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  #41 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hazels65
 
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Yes, same type of recipe. You can vary the fruits, and even add dried cherries
or cranberries for color. I cook mine on the stove and just let it simmer. I
also use much less sugar.

> I would have eaten your
>curried fruit. I love it! This is the recipe I use (is it similar to
>yours?):
>
>Cyndi
>
>
>
>Curried Fruit
>
>By: Southern Living
>Serving Size : 8
> 29 ounce canned sliced peaches, drained
> 29 ounce canned sliced pears, drained
> 20 ounce canned pineapple chunks, drained
> 15 ounce canned apricot halves, drained
> 3/4 cup packed brown sugar
>1/3 cup butter, melted
> 2 1/2 tablespoons curry powder
>
>Combine fruit in large casserole dish. Combine brown sugar and curry powder
>and spoon over fruit. (I mix it up a bit) Pour melted butter on top
>Bake at 350 degrees for 35 min or so.
>




  #42 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dawn
 
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Alex Rast wrote:

> Hear Hear! I can't imagine how such an abomination could possibly have been
> liked by so many people as to have made it Canonical on Thanksgiving.


I would have agreed with you until I made one from scratch one year.
Fresh green beans, mushrooms, cream.... It really did taste pretty good,
and I was prepared to hate it.

I think we've gotten so used to fresh produce year-round we've forgotten
that for a long time you only had vegetables in the winter if you had
put them up in the summer, and the taste of canned food wasn't so awful.



Dawn


  #43 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dave Smith
 
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Hazels65 wrote:

> If I see one more canned mushroom soup and green bean cassorole with those
> greasy onions on top I"m gonna puke, but in our family you wouldn't dare have a
> holiday without them.


My mother tried a green bean and mushroom soup dish on us when I was a kid. It was
just a few weeks after a visit to an uncles pig farm, and it looked too much like
pig slop for me to eat it.


  #44 (permalink)   Report Post  
Alex Rast
 
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at Tue, 30 Nov 2004 15:01:20 GMT in <1101823937.010541.231170
@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com>, (Zywicki) wrote :

>A bit of sugar draws the juice from strawberries, making them tender
>and yielding a lovely sauce.
>
>So it does have it's purpose, beyond sweetening.


However, that's only necessary for the harder, out-of-season strawberries,
at least in Washington State. The June season strawberries here don't need
the juice drawn from them, nor any tenderising. Even a slight mashing or
slicing yields tons of juice. And as for tender, these things literally
dissolve in the mouth. You don't have to chew at all - just suck on them
and they instantly collapse. That's part of my point. Adding sugar is a
tactic designed to cope with less-than-first-rate strawberries, but when
the strawberries really are as good as they can be, it's unnecessary in
every way.

at Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:28:43 GMT in
>,

(Dawn) wrote :

>> Hear Hear! I can't imagine how such an abomination could possibly have
>> been liked by so many people as to have made it Canonical on
>> Thanksgiving.

>
>I would have agreed with you until I made one from scratch one year.
>Fresh green beans, mushrooms, cream.... It really did taste pretty good,
>and I was prepared to hate it.


Undoubtedly that would be an improvement over stuff made from a can, if you
liked that sort of concoction. But it's not just the processed-food-use
that repulses me. The very *concept* of GBC sounds foul to me. Green beans
and cream? Ugh! Green beans and onions? Double Ugh! Cream and onions?
Triple Ugh!

Frankly, to me it sounds like a desperation tactic used by some housewife
as a stopgap measure, trying to use items on hand to cover an unplanned
situation (a planned dish was ruined, company unexpectedly dropped over,
some necessary ingredient for something else wasn't to be had, ran out of
money and needed to feed the family *something*).

--
Alex Rast

(remove d., .7, not, and .NOSPAM to reply)
  #49 (permalink)   Report Post  
Melba's Jammin'
 
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In article >,
(Alex Rast) wrote:
(snip)
> Undoubtedly that would be an improvement over stuff made from a can,
> if you liked that sort of concoction. But it's not just the
> processed-food-use that repulses me. The very *concept* of GBC sounds
> foul to me. Green beans and cream? Ugh! Green beans and onions?
> Double Ugh! Cream and onions? Triple Ugh!



How about this?
* Exported from MasterCook Mac *

Green Bean Soup

Recipe By : Posted to r.f.cooking by Barb Schaller 12-01-04
Serving Size : 6 Preparation Time :0:30
Categories : Soups

Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
1 # fresh green beans -- in 3/4² pieces
4 cups chicken stock
2 tsp. salt (I donıt use it)
1 clove garlic -- on a toothpick
1 tsp. vinegar
2 Tbsp. butter
1 small onion -- chopped fine
1 tsp. paprika
2 Tbsp. chopped parsley
2 Tbsp. flour
1/4 cup sour cream -- at room temperature

Cook beans, salt, vinegar and garlic in chicken stock about 15 minutes.
Remove from heat. Make roux from everything else except sour cream.
Dilute with 1 cup bean broth, then stir back into beans and broth.
Simmer 10 minutes until tender. Remove the garlic. Mix 2 tablespoons
soup into the sour cream then pour back into soup. Do not boil.
Correct the seasoning.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Per serving (excluding unknown items): 90 Calories; 6g Fat (65% calories
from fat); 2g Protein; 6g Carbohydrate; 14mg Cholesterol; 1477mg Sodium
Food Exchanges: 1/2 Vegetable; 1 Fat

NOTES : Source: Marge, 9/17/94. Pretty tasty! Not as sour as Momıs
Green Bean Soup --cream did not curdle. Ate the first batch I made all
by myself -- had to make more.

_____

> Frankly, to me it sounds like a desperation tactic used by some housewife
> as a stopgap measure, trying to use items on hand to cover an unplanned
> situation (a planned dish was ruined, company unexpectedly dropped over,
> some necessary ingredient for something else wasn't to be had, ran out of
> money and needed to feed the family *something*).


Nah, I think it was a move by the FrenchFriedOnionBits people to use
their product. A whole can of their product. Preferably a whole can
plus a little more so you'd have to buy two cans.
--
-Barb, <www.jamlady.eboard.com> Updated 11-29-04; Sam I Am!
birthday telling; Thanksgiving 2004; Fanfare, Maestro, please.
  #50 (permalink)   Report Post  
Melba's Jammin'
 
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In article >,
(Alex Rast) wrote:
(snip)
> Undoubtedly that would be an improvement over stuff made from a can,
> if you liked that sort of concoction. But it's not just the
> processed-food-use that repulses me. The very *concept* of GBC sounds
> foul to me. Green beans and cream? Ugh! Green beans and onions?
> Double Ugh! Cream and onions? Triple Ugh!



How about this?
* Exported from MasterCook Mac *

Green Bean Soup

Recipe By : Posted to r.f.cooking by Barb Schaller 12-01-04
Serving Size : 6 Preparation Time :0:30
Categories : Soups

Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
1 # fresh green beans -- in 3/4² pieces
4 cups chicken stock
2 tsp. salt (I donıt use it)
1 clove garlic -- on a toothpick
1 tsp. vinegar
2 Tbsp. butter
1 small onion -- chopped fine
1 tsp. paprika
2 Tbsp. chopped parsley
2 Tbsp. flour
1/4 cup sour cream -- at room temperature

Cook beans, salt, vinegar and garlic in chicken stock about 15 minutes.
Remove from heat. Make roux from everything else except sour cream.
Dilute with 1 cup bean broth, then stir back into beans and broth.
Simmer 10 minutes until tender. Remove the garlic. Mix 2 tablespoons
soup into the sour cream then pour back into soup. Do not boil.
Correct the seasoning.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Per serving (excluding unknown items): 90 Calories; 6g Fat (65% calories
from fat); 2g Protein; 6g Carbohydrate; 14mg Cholesterol; 1477mg Sodium
Food Exchanges: 1/2 Vegetable; 1 Fat

NOTES : Source: Marge, 9/17/94. Pretty tasty! Not as sour as Momıs
Green Bean Soup --cream did not curdle. Ate the first batch I made all
by myself -- had to make more.

_____

> Frankly, to me it sounds like a desperation tactic used by some housewife
> as a stopgap measure, trying to use items on hand to cover an unplanned
> situation (a planned dish was ruined, company unexpectedly dropped over,
> some necessary ingredient for something else wasn't to be had, ran out of
> money and needed to feed the family *something*).


Nah, I think it was a move by the FrenchFriedOnionBits people to use
their product. A whole can of their product. Preferably a whole can
plus a little more so you'd have to buy two cans.
--
-Barb, <www.jamlady.eboard.com> Updated 11-29-04; Sam I Am!
birthday telling; Thanksgiving 2004; Fanfare, Maestro, please.


  #51 (permalink)   Report Post  
Marge
 
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Thunder, we love the cranberry sauce made basically the way the bag
instructs. I don't really understand why people don't like cranberry
sauce. I wouldn't eat it as a kid (from the can), but then I wouldn't
eat onions and tomatoes either! This year I grabbed a couple of extra
bags and threw them in the freezer, so if we get the urge to have cs
later in the year, we can.

I make a sweet potato casserole on Thanksgiving, with a little orange
juice and sugar, topped with a pecan/flour/sugar mixture. It's not
horrific at all; got the recipe from Bon Appetit several years ago. I
can see if there's too much sugar it could easily get overwhelming. I
think it goes really well with stuffing and turkey. Thanksgiving is
one of those meals that always seems to have such a mishmash of flavors
and types of foods.

One year I picked plums off the tree in my dad's backyard and had them
out in an appetizer dish. They stayed untouched (except by me). Funny
how people get in their minds that if it's not store bought, it must be
"dirty" or "unedible."

Alex, we love strawberries. I can imagine that scene very easily.
Americans are so used to drinking soda, eating sweet cereals, using
artificial sweeteners (which dulls your senses to how sweet foods are
naturally). We eat tons of fresh fruit in our house. I love the white
peaches that come out in the summer. One year I made a pie with them,
and just thought adding sugar took away from how good they are. I just
eat the peaches now.

  #52 (permalink)   Report Post  
Joelle
 
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>> > And, who thought it would be
>> >a good idea to melt very sweet marshmellows (not my first food
>> >choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar sweetened, sweet potatoes?


They had an interview with Julia Childs on the morning show (obviously an old
one) and she was talking about how she liked the traditional dishes at
Thanksgiving. "I even like marshmellows on sweet potatoes!" she confessed.

Joelle
The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St
Augustine
Joelle
  #53 (permalink)   Report Post  
Joelle
 
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>> > And, who thought it would be
>> >a good idea to melt very sweet marshmellows (not my first food
>> >choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar sweetened, sweet potatoes?


They had an interview with Julia Childs on the morning show (obviously an old
one) and she was talking about how she liked the traditional dishes at
Thanksgiving. "I even like marshmellows on sweet potatoes!" she confessed.

Joelle
The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St
Augustine
Joelle
  #54 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hazels65
 
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OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.

A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if it's a
Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her family
scarfs it up.

She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned kind),
adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is lavishly
topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and baked
until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.

Anyone ever try this?

Henrietta
  #55 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hazels65
 
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OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.

A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if it's a
Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her family
scarfs it up.

She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned kind),
adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is lavishly
topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and baked
until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.

Anyone ever try this?

Henrietta


  #60 (permalink)   Report Post  
Rick & Cyndi
 
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"Hazels65" > wrote in message
...
> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>
> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
> it's a
> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
> family
> scarfs it up.
>
> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
> kind),
> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
> lavishly
> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
> baked
> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>
> Anyone ever try this?
>
> Henrietta

=================

Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some condensed
soup in it as well... .

Cyndi




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Rick & Cyndi
 
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"Hazels65" > wrote in message
...
> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>
> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
> it's a
> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
> family
> scarfs it up.
>
> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
> kind),
> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
> lavishly
> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
> baked
> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>
> Anyone ever try this?
>
> Henrietta

=================

Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some condensed
soup in it as well... .

Cyndi


  #62 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheryl Rosen
 
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in article , Melba's
Jammin' at
wrote on 12/1/04 9:51 AM:

> In article >,
>
(Alex Rast) wrote:
>
>>> And, who thought it would be
>>> a good idea to melt very sweet marshmellows (not my first food
>>> choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar sweetened, sweet potatoes?

>>
>> Again, hear hear! What's so wrong about perfectly good sweet potatoes
>> by themselves? Must they be made sweet to the point of sickliness?
>> Gee, while we're at it, why not soak the potatoes in sugar-water
>> until they can't absorb any more?

>
> I remember the late Peg Bracken years ago writing that "they've repealed
> the law that says you have to have marshmallows with sweet potatoes."
> <grin>.


My Mom's version of Thanksgiving dinner was perfectly roasted turkey, with
baked sweet potatoes, buttered peas, and dressing of some sort. In other
words, SIMPLY PREPARED side dishes!!!! Plus canned jellied cranberry sauce,
served in slices in an oval dish, and those little brown and serve dinner
rolls, she would get the package that had half white and half whole wheat
rolls.

There were some years when my sister made Thanksgiving that we had canned
yams cooked with pineapple and marshmallows, but there were always baked
sweets on the table, too, b/c Mom didn't really have a sweet tooth and loved
baked sweets with butter. Frankly, to this day, that's my preference for
sweet potatoes. I don't need the marshmallows.

Stove Top stuffing, once it became available, became the norm and we all
liked it a lot b/c it tasted like we thought stuffing should taste, but
prior to that, she would use either dried cubes or I vividly remember
ripping apart unsliced white bread one year, I was tiny, 4 or 5, maybe. And
there was a lot of dressing, and some went into the bird, but mostly it was
baked in corningware. And no one wanted from the bird, we all wanted the
stuff that was baked separately. And there was no "weird stuff" in Mom's
stuffing, like giblets, or chestnuts. It was just onions, mushroom slices
and celery, maybe an apple....the bread crumbs or bread, all moistened with
broth. (I do remember her cooking the neck and disgusting stuff from inside
the bird to make the broth for the dressing the night before thanksgiving.)
That's all that went into her stuffing. And we loved it.

That's probably why she went the Stove Top route. It was what we liked.

To this day, my sister, brother and I all prefer Stove Top to any of this
other "Gilded lily" stuff people make with chestnuts, meat, etc.

And we never had green bean casserole growing up.
That was for the "white bread" waspy neighbors, according to my mom.

In fact, I never had green bean casserole until I was an adult--I had it at
a friend's open house Holiday party. I took a small forkful to taste, just
out of curiosity, I had heard so much about it! And I hate to admit it, but
I like it. It's rather heavy, and to me, it goes with a simple meal, not a
feast. I surely wouldn't want to eat it with any regularity, but it's not a
bad thing to eat once or twice a year.

  #63 (permalink)   Report Post  
Sheryl Rosen
 
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in article , Melba's
Jammin' at
wrote on 12/1/04 9:51 AM:

> In article >,
>
(Alex Rast) wrote:
>
>>> And, who thought it would be
>>> a good idea to melt very sweet marshmellows (not my first food
>>> choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar sweetened, sweet potatoes?

>>
>> Again, hear hear! What's so wrong about perfectly good sweet potatoes
>> by themselves? Must they be made sweet to the point of sickliness?
>> Gee, while we're at it, why not soak the potatoes in sugar-water
>> until they can't absorb any more?

>
> I remember the late Peg Bracken years ago writing that "they've repealed
> the law that says you have to have marshmallows with sweet potatoes."
> <grin>.


My Mom's version of Thanksgiving dinner was perfectly roasted turkey, with
baked sweet potatoes, buttered peas, and dressing of some sort. In other
words, SIMPLY PREPARED side dishes!!!! Plus canned jellied cranberry sauce,
served in slices in an oval dish, and those little brown and serve dinner
rolls, she would get the package that had half white and half whole wheat
rolls.

There were some years when my sister made Thanksgiving that we had canned
yams cooked with pineapple and marshmallows, but there were always baked
sweets on the table, too, b/c Mom didn't really have a sweet tooth and loved
baked sweets with butter. Frankly, to this day, that's my preference for
sweet potatoes. I don't need the marshmallows.

Stove Top stuffing, once it became available, became the norm and we all
liked it a lot b/c it tasted like we thought stuffing should taste, but
prior to that, she would use either dried cubes or I vividly remember
ripping apart unsliced white bread one year, I was tiny, 4 or 5, maybe. And
there was a lot of dressing, and some went into the bird, but mostly it was
baked in corningware. And no one wanted from the bird, we all wanted the
stuff that was baked separately. And there was no "weird stuff" in Mom's
stuffing, like giblets, or chestnuts. It was just onions, mushroom slices
and celery, maybe an apple....the bread crumbs or bread, all moistened with
broth. (I do remember her cooking the neck and disgusting stuff from inside
the bird to make the broth for the dressing the night before thanksgiving.)
That's all that went into her stuffing. And we loved it.

That's probably why she went the Stove Top route. It was what we liked.

To this day, my sister, brother and I all prefer Stove Top to any of this
other "Gilded lily" stuff people make with chestnuts, meat, etc.

And we never had green bean casserole growing up.
That was for the "white bread" waspy neighbors, according to my mom.

In fact, I never had green bean casserole until I was an adult--I had it at
a friend's open house Holiday party. I took a small forkful to taste, just
out of curiosity, I had heard so much about it! And I hate to admit it, but
I like it. It's rather heavy, and to me, it goes with a simple meal, not a
feast. I surely wouldn't want to eat it with any regularity, but it's not a
bad thing to eat once or twice a year.

  #64 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hazels65
 
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>> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>>
>> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
>> it's a
>> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
>> family
>> scarfs it up.
>>
>> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
>> kind),
>> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
>> lavishly
>> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
>> baked
>> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>>
>> Anyone ever try this?
>>
>> Henrietta

>=================
>
>Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some condensed
>soup in it as well... .
>
>Cyndi


Wow. I just couldn't get past the extremely sweet topping that tasted like
cereal at breakfast.

Henrietta
  #65 (permalink)   Report Post  
Hazels65
 
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>> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>>
>> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
>> it's a
>> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
>> family
>> scarfs it up.
>>
>> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
>> kind),
>> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
>> lavishly
>> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
>> baked
>> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>>
>> Anyone ever try this?
>>
>> Henrietta

>=================
>
>Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some condensed
>soup in it as well... .
>
>Cyndi


Wow. I just couldn't get past the extremely sweet topping that tasted like
cereal at breakfast.

Henrietta


  #68 (permalink)   Report Post  
Melissa Houle
 
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(Hazels65) wrote in message >...
> If I see one more canned mushroom soup and green bean cassorole with those
> greasy onions on top I"m gonna puke, but in our family you wouldn't dare have a
> holiday without them. And, who thought it would be a good idea to melt very
> sweet marshmellows (not my first food choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar
> sweetened, sweet potatoes? OK, OK, I know everyone loves all those horrible
> sweet dishes with meats. What happened to that old adage among gourmets that
> one didn't serve sweet with meat? I learned that one about 50 years ago,
> though I do like a sweet-tart fruit sauce with wine.


Myself, I love a plain baked sweet potato with just butter, and a bit
of salt and pepper with it. Marshmallows--ycch! That definitely
makes them too sicky sweet. My mother though does make a very good
dish with sliced sweet potatoes with orange juice and a bit of maple
syrup, all of which are baked together in the oven as a kind of
casserole. It may sound odd, but it's really delicious, and not too
sweet at all. (No, I don't have the recipe handy right now.) She
started making it so that my vegetarian brother would have one more
dish on the table that he'd eat, and which was innocent of onions and
garlic. I never learned any real 'rule' about not serving sweets with
meat, but it very rarely happened in my family, so I don't do it as it
seems wrong to me. However, some meats, like ham, go very well with
fruit. And turkey just isn't complete for me without cranberry sauce.

>
> However, I did serve one condiment that I love that NOBODY would even try,
> except for a dear old friend who choked down a bite just to make me feel
> better. It goes well with ham. Chunky fruits cooked in butter and flavored
> with curry.


If I had been there, I'd at least have tried them. It sounds like
something I'd like, especially when paired with ham, which I also
love.
>
> Well, there was that time that the oyster stuffing turned gray, but let's not
> go there.
>
> Henrietta


The only time I had oysters in stuffing, it made the entire dish of
stuffing taste fishy. I like oysters--but in their own right, and
very fresh, or in an oyster stew. They don't make a happy marriage
with turkey, but that's just my taste buds talking. =o)

Melissa
  #69 (permalink)   Report Post  
Melissa Houle
 
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(Hazels65) wrote in message >...
> If I see one more canned mushroom soup and green bean cassorole with those
> greasy onions on top I"m gonna puke, but in our family you wouldn't dare have a
> holiday without them. And, who thought it would be a good idea to melt very
> sweet marshmellows (not my first food choice, anyway), on top of brown-sugar
> sweetened, sweet potatoes? OK, OK, I know everyone loves all those horrible
> sweet dishes with meats. What happened to that old adage among gourmets that
> one didn't serve sweet with meat? I learned that one about 50 years ago,
> though I do like a sweet-tart fruit sauce with wine.


Myself, I love a plain baked sweet potato with just butter, and a bit
of salt and pepper with it. Marshmallows--ycch! That definitely
makes them too sicky sweet. My mother though does make a very good
dish with sliced sweet potatoes with orange juice and a bit of maple
syrup, all of which are baked together in the oven as a kind of
casserole. It may sound odd, but it's really delicious, and not too
sweet at all. (No, I don't have the recipe handy right now.) She
started making it so that my vegetarian brother would have one more
dish on the table that he'd eat, and which was innocent of onions and
garlic. I never learned any real 'rule' about not serving sweets with
meat, but it very rarely happened in my family, so I don't do it as it
seems wrong to me. However, some meats, like ham, go very well with
fruit. And turkey just isn't complete for me without cranberry sauce.

>
> However, I did serve one condiment that I love that NOBODY would even try,
> except for a dear old friend who choked down a bite just to make me feel
> better. It goes well with ham. Chunky fruits cooked in butter and flavored
> with curry.


If I had been there, I'd at least have tried them. It sounds like
something I'd like, especially when paired with ham, which I also
love.
>
> Well, there was that time that the oyster stuffing turned gray, but let's not
> go there.
>
> Henrietta


The only time I had oysters in stuffing, it made the entire dish of
stuffing taste fishy. I like oysters--but in their own right, and
very fresh, or in an oyster stew. They don't make a happy marriage
with turkey, but that's just my taste buds talking. =o)

Melissa
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Rick & Cyndi
 
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"Hazels65" > wrote in message
...
>>> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>>>
>>> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
>>> it's a
>>> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
>>> family
>>> scarfs it up.
>>>
>>> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
>>> kind),
>>> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
>>> lavishly
>>> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
>>> baked
>>> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>>>
>>> Anyone ever try this?
>>>
>>> Henrietta

>>=================
>>
>>Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some
>>condensed
>>soup in it as well... .
>>
>>Cyndi

>
> Wow. I just couldn't get past the extremely sweet topping that tasted
> like
> cereal at breakfast.
>
> Henrietta

===========

Ohhhhhhh... oops, no. The one I had was made with Corn Flakes (basically
unsweetened Frosted Flakes). My bad. LOL

Cyndi




  #71 (permalink)   Report Post  
Rick & Cyndi
 
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"Hazels65" > wrote in message
...
>>> OK, OK, I got a gross one for ya.
>>>
>>> A friend from Canada who now lives in the US makes this; I'm not sure if
>>> it's a
>>> Canadian thing or something else. I find it absolutely dreadful, but her
>>> family
>>> scarfs it up.
>>>
>>> She takes frozen potato hash-browns (the big chunky, uncooked, unbrowned
>>> kind),
>>> adds tons of shredded cheese, seasons with salt, pepper. Then it is
>>> lavishly
>>> topped with (gag), frosted flakes (cereal) mixed with melted butter and
>>> baked
>>> until the potatoes are done and the topping crisp.
>>>
>>> Anyone ever try this?
>>>
>>> Henrietta

>>=================
>>
>>Yep. And it's surprisingly good. I think the one I ate had some
>>condensed
>>soup in it as well... .
>>
>>Cyndi

>
> Wow. I just couldn't get past the extremely sweet topping that tasted
> like
> cereal at breakfast.
>
> Henrietta

===========

Ohhhhhhh... oops, no. The one I had was made with Corn Flakes (basically
unsweetened Frosted Flakes). My bad. LOL

Cyndi


  #72 (permalink)   Report Post  
Marge
 
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Henrietta, the vanilla sounds good. I'll have to try that with some
fruit.

Sheryl, your t-day dinner sounds a lot like ours. But my mom did like
to add the giblets to the stuffing -- us kids would never eat it
because of that! ha.

And one time my parents made my brother sit at the table until he
finished his sweet potatoes so he developed a passionate hatred of
them. We stopped having them at any dinner because of that. I
"rediscovered" them again as an adult, now I love them, usually without
too much extra, maybe a little maple syrup, salt and pepper.

We never had that green bean casserole either. For some reason canned
peas were the big thing for us.

I guess when you have 3 picky kids, the dishes can't get too fancy,
haha.

  #73 (permalink)   Report Post  
Marge
 
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Henrietta, the vanilla sounds good. I'll have to try that with some
fruit.

Sheryl, your t-day dinner sounds a lot like ours. But my mom did like
to add the giblets to the stuffing -- us kids would never eat it
because of that! ha.

And one time my parents made my brother sit at the table until he
finished his sweet potatoes so he developed a passionate hatred of
them. We stopped having them at any dinner because of that. I
"rediscovered" them again as an adult, now I love them, usually without
too much extra, maybe a little maple syrup, salt and pepper.

We never had that green bean casserole either. For some reason canned
peas were the big thing for us.

I guess when you have 3 picky kids, the dishes can't get too fancy,
haha.

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