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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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Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good
to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than Hunt's Manwhich? Thanks, Mark |
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![]() "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio ... > On Thu 15 Sep 2005 01:27:40p, Ferrante wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >> to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >> joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >> Hunt's Manwhich? >> >> Thanks, >> Mark >> > > Homemade is better and not much harder. > > Brown ground beef, onions, green and red peppers, combine mixture with > catsup, chili sauce, barbecue sauce (or any combination of the 3), a bit > of > chili powder, cumin...whatever flavors you like. > > -- > Wayne Boatwright *¿* > ____________________________________________ > > Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! And the doctor. What happened to your doctor? ![]() Pandora > |
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On Thu 15 Sep 2005 01:27:40p, Ferrante wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good > to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy > joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than > Hunt's Manwhich? > > Thanks, > Mark > Homemade is better and not much harder. Brown ground beef, onions, green and red peppers, combine mixture with catsup, chili sauce, barbecue sauce (or any combination of the 3), a bit of chili powder, cumin...whatever flavors you like. -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* ____________________________________________ Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! |
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![]() "Ferrante" > wrote in message ... > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good > to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy > joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than > Hunt's Manwhich? > > Thanks, > Mark Well....what result do you want? Can you match your description with some spices you're familiar with? "Doctor up" could include the addition of strawberry yogurt, but that's probably not the direction you're headed in. |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Thu 15 Sep 2005 01:27:40p, Ferrante wrote in rec.food.cooking: > > >>Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >>to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >>joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >>Hunt's Manwhich? >> >>Thanks, >>Mark >> > > > Homemade is better and not much harder. > > Brown ground beef, onions, green and red peppers, combine mixture with > catsup, chili sauce, barbecue sauce (or any combination of the 3), a bit of > chili powder, cumin...whatever flavors you like. > What he said. It is not much more than trivial to make something that will taste 100x better. |
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Doug Kanter wrote on 15 Sep 2005 in rec.food.cooking
> > "Ferrante" > wrote in message > ... > > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be > > good to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy > > sloppy joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better > > brand than Hunt's Manwhich? > > > > Thanks, > > Mark > > Well....what result do you want? Can you match your description with > some spices you're familiar with? "Doctor up" could include the > addition of strawberry yogurt, but that's probably not the direction > you're headed in. > > > Since we are talkin manufactured canned Manwich...coolwhip would be a better addition than yogurt. Garlic couldn't hurt. Possibly those canned french fried onions too. -- The eyes are the mirrors.... But the ears...Ah the ears. The ears keep the hat up. |
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![]() Ferrante wrote: > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good > to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy > joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than > Hunt's Manwhich? > > Thanks, > Mark I like to melt a slice of American or cheddar cheese on my Manwiches. |
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On Thu 15 Sep 2005 02:16:17p, Pandora wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> > "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio > ... >> On Thu 15 Sep 2005 01:27:40p, Ferrante wrote in rec.food.cooking: >> >>> Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >>> to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >>> joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >>> Hunt's Manwhich? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Mark >>> >> >> Homemade is better and not much harder. >> >> Brown ground beef, onions, green and red peppers, combine mixture with >> catsup, chili sauce, barbecue sauce (or any combination of the 3), a bit >> of chili powder, cumin...whatever flavors you like. >> >> -- >> Wayne Boatwright *¿* >> ____________________________________________ >> >> Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! > > And the doctor. What happened to your doctor? ![]() > Pandora The doctor died of food poisoning. -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* ____________________________________________ Okay, okay, I take it back! UnScrew you! |
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In article >,
Ferrante > wrote: >Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >Hunt's Manwhich? More garlic is good... Last time I used this sauce, I added a finely chopped clove or two. Plus some chipotle powder; I *love* chipotle powder. (Just in mine -- it would cause my wife's delicate Norweigian taste buds to burst into flames.) (Which is, coincidentally, the effect lutefisk has on me.) -- Tagon: "Where's your sense of adventure?" | Mike Van Pelt Kevyn: "It died under mysterious circumstances. | mvp at calweb.com My sense of self-preservation found the body, | KE6BVH but assures me it has an airtight alibi." (schlockmercenary.com) |
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![]() "Mr Libido Incognito" > wrote in message ... > Doug Kanter wrote on 15 Sep 2005 in rec.food.cooking > >> >> "Ferrante" > wrote in message >> ... >> > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be >> > good to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy >> > sloppy joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better >> > brand than Hunt's Manwhich? >> > >> > Thanks, >> > Mark >> >> Well....what result do you want? Can you match your description with >> some spices you're familiar with? "Doctor up" could include the >> addition of strawberry yogurt, but that's probably not the direction >> you're headed in. >> >> >> > > Since we are talkin manufactured canned Manwich...coolwhip would be a > better addition than yogurt. > > Garlic couldn't hurt. Possibly those canned french fried onions too. How about crushed nacho chips? :-) |
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Mr Libido Incognito wrote:
> > Since we are talkin manufactured canned Manwich...coolwhip would be a > better addition than yogurt. > > Garlic couldn't hurt. Possibly those canned french fried onions too. > How about adding some onion soup mix? |
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On Thu, 15 Sep 2005 16:27:40 -0400, Ferrante
> wrote: >Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >Hunt's Manwhich? If you must ... sliced onion and pickles. I like to use Manwich sauce in and atop a meatloaf. Tara |
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Sriracha to taste; Huy Fong brand is my preference.
I put this on nearly everything but ice cream. Although... |
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Doug Kanter wrote:
> "Mr Libido Incognito" > wrote in message > ... > > Doug Kanter wrote on 15 Sep 2005 in rec.food.cooking > > > >> > >> "Ferrante" > wrote in message > >> ... > >> > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be > >> > good to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some > easy > >> > sloppy joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a > better > >> > brand than Hunt's Manwhich? > >> > > >> > Thanks, > >> > Mark > > > > Garlic couldn't hurt. Possibly those canned french fried onions too. > > How about crushed nacho chips? :-) Insipid product (manwitch?) IMO, but i have become addicted to fennel seeds cooked with beef. Certainly could not hurt the aforementioned product. A bit of cumin would probly be nice as an alternative. But if i wanted something like that i would take a can of generic crushed tomatoes and 'doctor it up' with chopped green peppers, onion, garlic, caraway, fennel, cumin, celery etc. add the cooked ground beef in appropriate proportions let simmer for a bit and serve. When i make burgers i use the food processor to chop onions and add them and fennel seeds and garlic to the ground beef and cook the beef patties for burgers. --- JL |
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![]() Doug Kanter wrote: > "Ferrante" > wrote in message > ... > > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good > > to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy > > joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than > > Hunt's Manwhich? > > > > Thanks, > > Mark > > Well....what result do you want? Can you match your description with some > spices you're familiar with? "Doctor up" could include the addition of > strawberry yogurt, but that's probably not the direction you're headed in. Hey, that's not kosher! For the OP: To spice up Manwhich without too much extra hassle, I would probably add some sort of vegetation in the presentation (chopped onion, shredded lettuce, sliced avocado) and treat it as a sort of sloppy-joe-taco. Applecandy |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Thu 15 Sep 2005 01:27:40p, Ferrante wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >> to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >> joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand >> than Hunt's Manwhich? >> >> Thanks, >> Mark >> > > Homemade is better and not much harder. > > Brown ground beef, onions, green and red peppers, combine mixture with > catsup, chili sauce, barbecue sauce (or any combination of the 3), a > bit of chili powder, cumin...whatever flavors you like. That's what I do, too. I also add mushrooms and mustard plus some kind of hamburger relish. Katherine |
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In article >,
Ferrante > wrote: > Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good > to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy > joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than > Hunt's Manwhich? I'm with Wayne here. If you are going to take the time to add ingredients, just skip the Manwich. In my bachelor days, I was astounded to see my roomate cook spaghetti from a box mix. It had dry pasta, a can of sauce and a little packet of grated cheese. That wasn't so amazing, but he added all these other ingredients to it. He could have skipped the box mix entirely, and saved some money. Brown a pound of hamburger. Add chopped onions at the end of the browning. Chopped green pepper or celery would be good, if you like them. Add a can (8 oz) of tomato sauce, plus a teaspoon or two of chili powder. Cook until it is the consistency you want. Serve over toasted buns. I like to sprinkle my serving liberally with hot pepper sauce (Tabasco or such). |
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Dan Abel wrote:
> In article >, > Ferrante > wrote: > > >>Ok, I probably spelled Manwhich wrong, but anyway, what would be good >>to add to it besides hamburger? I am in the mood for some easy sloppy >>joes over yellow egg buns and some chips! Is there a better brand than >>Hunt's Manwhich? > > > > I'm with Wayne here. If you are going to take the time to add > ingredients, just skip the Manwich. In my bachelor days, I was > astounded to see my roomate cook spaghetti from a box mix. It had dry > pasta, a can of sauce and a little packet of grated cheese. That wasn't > so amazing, but he added all these other ingredients to it. He could > have skipped the box mix entirely, and saved some money. > > Brown a pound of hamburger. Add chopped onions at the end of the > browning. Chopped green pepper or celery would be good, if you like > them. Add a can (8 oz) of tomato sauce, plus a teaspoon or two of chili > powder. Cook until it is the consistency you want. Serve over toasted > buns. I like to sprinkle my serving liberally with hot pepper sauce > (Tabasco or such). Doncha gotta add a bunch of sugar... or ketchup? Otherwise it won't taste anything like the stuff in the can. I'd probably use onions, bell pepper, tomato *paste*, celery salt, a pinch of brown sugar, and a bunch of W'shire sauce. -Bob |
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zxcvbob > said:
> Doncha gotta add a bunch of sugar... or ketchup? Otherwise it won't > taste anything like the stuff in the can. > > I'd probably use onions, bell pepper, tomato *paste*, celery salt, a > pinch of brown sugar, and a bunch of W'shire sauce. And touch of cinnamon. Carol |
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![]() "Dan Abel" > wrote in message ... > > Brown a pound of hamburger. Add chopped onions at the end of the > browning. Chopped green pepper or celery would be good, if you like > them. Add a can (8 oz) of tomato sauce, plus a teaspoon or two of > chili > powder. Cook until it is the consistency you want. Serve over > toasted > buns. I like to sprinkle my serving liberally with hot pepper sauce > (Tabasco or such). I'm going to have to try this. I've tried several recipes in the past, trying to achieve the flavor of the Sloppy Joes my mom used to make. I think she used the McCormick seasoning powder in the envelope; I'd like that flavor, but without using the envelope. Most of the recipes I tried were too sweet-and-sour or too barbeque-saucey for me. I also like that chipotle powder idea...when in doubt, throw in a little chipotle!! Chris |
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"Chris" > said:
> I'm going to have to try this. I've tried several recipes in the past, > trying to achieve the flavor of the Sloppy Joes my mom used to make. I > think she used the McCormick seasoning powder in the envelope; I'd like > that flavor, but without using the envelope. Most of the recipes I > tried were too sweet-and-sour or too barbeque-saucey for me. > > I also like that chipotle powder idea...when in doubt, throw in a little > chipotle!! Seriously ... add a little cinnamon. I can taste it in the Manwich. Carol, who's making Manwiches for dinner tomorrow. |
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zxcvbob wrote:
> > > > > Doncha gotta add a bunch of sugar... or ketchup? Otherwise it won't > taste anything like the stuff in the can. > Almost, I think adding both 1/2 cup of sugar and 1/2 cup of salt would approximate the "space food" taste. > I'd probably use onions, bell pepper, tomato *paste*, celery salt, a > pinch of brown sugar, and a bunch of W'shire sauce. > > -Bob |
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