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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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Really, who kidnapped my knishes?
Last weekend I stopped at Yonah Shimmel and bought two lovely kasha knishes. When I got home, they were gone ![]() after I paid for them and that was the last stop before heading home, so I can only imagine someone lifted that bag out of the larger bag I was carrying them in (or they fell out). So far, no ransome note! Who stole my knishes? (sung to the tune of "Who stole the kishka?") http://www.brave.com/bo/lyrics/whostole.htm "Someone bring it back!" I'm going to have to listen to some Polkacide to cheer myself up: "In heaven there is no beer, that's why we drink it here..." Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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>"Who stole my knishes? (sung to the tune of "Who stole the kishka?")
Is that song anything like, "beans, beans good for your heart?" |
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On 8 Dec 2005 13:06:48 -0800, "kevnbro" > wrote:
>>"Who stole my knishes? (sung to the tune of "Who stole the kishka?") > > Is that song anything like, "beans, beans good for your heart?" > I don't think so. WSTK? is a polka ![]() Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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Michael "Dog3" Lonergan wrote:
> (Curly Sue) looking for trouble wrote in > : > > >>Really, who kidnapped my knishes? >> >>Last weekend I stopped at Yonah Shimmel and bought two lovely kasha >>knishes. When I got home, they were gone ![]() >>after I paid for them and that was the last stop before heading home, >>so I can only imagine someone lifted that bag out of the larger bag I >>was carrying them in (or they fell out). >> >>So far, no ransome note! >> >>Who stole my knishes? (sung to the tune of "Who stole the kishka?") >>http://www.brave.com/bo/lyrics/whostole.htm >>"Someone bring it back!" >> >>I'm going to have to listen to some Polkacide to cheer myself up: >>"In heaven there is no beer, that's why we drink it here..." >> >>Sue(tm) >>Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! >> > > > <burp> What knishes? > > Michael <- looking all innocent and stuff > After reading this I had to dig out my recipe. potatoes cooking and onions in frying pan atm. ![]() -- saerah "Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice." -Baruch Spinoza "There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened." -Douglas Adams |
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well then... roll out the barrel.. we'll have a barrel of fun!
(that is a polka, right?) |
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![]() Curly Sue wrote: > Who stole my knishes? (sung to the tune of "Who stole the kishka?") > http://www.brave.com/bo/lyrics/whostole.htm > "Someone bring it back!" > > I'm going to have to listen to some Polkacide to cheer myself up: > "In heaven there is no beer, that's why we drink it here..." I just copied this recipe from the Polkacide website: Blood Sausage aka "Kiszka" (as in "Who Stole the Kishka?"- the famous Walt Solek tune) >From _Great Sausage Recipes and Meat Curing_ by Rytek Kutas, kindly shared by Doug Allison from Decatur, GA on alt.music.polka Ingredients for 25 pounds 8 ozs salt 1 oz onion powder 1 oz coarse black pepper 0.25 oz marjoram 0.25 oz ground allspice 1 qt beef blood 1 oz Prague Powder #1 12.5 lbs pork snouts 5 lbs pork tongues 2.5 lbs pork skins 5 lbs buckwheat groats or barley (cooked weight) All meats must be cooked for at least 2 hours then cooled. Grind all the meats through a 3/16" grinder plate. ۬Place the buckwheat groats or barley in a container and cover with boiling water for at least 2 hours. Be sure you place a cover on the container to prevent too much heat from escaping. (You may cook either of these items until the volume is doubled.) Remove and let cool. After all the meats and groats have cooled, place in a mixer and add all the seasonings and blood, and mix well. Stuff into beef bungs or beef middles. Blood sausage is then cooked in 160 degrees F. water until the internal temperature reaches 152 degrees F. Remove from cooker and shower with cool water until the internal temperature is reduced to 110 degrees F.; place in cooler for at least 24 hours. NOTE: Since there always seems to be some breakage in the sausage business, you may add whatever broken sausage you have to the above formula. This blood sausage is spiced quite heavily and will cover up most other spices. You may add up to 4 lbs of broken sausage to a 25 lb formula. Be sure you account for the salt already in the broken sausage. Good eats- D.M. |
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