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Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas
and I'm running low. I can take or leave the chocolate coating, but the 'toffee brittle' is by far the best I've ever had. It is the perfect texture-- doesn't break your teeth to bite off a piece [1/4" thick] - but still crumbles in your mouth. Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is there another secret? I do several brittles every year- some in the microwave, and some on the stove-- All use baking soda to introduce air- Mine is good. See's is fantastic. Any thoughts? Jim |
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Jim Elbrecht wrote:
> > Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is there another secret? What are the ingredients? That would be a clue. I tried looking for them, but sees.com loads too slowly for me. |
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On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 14:39:18 -0800, Mark Thorson >
wrote: >Jim Elbrecht wrote: >> >> Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is there another secret? > >What are the ingredients? That would >be a clue. I tried looking for them, >but sees.com loads too slowly for me. "sugar, butter (milk), almonds, chocolate, cocoa butter, salt, vanilla, soy lecithin (an emulsifier), vanillin (an artificial flavor). May contain traces of eggs, other tree nuts and peanuts." The soy lecithin is a new one on me-- Google led me to this page; http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article...Recipe-/401655 I like his recipe- no corn syrup- no baking soda- lots of butter. . . and aside form the soy lecithin, he also uses some "Baker's Special Sugar". That is apparently a super-fine sugar. Makes sense that it might help. I'll give his recipe a shot next week. Jim |
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On 2012-12-30, Jim Elbrecht > wrote:
> See's is fantastic. Yep. Despite having a friend who worked for See's commercial sales center and getting 50%-60% off everything for about 10 yrs, I still miss the brittle. We'd buy boxes of that stuff every year. No more. (sigh) nb |
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On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 17:13:14 -0500, Jim Elbrecht >
wrote: > Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas > and I'm running low. > > I can take or leave the chocolate coating, but the 'toffee brittle' > is by far the best I've ever had. It is the perfect texture-- > doesn't break your teeth to bite off a piece [1/4" thick] - but still > crumbles in your mouth. > > Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is there another secret? > > I do several brittles every year- some in the microwave, and some on > the stove-- All use baking soda to introduce air- Mine is good. > See's is fantastic. > > Any thoughts? Order more. I haven't heard of "California Brittle" (not a big candy eater, so I don't frequent See's outlets although many are easily accessible - as is their factory store), but their toffee is totally divine. I'm a big See's peanut brittle fan. Bought Trader Joe's peanut brittle recently and realized on first bite why I'd rather pay more for See's. -- I take life with a grain of salt, a slice of lemon and a shot of tequila |
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![]() Jim wrote: >I can take or leave the chocolate coating, > but the 'toffee brittle' is by far the best > I've ever had. * It is the perfect texture-- > doesn't break your teeth to bite off a > piece [1/4" thick] - but still crumbles in > your mouth. >Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is > there another secret? >I do several brittles every year- some in > the microwave, and some on the stove-- > All use baking soda to introduce air- * > Mine is good. See's is fantastic. >Any thoughts? I will put my Peanut Brittle and Almond Roca (which is basically a Almond Brittle) up against anyone's...commercial, or otherwise. I've won blue ribbons with my Almond Roca, and my Peanut Brittle is always in demand, so make several batches to share with friends and family, and they always comment on how it is so hard to the touch, but as soon as it hits your mouth, it just melts like butter. I've had See's candy, but not their brittle, so can't comment. I made my Peanut Brittle in the microwave and the first time I tried it, I burned it, so had to adjust the recipe to the wattage of my particular microwave and now it comes out perfectly every time, and stores well and ships great. It has soda in it, but not my Almond Roca (brittle). I stir 1 cup finely chopped toasted almonds into the cooked mixture, when it reaches the right temperature, and I coat both sides with melted milk chocolate and coat each side with 1 cup (total) coarsely chopped blanched almonds. Some just use chocolate on one side, but we prefer it on both sides. It is out of this world! Judy |
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"Judy Haffner" > wrote in message
... Jim wrote: >I can take or leave the chocolate coating, > but the 'toffee brittle' is by far the best > I've ever had. It is the perfect texture-- > doesn't break your teeth to bite off a > piece [1/4" thick] - but still crumbles in > your mouth. >Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is > there another secret? >I do several brittles every year- some in > the microwave, and some on the stove-- > All use baking soda to introduce air- > Mine is good. See's is fantastic. >Any thoughts? I will put my Peanut Brittle and Almond Roca (which is basically a Almond Brittle) up against anyone's...commercial, or otherwise. I've won blue ribbons with my Almond Roca, and my Peanut Brittle is always in demand, so make several batches to share with friends and family, and they always comment on how it is so hard to the touch, but as soon as it hits your mouth, it just melts like butter. I've had See's candy, but not their brittle, so can't comment. I made my Peanut Brittle in the microwave and the first time I tried it, I burned it, so had to adjust the recipe to the wattage of my particular microwave and now it comes out perfectly every time, and stores well and ships great. It has soda in it, but not my Almond Roca (brittle). I stir 1 cup finely chopped toasted almonds into the cooked mixture, when it reaches the right temperature, and I coat both sides with melted milk chocolate and coat each side with 1 cup (total) coarsely chopped blanched almonds. Some just use chocolate on one side, but we prefer it on both sides. It is out of this world! Judy ============ I've never had anything as good as here. We used to get a box at Christmas every year from a customer. Simply wonderful. http://www.enstrom.com/ |
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Sqwertz > wrote:
>On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 18:32:56 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: -snip- >> >> "sugar, butter (milk), almonds, chocolate, cocoa butter, salt, >> vanilla, soy lecithin (an emulsifier), vanillin (an artificial >> flavor). May contain traces of eggs, other tree nuts and peanuts." > >The butter is the difference between a toffee and a brittle. The >later does not contain any dairy product. So that there is a toffee >rather than a brittle. How did you know that I *was* wondering what the difference was? <g> Now, can you explain what See's means when they say 'toffee brittle'? http://www.sees.com/prod.cfm/Brittle...fornia_Brittle "two delightful flavors: toffee brittle and a coating of smooth milk chocolate" Not a *lot* of butter? A texture between? The 'brittles'(?) I make have a token amount of butter/margarine. [one is 1/2 cup butter to 2 cups sugar- another is a tsp to 1 cup sugar] > >> The soy lecithin is a new one on me-- Google led me to this page; >> http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article...Recipe-/401655 > >The lecithin is a component of the chocolate rather than the >toffee/brittle. You *know* that? The recipe on the link I posted has the lecithin in the brittle to keep the copious amounts of butter bound to the sugar. [4 cups butter to 6.3 cups sugars] I just noticed that it is *toffee* not brittle- and that it is *cut* in the end. I thought toffee was the brittle one, taffy was the cutting one? If that regional? Am I just wrong? Jim |
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Sqwertz > wrote:
>On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 17:13:14 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: > >> Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas >> and I'm running low. -snip- > >Victorian Toffee kicks ass. A big, thick 1.5lb Heath Bar covered with >almonds. It came with a little metal hammer tchotchke. Is that See's, too? [she brought home See's from SF-- then we discovered that one of the malls I avoid like the plague has a See's store] Sounds good to me-- especially a tchotchke.<g> Jim |
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sf > wrote:
>On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 17:13:14 -0500, Jim Elbrecht > >wrote: > >> Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas >> and I'm running low. >> >> I can take or leave the chocolate coating, but the 'toffee brittle' >> is by far the best I've ever had. It is the perfect texture-- >> doesn't break your teeth to bite off a piece [1/4" thick] - but still >> crumbles in your mouth. >> >> Is it the generous use of almonds? Or is there another secret? >> >> I do several brittles every year- some in the microwave, and some on >> the stove-- All use baking soda to introduce air- Mine is good. >> See's is fantastic. >> >> Any thoughts? > >Order more. Hehe-- what's the fun in that? If I can duplicate it, I can eat all I want *when* I want. [*and* say 'I made it myself'.<G> Jim |
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Jim Elbrecht wrote:
> > "sugar, butter (milk), almonds, chocolate, cocoa butter, salt, > vanilla, soy lecithin (an emulsifier), vanillin (an artificial > flavor). May contain traces of eggs, other tree nuts and peanuts." No baking soda. Baking soda is what makes the gas bubbles in a brittle, which is what makes a brittle easily breakable. Does this product have bubbles in it? If so, they must get in there somehow. |
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![]() Jim wrote: >Do you use lecithin, a thermometer, > and/or beaucoup butter? I do use a thermometer...I bought a new Taylor last holiday season, as the numbers were so faded out on my old original one, but not the lecithin, or the special butter. >I think it was your post last year that got > me to try the microwave-- Pretty > amazing-- I was doubtful, but hey, it > works! Do you use my recipe? Not sure if I posted it here before, but it is awesome! I had to adjust the cooking times though for my own particular microwave, so burned the first couple of batches, until I worked out the kinks, and now I have it down to a fine science. >Sounds good from here-- * * No soda? * > What makes it chewable-- temp >or almonds? No soda in my Almond Roca, which I would call more of a toffee actually than a brittle. It has the same 'crunch' to it that commercial Almond Roca has, but is much better, I think. We break it up in pieces, after it's set up and cold. Stick a sharp point of a knife down in it anywhere and lightly tap the end of the knife with a meat mallet, and it will start to crack like broken glass, into pieces. Here is the recipe I use: Almond Roca 1 cup butter 1 tbsp. light corn syrup 1-1/3 cups sugar 3 tbsp. water 2 cups slivered almonds 2 pkgs. (11 oz. each) milk chocolate baking chips Toast 1 cup of the almonds and coarsely chop; set aside. Finely chop the other 1 cup of almonds. Melt butter in saucepan. Add corn syrup, sugar and water. Cook to hard crack stage (300º). Remove from heat and quickly stir in the chopped toasted almonds. Spread into a foil-lined 9x13 inch baking pan (making sure foil extends over the sides some). Melt chips and spread half over the Roca in pan. Sprinkle with half of the finely chopped almonds. Turn pan upside down into another foil-lined pan of the same size and remove foil carefully, may need the help of a table knife to "pry" it loose from the foil, if is still fairly soft. Spread the remaining melted chocolate over that side evenly and sprinkle with remaining chopped almonds. Chill in refrigerator before breaking into pieces. Be careful, as this is addictive! ![]() Judy |
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![]() "Sqwertz" > wrote in message ... > On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 08:44:58 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: > >> Sqwertz > wrote: >> >>>On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 17:13:14 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: >>> >>>> Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas >>>> and I'm running low. >> >> -snip- >>> >>>Victorian Toffee kicks ass. A big, thick 1.5lb Heath Bar covered with >>>almonds. It came with a little metal hammer tchotchke. >> >> Is that See's, too? [she brought home See's from SF-- then we >> discovered that one of the malls I avoid like the plague has a See's >> store] > > It was See's. I don't see too many mentions of it on the web, so they > may not have produced it recently. > > Looks like it was called "Victoria Toffee" (no "N"). -- > http://reviews.sees.com/3973/358/rev...=6&sort=rating > The link to it on their own page is broken, so it looks like it they > haven't made it for a couple years. > > -sw We got our Victoria Toffee right after Thanksgiving last year. We missed their window in 2011 and the kids were a little upset. Apparantly they have it only from Thanksgiving to Christmas. Happy New Year!! Gene & Betty |
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On 1/1/2013 12:00 AM, Judy Haffner wrote:
> Here is the recipe I use: > > Almond Roca > > 1 cup butter > 1 tbsp. light corn syrup > 1-1/3 cups sugar > 3 tbsp. water > 2 cups slivered almonds > 2 pkgs. (11 oz. each) milk chocolate baking chips > > Toast 1 cup of the almonds and coarsely chop; set aside. Finely chop the > other 1 cup of almonds. > > Melt butter in saucepan. Add corn syrup, sugar and water. Cook to hard > crack stage (300º). Remove from heat and quickly stir in the chopped > toasted almonds. Spread into a foil-lined 9x13 inch baking pan (making > sure foil extends over the sides some). Melt chips and spread half over > the Roca in pan. Sprinkle with half of the finely chopped almonds. Turn > pan upside down into another foil-lined pan of the same size and remove > foil carefully, may need the help of a table knife to "pry" it loose > from the foil, if is still fairly soft. Spread the remaining melted > chocolate over that side evenly and sprinkle with remaining chopped > almonds. Chill in refrigerator before breaking into pieces. > > Be careful, as this is addictive! ![]() > > Judy You know, I am going to a big family wedding in March, I don't need this kind of trouble, lady. lol Becca |
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On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 11:23:01 -0600, Sqwertz >
wrote: >On Mon, 31 Dec 2012 08:44:58 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: > >> Sqwertz > wrote: >> >>>On Sun, 30 Dec 2012 17:13:14 -0500, Jim Elbrecht wrote: >>> >>>> Darn that's good stuff! My daughter gave me some for Christmas >>>> and I'm running low. a bit OT but having just finished a box of See's Candy- it gives me opportunity. I actually just finished reading a book about the SEE family- a COSTCO paperback ( entitled: "On Gold Mountain" by Lisa See) and although it is somewhat hard to sort of follow the similar Chinese names- it is a great read about coming to China to the Gold Mountain aka- California how enterprising they were. One mention is how the See family is also the same as the candy. All my life in Hawaii, we've had See's Candy. I don't think it is everywhere but I just love it. Probably not a super high class kind of candy (as compared to what?) but each piece is so great! Flavorful and chocolaty and seemingly hand made. I love See's candy. Happy New Year. aloha, Cea |
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On Tue, 01 Jan 2013 18:55:30 -1000, pure kona
> wrote: > All my life in Hawaii, we've had See's Candy. I don't think it is > everywhere but I just love it. Probably not a super high class kind > of candy (as compared to what?) but each piece is so great! Flavorful > and chocolaty and seemingly hand made. > > I love See's candy. Me too. I've eaten more expensive candy, but none were better than See's. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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Eating Peanut Brittle regularly is associated with a lowered risk of weight gain. Research has shown that people who eat nuts at least twice weekly are much less likely to gain weight than those who almost never eat them.
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pure kona wrote:
> > All my life in Hawaii, we've had See's Candy. I don't think it is > everywhere but I just love it. Probably not a super high class kind > of candy (as compared to what?) but each piece is so great! Flavorful > and chocolaty and seemingly hand made. Centered in California Sees is owned by Berkshire Hathaway. They are on a very gradual growth program. I'm not sure how many states they have stores in but when a similar company based in Chicago went out of business they opened a few stores here. Someone reinstated the other candy company so how we have several stores of each. |
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On 2013-01-02, Doug Freyburger > wrote:
> stores in but when a similar company based in Chicago went out of > business..... Despite bogus news to the contrary, it's still hard times. Our only 7-11 closed, ferchrynoutloud! nb |
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On Wed, 2 Jan 2013 16:26:58 +0000 (UTC), Doug Freyburger
> wrote: > pure kona wrote: > > > > All my life in Hawaii, we've had See's Candy. I don't think it is > > everywhere but I just love it. Probably not a super high class kind > > of candy (as compared to what?) but each piece is so great! Flavorful > > and chocolaty and seemingly hand made. > > Centered in California Sees is owned by Berkshire Hathaway. They are on > a very gradual growth program. I'm not sure how many states they have > stores in but when a similar company based in Chicago went out of > business they opened a few stores here. Someone reinstated the other > candy company so how we have several stores of each. Lucky you! Not so good for me, because my father is still alive and living in Chicago... I used to be able to send him See's and they'd really appreciate it because they got hooked on See's when they lived in Hawaii. It's not such a treat when it's so easily available. Kind of like us an In N Out. We'd anticipate finding one and it was fun to eat at. Now that there's one nearby, I hardly go at all. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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sf wrote:
> Doug Freyburger > wrote: > > Lucky you! Not so good for me, because my father is still alive and > living in Chicago... I used to be able to send him See's and they'd > really appreciate it because they got hooked on See's when they lived > in Hawaii. It's not such a treat when it's so easily available. Kind > of like us an In N Out. We'd anticipate finding one and it was fun to > eat at. Now that there's one nearby, I hardly go at all. Gourmet candy is a rare purchase for me. There are Indiana based stores around here somewhere. But the quality of Sees is just that much higher. In-N-Out has been around for decades. Now there's a gourmet burger movement of some sort. Near us we have - Fuddruckers, Five Guys Burgers and Fries, Smashburger, Meatheads, some fancy place that serves wine and burgers. I've probably gone past more fancy burger places without noticing them. I have not yet been to a Meatheads. I am unlikely to go back to the fancy place that serves wine and burgers as the prices were that much higher. |
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notbob wrote:
> Doug Freyburger > wrote: > >> stores in but when a similar company based in Chicago went out of >> business..... Fannie May. The name sounds like they should be in a mortgage business but the stores look very much like Sees clones. > Despite bogus news to the contrary, it's still hard times. Our only > 7-11 closed, ferchrynoutloud! Yeah, what the deal with that? Maybe half of them in the burbs shut down. Even more wierd one day around 5 Burger Kinds closed down the same day near us. They didn't even empty the trash, ugh. |
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On Wed, 2 Jan 2013 21:12:55 +0000 (UTC), Doug Freyburger
> wrote: > > In-N-Out has been around for decades. Maybe where you live, but not near me. > Now there's a gourmet burger > movement of some sort. Near us we have - Fuddruckers, Five Guys Burgers > and Fries, Smashburger, Meatheads, some fancy place that serves wine and > burgers. I've probably gone past more fancy burger places without > noticing them. > > I have not yet been to a Meatheads. I am unlikely to go back to the > fancy place that serves wine and burgers as the prices were that much > higher. We have a great little hamburger and beer place near us called "Hall Of Flame Burgers". All their burgers come with fries. It's really, really good meat, they don't say they grind their own but they probably do - and fantastic prices (that just went up, but still aren't bad). The Fuddruckers near me went out of business 2 or 3 years ago. I think I've seen a Five Guys Burgers somewhere, but it beats me where and I've never heard of the others. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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Sqwertz wrote:
> > We have *all* the usual burger chains except for I&O (coming soon, > along with Smashburger), plus at least 20 more that are local chains > or one-offs. I tend to think Austin is the burger capital of the U.S. > > I think I'll make one right now... How does mushroom, bacon, jalapeno > and swiss sound? Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. You southwesterners really seem to like that heat on almost anything though. Bobby Flay can't resist putting heat on just about anything he makes. G. |
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On 1/3/2013 2:37 PM, Gary wrote:
> Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. You southwesterners > really seem to like that heat on almost anything though. Bobby Flay can't > resist putting heat on just about anything he makes. Jalapenos on burgers is pretty common here in the South. Most burger chains have a version like this: http://www.whataburger.com/Food/Item...se-whataburger Whataburger will add jalapenos to any sandwich they make at a nominal cost. I like jalapenos with a burger... but on the side. George L |
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Sqwertz wrote:
> > We have *all* the usual burger chains except for I&O (coming soon, > along with Smashburger), plus at least 20 more that are local chains > or one-offs. I tend to think Austin is the burger capital of the U.S. > > I think I'll make one right now... How does mushroom, bacon, jalapeno > and swiss sound? Do it slow braised or fast fried? I like either way but the result is quite different. |
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Gary wrote:
> Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. Burgers with pepper jack cheese is a popular combo. When was the last time you learned something new? If you're going to criticize other people's cooking, you could at least cite something from your Bible. I'm sure you can find some blessing for unusual cheeseburgers if you search Acts or Apocrypha. |
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![]() Jim wrote: >The one I use is; >Microwave Peanut Brittle >1 * * * * * * * cup raw peanuts >1 * * * * * * * cup sugar >1/2 * * * * * cup white karo >1/8 * * teaspoon salt >1 * * * * * teaspoon butter >1 * * * * * teaspoon vanilla >1 * * * * * teaspoon baking soda >Stir peanuts, sugar, karo and salt into 1 >1/2 quart casserole. Cook 4 min on High. >Stir >Cook 4 more min. on High. >Mix in butter and vanilla. Cook 2 more >min. on High. Add baking soda and stir >till white and foamy. Pour onto lightly > greased sheet pan and cool one hour. > Break into pieces and store in airtight > container. xxxxxxxxxx >If that's yours, claim it so can make that > note. * Thanks. My recipe is slightly different, especially the preparation and cooking times, but if this works for you, then good deal! I think my microwave is a 1000 wattage oven, so the times you use would be too long and it would burn. As far as the ingredients go, I use salted Spanish peanuts and not raw, and I don't use salt. Maybe the recipe I have didn't list it, because it called for salted peanuts? I use a 2 quart Pyrex measuring cup with handle (which works slick!) and combine sugar and corn syrup and cook 4 minutes on high. Stir in peanuts and cook 2 minutes longer on high (original recipe said to cook 3 to 5 minutes, but was much TOO long for my microwave). Stir in butter and vanilla and microwave on high for only 40 seconds until peanuts are lightly browned. Add soda and stir gently until light and foamy. Pour mixture onto lightly greased cookie sheet. Let cool about 1 hour and then break into pieces. When I pour the hot mixture onto the cookie sheet, I tip the sheet so it will spread out a little more and isn't so thick. Anyway, the main difference is the cooking times, but every microwave is different, so have to learn by trial and error, and might take a batch or two to get it down pat. Judy |
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Sqwertz wrote:
> > On Thu, 03 Jan 2013 15:37:59 -0500, Gary wrote: > > > Sqwertz wrote: > > > >> I think I'll make one right now... How does mushroom, bacon, jalapeno > >> and swiss sound? > > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. > > That's because you're from Mary-land. > > -sw I was pretty merry when I was growning up there. I love jalapeno's but would never think to add them to a burger. oh well. Who am I to argue with the Sandwich King? ![]() |
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On Jan 4, 1:19*pm, Gary > wrote:
> Sqwertz wrote: > > > On Thu, 03 Jan 2013 15:37:59 -0500, Gary wrote: > > > > Sqwertz wrote: > > > >> I think I'll make one right now... *How does mushroom, bacon, jalapeno > > >> and swiss sound? > > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? *ehehhe *Your burger sounds good but what's > > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. > > > That's because you're from Mary-land. > > > -sw > > I was pretty merry when I was growning up there. *I love jalapeno's but > would never think to add them to a burger. *oh well. *Who am I to argue with > the Sandwich King? * ![]() Try it sometime...jalapeno's on a burger are awesome! |
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On Jan 3, 12:52*pm, George Leppla > wrote:
> On 1/3/2013 2:37 PM, Gary wrote: > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? *ehehhe *Your burger sounds good but what's > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. *You southwesterners > > really seem to like that heat on almost anything though. *Bobby Flay can't > > resist putting heat on just about anything he makes. > > Jalapenos on burgers is pretty common here in the South. Most burger > chains have a version like this:http://www.whataburger.com/Food/Item...se-whataburger > Whataburger will add jalapenos to any sandwich they make at a nominal cost. |
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Chemo wrote:
> > On Jan 3, 12:52 pm, George Leppla > wrote: > > On 1/3/2013 2:37 PM, Gary wrote: > > > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's > > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. You southwesterners > > > really seem to like that heat on almost anything though. Bobby Flay can't > > > resist putting heat on just about anything he makes. > > > > Jalapenos on burgers is pretty common here in the South. Most burger > > chains have a version like this:http://www.whataburger.com/Food/Item...se-whataburger > > Whataburger will add jalapenos to any sandwich they make at a nominal cost. > > > > I like jalapenos with a burger... but on the side. > > > > George L > > Try 'em on a hot dog sometime. Excellent! There ya go. You must live in the SW too. ![]() |
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On Jan 4, 2:47*pm, Gary > wrote:
> Chemo wrote: > > > On Jan 3, 12:52 pm, George Leppla > wrote: > > > On 1/3/2013 2:37 PM, Gary wrote: > > > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? *ehehhe *Your burger sounds good but what's > > > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. *You southwesterners > > > > really seem to like that heat on almost anything though. *Bobby Flay can't > > > > resist putting heat on just about anything he makes. > > > > Jalapenos on burgers is pretty common here in the South. Most burger > > > chains have a version like this:http://www.whataburger.com/Food/Item...se-whataburger > > > Whataburger will add jalapenos to any sandwich they make at a nominal cost. > > > > I like jalapenos with a burger... but on the side. > > > > George L > > > Try 'em on a hot dog sometime. Excellent! > > There ya go. *You must live in the SW too. * ![]() Nope...PNW |
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"George M. Middius" wrote:
> > Gary wrote: > > > Who let Bobby Flay on this ng? ehehhe Your burger sounds good but what's > > with the jalapeno? I wouldn't put that on a burger. > > Burgers with pepper jack cheese is a popular combo. When was the last time you > learned something new? > > If you're going to criticize other people's cooking, you could at least cite > something from your Bible. I'm sure you can find some blessing for unusual > cheeseburgers if you search Acts or Apocrypha. funny... and it was in a Mel Brooks movie. 'History of the World, part 2' maybe? Moses was up on the mountain and God gave him the 15 commandments etched on 3 stone tablets. Then as he walked down the mountain, he dropped one and it shattered. So when he got to the bottom of the mountain, he claimed 10 commandments. hahahaha Pepper jack cheese on a burger sounds worth trying. I haven't even bought that in years. I bought an 8oz bar of Seriously Sharp Cheddar by Cabot this morning. It's one of my favorite cheeses. Gary |
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