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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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It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think).
One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, at least. https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout Lenona. |
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![]() wrote in message ... It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, at least. https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout Lenona. == Nice one. Thanks for posting ![]() |
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On Monday, May 7, 2018 at 8:50:34 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). > > One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, at least. > > https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout > > > > Lenona. I clicked through 16 slides to find the most popular dessert in 1957 was: angel food cake. The most boring dessert in the history of desserts. Cindy Hamilton |
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On 2018-05-08 9:18 AM, jmcquown wrote:
> On 5/7/2018 8:50 PM, wrote: >> It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). >> >> One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the >> usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept >> for a while, at least. >> >> https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout >> >> >> >> >> Lenona. >> > > Huh.Â* I'd never heard of a Lane Cake. ![]() > Nor have I. I also never heard of the most popular dessert for my year, Rice Cream. Many of the others are the desserts of my youth, but I wonder about linking them to any particular year. It may have been a little stroll down Memory Lane but I think we all just fell for click bait. |
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Well, nobody told my body that pecan pie was the most popular in my year, 1941. I am deathly
allergic to pecans and other tree nuts. I will take 1940 instead...bread pudding. The N'awlins Commander's Palace recipe with whiskey sauce is the most bestest recipe of all. N. |
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Cindy, if you could have some of my grandma's angel food cake, you wouldn't say it was boring.
It was absolutely, perfectly angelic. ;-)) No, I don't have her recipe....but almond flavored butter cream icing made up part of the perfection. N. |
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On 5/8/2018 9:31 AM, Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2018-05-08 9:18 AM, jmcquown wrote: >> On 5/7/2018 8:50 PM, wrote: >>> It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). >>> >>> One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the >>> usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept >>> for a while, at least. >>> >>> https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Lenona. >>> >> >> Huh.Â* I'd never heard of a Lane Cake. ![]() >> > > Nor have I. I also never heard of the most popular dessert for my year, > Rice Cream. Many of the others are the desserts of my youth, but I > wonder about linking them to any particular year. It may have been a > little stroll down Memory Lane but I think we all just fell for click bait. Click bait, sure, but Leona's posts are food related! It's funny how these articles try to categorize things so specifically. Who did they interview to figure out what desserts most people were eating in a particular year? Did they take a survey and extrapolate the results? Who did they talk to? What were the demographics? That Rice Cream (a Swedish Rice Ring) from your birth year was not something I ever heard of, either. Apparently it was popular in Minnesota. Okay, cold climate and Swedish or Danes. ![]() The Lane Cake is allegedly southern. I wasn't born in the south (Southern California doesn't count). Even having lived in the "south" for decades I've never run across it. I fully expected the dessert in the year I was born to involve Jell-O. ![]() Jill |
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On 5/8/2018 11:08 AM, Nancy2 wrote:
> Well, nobody told my body that pecan pie was the most popular in my year, 1941. I am deathly > allergic to pecans and other tree nuts. I will take 1940 instead...bread pudding. The N'awlins > Commander's Palace recipe with whiskey sauce is the most bestest recipe of all. > > N. > I'm not allergic to pecans or any tree nuts but I have never been a fan of pecan pie. It's too sickly sweet. I adore ginger bread (allegedly 1942). I noticed banana pudding showed up on that list circa 1955. That's another thing in my years in the south I've never actually made. The versions I tasted all involved Nabisco Vanilla wafers and boxed pudding mix. I have no idea if it was the most popular dessert in 1955. It was definitely still popular in Memphis in the 1980's in some of the little southern diners. That and peach cobbler. ![]() Jill |
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On 2018-05-08 11:23 AM, jmcquown wrote:
> On 5/8/2018 9:31 AM, Dave Smith wrote: >> On 2018-05-08 9:18 AM, jmcquown wrote: >>> On 5/7/2018 8:50 PM, wrote: >>>> It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). >>>> >>>> One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the >>>> usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept >>>> for a while, at least. >>>> >>>> https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Lenona. >>>> >>> >>> Huh.Â* I'd never heard of a Lane Cake. ![]() >>> >> >> Nor have I. I also never heard of the most popular dessert for my >> year, Rice Cream. Many of the others are the desserts of my youth, but >> I wonder about linking them to any particular year. It may have been a >> little stroll down Memory Lane but I think we all just fell for click >> bait. > > Click bait, sure, but Leona's posts are food related!Â* It's funny how > these articles try to categorize things so specifically. Hey.... I admitted that I fell for it. I did question the linking of them to the years. I think they may have just gone through the cook books of the time and picked out some samples. I never heard of the one for my year, but many of those from earlier and later years where quite common during my childhood. I think the 7Up cake for 1977 is misplaced. It was common around her before that. FWIW, a much better version of the Bundt cake was Sherry cake. > |
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"Ophelia" > wrote in message
... > > > wrote in message > ... > > It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). > > One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual > kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, > at least. > > https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout > > > > Lenona. > > == > > Nice one. Thanks for posting ![]() I think with very few exceptions I have made every one of them, and liked them a lot, still do like them a lot, if not making them as often these days. Cheri |
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On 5/8/2018 11:10 AM, Nancy2 wrote:
> Cindy, if you could have some of my grandma's angel food cake, you wouldn't say it was boring. > It was absolutely, perfectly angelic. ;-)) > No, I don't have her recipe....but almond flavored butter cream icing made up part of the > perfection. > > N. > The angel food cake I tasted as a kid was not really embellished. A simple drizzle of some powdered sugar icing, that's about it. It was my middle brother's favourite cake and he always requested it for his birthday. I couldn't tell you why he liked it. Maybe because it was baked in a special pan (I still have the pan my mother used). I always thought it tasted rather plain. It did have a nice texture but not much else going for it. Jill |
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On 2018-05-08, jmcquown > wrote:
> I fully expected the dessert in the year I was born to involve Jell-O. ![]() HA! Me, also. ![]() Turns out Jell-O based whatevers weren't a biggie until the yr after I was born. My late brother lucked out with Bananas Foster, though I doubt if he ever had any, but I made up for it by making it fer my GF and myself. It came out sublime. ![]() nb |
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lenona321 wrote:
> >It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). > >One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, at least. > >https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout Here's mine and I still bake one a couple three times a year. https://postimg.cc/image/ta54m0jb1/096da4d7/ However my favorite dessert is Nesselrode Pie. Used to be easy to find in NYC but now it's rarer than hen's teeth... can't even find a proper picture. |
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![]() "Cheri" wrote in message news ![]() "Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > > > wrote in message > ... > > It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). > > One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual > kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, > at least. > > https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout > > > > Lenona. > > == > > Nice one. Thanks for posting ![]() I think with very few exceptions I have made every one of them, and liked them a lot, still do like them a lot, if not making them as often these days. Cheri == I rarely make pudding (desserts?) these days. Maybe once a week, if that. We are not enthusiastic about sweet stuff as were were in the past ![]() make them if family are visiting though ![]() |
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![]() wrote in message ... lenona321 wrote: > >It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). > >One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual >kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, >at least. > >https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout Here's mine and I still bake one a couple three times a year. https://postimg.cc/image/ta54m0jb1/096da4d7/ However my favorite dessert is Nesselrode Pie. Used to be easy to find in NYC but now it's rarer than hen's teeth... can't even find a proper picture. == https://www.womansday.com/food-recip...de-pie-recipe/ |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 8:32:06 AM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> > On 2018-05-08 9:18 AM, jmcquown wrote: > > > > Huh.Â* I'd never heard of a Lane Cake. ![]() > > > > Nor have I. > I have but have never eaten one. In the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" I *think* it's the neighbor across the street, Miss Maudie, who makes a killer Lane Cake that everyone wishes she would share her recipe. Ain't gonna happen; she jealously guarded her recipe. > > It may have been a little stroll down Memory Lane but I think we > all just fell for click bait. > Yep. |
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"Ophelia" > wrote in message
... > I rarely make pudding (desserts?) these days. Maybe once a week, if > that. > > We are not enthusiastic about sweet stuff as were were in the past ![]() > make them if family are visiting though ![]() I don't make a lot of sweets anymore either except when company is coming, I usually prefer berries, melon, and things like that in season. Once in a great while, like today, I will buy a small carton of ice cream for dessert. Just enough for two servings. If it was up to dh he would have pies, cakes, and things like that everyday. ![]() Cheri |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 10:36:16 AM UTC-5, Jill McQuown wrote:
> > I noticed banana pudding showed up on that list circa 1955. That's > another thing in my years in the south I've never actually made. The > versions I tasted all involved Nabisco Vanilla wafers and boxed pudding mix. > > Jill > My mother always made a huge banana pudding for Sunday dinner from scratch (it's an easy recipe) in the mid-40's. My oldest brother absolutely l-o-v-e-d her banana pudding and my parents would have to stop him from overeating and becoming sick. One Sunday they said nothing and let him eat as much of the banana pudding as he wanted which was almost the whole bowl. He became violently ill from his overindulgence and he said it was a full 10 years before he could eat banana pudding again. Who says you can't fill up teenage boys with food?!? ;-) |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 11:25:01 AM UTC-5, Sheldon wrote:
> > Here's mine and I still bake one a couple three times a year. > https://postimg.cc/image/ta54m0jb1/096da4d7/ > > I've always liked a good pineapple upside down cake. Some folks make them in a cast iron skillet; I don't care what you bake it in, it's still good. |
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jmcquown wrote:
> Huh. I'd never heard of a Lane Cake. ![]() Lane Cake: "Huh, I'd never heard of a Jill." ![]() PS: Popular dessert in my birth year (1953) was peach cobbler. I like that but I'm willing to bet I never got to eat it that year. |
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On Tue, 8 May 2018 18:12:06 +0100, "Ophelia" >
wrote: > > >wrote in message ... > >lenona321 wrote: >> >>It starts in 1940 and goes to 2001 (I think). >> >>One thing that surprised me was the banana split - no, it's not the usual >>kind! I had never heard of this version. Hint: It can be kept for a while, >>at least. >> >>https://www.msn.com/en-us/foodanddri...id=mailsignout > >Here's mine and I still bake one a couple three times a year. >https://postimg.cc/image/ta54m0jb1/096da4d7/ >However my favorite dessert is Nesselrode Pie. Used to be easy to >find in NYC but now it's rarer than hen's teeth... can't even find a >proper picture. > > >== >https://www.womansday.com/food-recip...de-pie-recipe/ A real Nesselrode pie is about 8" high and about 14" diameter... most diners in NYC sold it, especially the Greek diners. It's been some 50 years since I've seen a Nesselrode pie anywhere. |
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On Tue, 8 May 2018 10:19:49 -0700, "Cheri" >
wrote: >"Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > >> I rarely make pudding (desserts?) these days. Maybe once a week, if >> that. >> >> We are not enthusiastic about sweet stuff as were were in the past ![]() >> make them if family are visiting though ![]() > >I don't make a lot of sweets anymore either except when company is coming, I >usually prefer berries, melon, and things like that in season. Once in a >great while, like today, I will buy a small carton of ice cream for dessert. >Just enough for two servings. If it was up to dh he would have pies, cakes, >and things like that everyday. ![]() > >Cheri We don't have dessert often but when we do it's usually fresh fruit. sometimes berries atop jello. We both like diet jello... I usually make two of the large packages and instead of the cold water I use cold seltza., makes for a prettier sparkling dessert. |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 1:55:31 PM UTC-5, Jill McQuown wrote:
> > On 5/8/2018 1:14 PM, wrote: > >> > > I have but have never eaten one. In the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" > > I *think* it's the neighbor across the street, Miss Maudie, who makes > > a killer Lane Cake that everyone wishes she would share her recipe. > > Ain't gonna happen; she jealously guarded her recipe. > > Ah well. I read the book (Harper Lee) and love the movie but never paid > much attention to Lane Cake Miss Maudie baked. > When I read it I thought "what in sam hill is a Lane Cake?" That was a hundred years ago and of course there was no internet and I didn't have access to cook books; I was stumped. > > >> It may have been a little stroll down Memory Lane but I think we > >> all just fell for click bait. > >> > > Yep. > > > Nothing wrong with a little food related nostalgia. I just wouldn't > count on it being completely accurate information. > > Jill > Yes, sometimes they are fun. I do take issue with those that seem to run to a hundred pages and want you to click, click, click. |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 11:10:37 AM UTC-4, Nancy2 wrote:
> Cindy, if you could have some of my grandma's angel food cake, you wouldn't say it was boring. > It was absolutely, perfectly angelic. ;-)) > No, I don't have her recipe....but almond flavored butter cream icing made up part of the > perfection. > > N. Nope. Almond flavoring doesn't appeal. It's still a big, white blob that tastes of nothing but sugar. I'd rather have plain berries. Today the bakery was giving out samples of a brownie with Dulce de Leche in the middle. That was good. Cindy Hamilton |
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![]() "Cheri" wrote in message news ![]() "Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > I rarely make pudding (desserts?) these days. Maybe once a week, if > that. > > We are not enthusiastic about sweet stuff as were were in the past ![]() > make them if family are visiting though ![]() I don't make a lot of sweets anymore either except when company is coming, I usually prefer berries, melon, and things like that in season. Once in a great while, like today, I will buy a small carton of ice cream for dessert. Just enough for two servings. If it was up to dh he would have pies, cakes, and things like that everyday. ![]() Cheri === Ahh yes. We like a small bowl of ice cream ![]() Hmm he likes his puddings eh ![]() craving ![]() |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 3:46:52 PM UTC-5, Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> > David excels at tea breads like banana walnut > bread, cranberry-orange bread. On Sundays I often bake > filled croissants, either with chocolate or fresh berries. > > A good banana nut bread is a thing of beauty! Such a simple recipe but amazing how some people can screw up this delicious concoction. Ever used croissants to make bread pudding?? WOW! |
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Cheri, I am replying to your remark that I am "too stupid" to quote what I am replying to. Did I
**** in your Cheerios? When I post from this idiot first-generation iPad, I cannot quote so it shows up when I post. Sorry you have been so inconvenienced, but I can't think it required name-calling. N. |
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On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 8:21:56 PM UTC-5, graham wrote:
> > On 2018-05-08 5:02 PM, wrote: > > > > Ever used croissants to make bread pudding?? WOW! > > > > > Try using leftover or stale panettone. > > Leftover panettone? Surely you jest; there's no such thing as leftover panettone. :-)) |
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"Nancy2" > wrote in message
... > Cheri, I am replying to your remark that I am "too stupid" to quote what I > am replying to. Did I > **** in your Cheerios? When I post from this idiot first-generation iPad, > I cannot quote > so it shows up when I post. Sorry you have been so inconvenienced, but I > can't think it > required name-calling. > > N. You are not replying to MY POST Nancy, you are replying to a forger or someone elses misquote if anything, I have never, nor would I ever, call someone stupid for not quoting. Cheri |
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> wrote in message
... > On Tue, 8 May 2018 10:19:49 -0700, "Cheri" > > wrote: > >>"Ophelia" > wrote in message ... >> >>> I rarely make pudding (desserts?) these days. Maybe once a week, if >>> that. >>> >>> We are not enthusiastic about sweet stuff as were were in the past ![]() >>> do >>> make them if family are visiting though ![]() >> >>I don't make a lot of sweets anymore either except when company is coming, >>I >>usually prefer berries, melon, and things like that in season. Once in a >>great while, like today, I will buy a small carton of ice cream for >>dessert. >>Just enough for two servings. If it was up to dh he would have pies, >>cakes, >>and things like that everyday. ![]() >> >>Cheri > > We don't have dessert often but when we do it's usually fresh fruit. > sometimes berries atop jello. We both like diet jello... I usually > make two of the large packages and instead of the cold water I use > cold seltza., makes for a prettier sparkling dessert. We like sugar free Jell-O too. Cheri |
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On 2018-05-08 9:21 PM, Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Tue 08 May 2018 06:21:52p, graham told us... > >> On 2018-05-08 5:02 PM, wrote: >>> On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 3:46:52 PM UTC-5, Wayne Boatwright >>> wrote: >>>> >>>> David excels at tea breads like banana walnut >>>> bread, cranberry-orange bread. On Sundays I often bake >>>> filled croissants, either with chocolate or fresh berries. >>>> >>>> >>> A good banana nut bread is a thing of beauty! Such a simple >>> recipe but amazing how some people can screw up this delicious >>> concoction. Ever used croissants to make bread pudding?? WOW! >>> >>> >> Try using leftover or stale panettone. >> I sometimes make a bread & butter pudding with a caramel base. > > Hmm... I never thought aboaut it, but it sounds delicious. I just > happen to have several panettone in the pantry, so this is a must > try! > Here is the recipe. Don't over cook the caramel otherwise it will set too hard. It does set but liquefies during baking but if you overdo the caramelisation, it might not liquefy evenly. https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/...-panettone-pud |
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![]() "Sqwertz" > wrote in message ... > On Tue, 8 May 2018 19:21:52 -0600, graham wrote: > >> Try using leftover or stale panettone. >> I sometimes make a bread & butter pudding with a caramel base. > > Doesn't all pannetone come pre-staled and can't get any worse for up > to a year? At which time it starts forming mold. > > -sw Hey! You and I actually agree on something! |
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On 2018-05-09 12:07 AM, Sqwertz wrote:
> On Tue, 8 May 2018 19:21:52 -0600, graham wrote: > >> Try using leftover or stale panettone. >> I sometimes make a bread & butter pudding with a caramel base. > > Doesn't all pannetone come pre-staled and can't get any worse for up > to a year? Not the panettone that I've bought or been given and certainly not that which I have made. |
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On 2018-05-08 10:20 PM, Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Tue 08 May 2018 09:11:30p, graham told us... > >> On 2018-05-08 9:21 PM, Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>> On Tue 08 May 2018 06:21:52p, graham told us... >>> >>>> On 2018-05-08 5:02 PM, wrote: >>>>> On Tuesday, May 8, 2018 at 3:46:52 PM UTC-5, Wayne Boatwright >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> David excels at tea breads like banana walnut >>>>>> bread, cranberry-orange bread. On Sundays I often bake >>>>>> filled croissants, either with chocolate or fresh berries. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> A good banana nut bread is a thing of beauty! Such a simple >>>>> recipe but amazing how some people can screw up this delicious >>>>> concoction. Ever used croissants to make bread pudding?? WOW! >>>>> >>>>> >>>> Try using leftover or stale panettone. >>>> I sometimes make a bread & butter pudding with a caramel base. >>> >>> Hmm... I never thought aboaut it, but it sounds delicious. I >>> just happen to have several panettone in the pantry, so this is a >>> must try! >>> >> Here is the recipe. Don't over cook the caramel otherwise it will >> set too hard. It does set but liquefies during baking but if you >> overdo the caramelisation, it might not liquefy evenly. >> >> https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/...-panettone-pud >> > > Thanks, Graham! I'm looking forward to making this. > Imagine a bread & butter pudding version of a crème caramel, except not inverted. |
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Cheri, damn! I have always recognized your forger...until now. I readily admit that
It didn't sound like you. I am so sorry! Mea culpa, my bad, sorry, sorry....slap me With a limp French fry. :-() N. |
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Nancy2 wrote:
> > Cheri, I am replying to your remark that I am "too stupid" to quote what I am replying to. Did I > **** in your Cheerios? Nancy2. That was the fake Cheri that posts under her name now and then. I was suprised by "her" comment too and suspected... so I looked at full headers and saw it wasn't the real Cheri. |
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