrote: >> >>> one lobster each for some 20 bucks a pound, I'd probably say same. But >>> tain't so round here. >> >> Do you take boarders? >> >> nb > >Yes. > >Jack Landlord > I had one (lobster roll, that is) this summer on Cape Cod. Being a denizen of Cow Hill, I found it exotic and addictively enticing. All of which is to say "put clean sheets on the settee 'cause I'm on my way." Love them lobsters on rolls on a grill, on platters, anyway you got 'em. modom "Dallas is a rich man with a death wish in his eyes." -- Jimmie Dale Gilmore |
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On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 16:04:24 GMT, "Jack Schidt®"
> wrote: > >"notbob" > wrote in message >news:%tg5d.259575$Fg5.246184@attbi_s53... >> On 2004-09-25, Jack Schidt® > wrote: >> >>> one lobster each for some 20 bucks a pound, I'd probably say same. But >>> tain't so round here. >> >> Do you take boarders? >> >> nb > >Yes. > >Jack Landlord > I had one (lobster roll, that is) this summer on Cape Cod. Being a denizen of Cow Hill, I found it exotic and addictively enticing. All of which is to say "put clean sheets on the settee 'cause I'm on my way." Love them lobsters on rolls on a grill, on platters, anyway you got 'em. modom "Dallas is a rich man with a death wish in his eyes." -- Jimmie Dale Gilmore |
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