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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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My wife's family call them featherbeds. They used a slightly
sweetened version of their heavy white bread dough [with milk and Crisco but no egg] that had been made the day before and refrigerated until an hour or two before the oil was heated up. Then the tricky part was to tear off pieces and pull them into paper-thin bits before dunking in hot oil. These are closest I see out there- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:St...ried_Dough.jpg Mimi would have let them slide-- but hers would not have had those thick spots in the centers. Some eat them with butter- some with confectioners sugar- some with maple syrup- and some with cinnamon & sugar. I like one plain - hot out of the oil. I've never heard anyone else call them 'featherbeds'. [and my mom never made anything that involved yeast- so I never had them growing up] If anyone called them featherbeds, do you know where the name came from? It is supposedly a handed down recipe-- but I'm curious about whether it came from the English, Irish, German, Canadian, Quaker, ?Native American?- or 'NY redneck' branch. Jim |
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