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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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Yo, Sqwertz... dig in, there's plenty!
Three pounds of Hillshire Farms kielbasa asimmer: http://i53.tinypic.com/2rfyjxe.jpg Beans were very bland, needed heavy duty doctoring... added everything I could think of including more than a cup of water, they were like cement... even added a heap of Penseys smoked paprika (finally found a use). Later today I phoned the number on the can (they have no web site). I spoke to a women who is the daughter of the man who started the company during the great depression. She explained how back then poor folks slathered this product on bread to make a sandwich, sometimes added a slice of raw onion, a slab of bologna if you were flush, or just a little brown sugar. She said that folks usually open both ends of teh can and pushed the beans out in a log, then sliced off slabs as desired. The recipe has never been changed. It really is a bargain and makes a fairly nutritious meal, albiet BLAH! I'm being mailed some literature about the company history and a recipe pamphlet... also instructions for ordering their other products directly, was informed their canned split pea soup, bean soup, and saucepan beans (juicier) are not available in retail stores and are only sold by the case. Was a pretty interesting conversation. Was thinking (I know, dangerous) that a texas feller with a plethera of extrys could maybe fix up a heap o' Hillshire kielbasa corn dogs... just a thought. Would take a special person what could wrap their lips around that heap o' goodness. |
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