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25 new of 74 responses total.
eeyore
response 12 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 6 14:13 UTC 1995

ahh, but if you're gonna have corn, y might as well soak it in beutter!  :)
keesan
response 13 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 01:22 UTC 1998

We have been cooking up a pot of potatoes in the late evening, when it starts
to cool off, and eating it all the next day, to avoid having to cook when it
is hot.  Or cold rice or millet.  For breakfast, rather than heating the
kitchen with oatmeal.  I am getting tired of cold potatoes - any other ideas
of things that don't need cooking (or can be precooked), are locally grown
and organic, and vegan?  And not refined, or cooked by someone else.  This
is getting difficult, I am looking forward to the corn season, and the
tomatoes, beans, cucumbers, eggplant, peppers....  Last time I was at the
market still just lettuce, spinach and kale.  But we have raspberries and
strawberries ripe now, and some bush cherries. And mulberries, and black
raspberries, and juneberries, and wild amaranth and onion tops and chives (to
put in the beans along with last year's tomatoes).  When will the first corn
be ripe this year?
keesan
response 14 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 22:19 UTC 2002

This year the raspberries and juneberries are later, and there is still not
too much at the market.  Peas in the pod, beet greens, chinese cabbage, and
some greenhouse tomatoes and zucchini and cucumbers,  We are experimenting
with freezing mulberries, which are pretty fragile and bland but maybe we can
combinethem with dried apricots for tang.
jaklumen
response 15 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 09:52 UTC 2002

resp:12  nah-- what Scott is referring to in resp:11 is that if you 
pick maize like that, you'll be eating more sugar, less starch.  Much 
sweeter.

I enjoy cooking it in the husk over coals as opposed to boiling.  Full 
husk, mind you-- once the husk has been burnt, your cob is done.

resp:13  I've never seen wild amaranth.

re: gazpacho all over the place, I'd love to make it, but I understand 
it's expensive.  Anyway, I enjoy falfel in pita bread with tomato, 
cucumber, sprouts, and tiki sauce.

Anything about a BBQ is wonderful.  I'm looking forward to one on the 
12th for my gaming group.
cmcgee
response 16 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 10:59 UTC 2002

Gaspacho is cheap in the summer.
Layer in a blender or food processor, bottom to top:

Red onion               1 small
Garlic                  2 cloves
Green pepper            1 small
Cucumber, peeled        1 medium
Tomato                  3
Salt                    1 tsp (or less)
Pepper                  some
Chicken stock           1/4 C
Basil leaves            1 fresh

This grinds onions and garlic but leaves green pepper in larger
chunks.  Much better if left for 24 hours.
keesan
response 17 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 14:20 UTC 2002

None of the above ingredients other than basil are yet available at the
market except greenhouse grown tomato and cucumber.  I will wai, and continue
being inventive with peas and Chinese cabbage and very small homegrown
carrots.
cmcgee
response 18 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 14:21 UTC 2002

The Gaspacho recipe was given to me by Bob Parnes, an historic figure in
computing.  
cmcgee
response 19 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 14:25 UTC 2002

In all the grocery stores I use, the ingredients are available.  Most of them
are shipped from parts of the country that are further south than Michigan,
and are not greenhouse-grown vegetables.  Most of the ingredients are on sale
at reduced prices on a regular basis.  For everyone but Sindi they are cheap
and readily available.  
keesan
response 20 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 17:42 UTC 2002

Sindi prefers not to buy food that has been shipped from out of state when
there is local food available to buy.  We freeze or dry seasonal foods for
use in the winter, which helps keep the local farmers in business.
I got the impression that most food was shipped from California even in the
middle of the summer when it is available locally.
glenda
response 21 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 20:03 UTC 2002

Depends on where you shop.  We shop at Hiller's, Whole Foods, People's Food
Co-op and Merchant of Vino all of which buy local when available.
keesan
response 22 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 01:27 UTC 2002

So what is available there now that is locally grown?  Today we froze a lot
of snap peas that I got from someone who had sold all her other vegetables
and wanted to go home so marked the price down and thanked me for buying all
9 pints of them.  Three minutes microwave for a large covered glass bowl, dunk
in cold water for a few minutes, ziplock back, suck air out with a straw, seal
and freeze.  Last week it was mustard greens.
jaklumen
response 23 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 11:11 UTC 2002

resp:16  Whatabout the olive oil?  It's a must!
cmcgee
response 24 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 14:34 UTC 2002

I suppose you could substitute olive oil for the chicken stock.  Or just
add it to taste.
jaklumen
response 25 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 5 07:37 UTC 2002

Yeah.. because.. isn't gazpacho good ol' sopa fria espanola?  The 
Spaniards love olive oil.. my mother has a Spanish recipe book that 
called for American fruit salad to be drenched in it.
orinoco
response 26 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 5 21:14 UTC 2002

Hm.  I'd thought Gazpacho was more Latin American than Spanish.  Then again,
the recipe I've got uses olive oil too.  I don't suppose it matters much where
it's from, as long as it tastes good.
keesan
response 27 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 5 22:37 UTC 2002

Last night I made something sort of like enchiladas.  Microwaved onions
(refrigerated since this winter, sprouting), garlic (the good parts, local),
a few inches of a large parsnip (pulled this spring), a can of tomato sauce
(from Evelyn's Boutique, very local), some frozen tortillas from Kroger's (not
terribly local but they were in the freezer), dried tofu and dried shiitake
mushrooms (from a store north of the river, semilocal).  Cook the first three
ingredients, then add the rest, and fresh local snap peas at the end. 
Substitute for just about anything but the sauce maybe.  Good cold too.
slynne
response 28 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 7 21:19 UTC 2002

I love things that are good cold this time of year!
jaklumen
response 29 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 06:51 UTC 2002

Root beer, watermelon, ice cream, berry pies, lemonade..
slynne
response 30 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 19:23 UTC 2002

Yup, I love all of those things :) 

But, a lot of things one wouldnt think of as being good cold actually 
are very good cold. *shrug*

Things like baked chicken, cooked veggies, rice, etc. 
cmcgee
response 31 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 8 21:47 UTC 2002

Japanese and Korean cold summer noodles.
jaklumen
response 32 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 08:52 UTC 2002

Yep, baked chicken, cooked veggies (like broccoli with an Italian-style 
dressing like Cheese Fantastico!), and rice; but also pizza, pork n 
beans, baked beans...

I forgot potato salad, jello, green salad, sweet dinner rolls, pasta 
salad, etc.

resp:31  Not sure if I've ever had, but it sounds delicious..
void
response 33 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 18 01:05 UTC 2002

   Raw vegetables are good cold.  Most cooked vegetables are icky when
cold.
jaklumen
response 34 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 18 07:57 UTC 2002

heh, well, cold cooked broccoli with that Italian-style dressing 
(*like* Cheese Fantastico!) is great.  Not especially fond of it 
otherwise.
slynne
response 35 of 74: Mark Unseen   Jul 18 18:44 UTC 2002

Haha. I am weird that way. I dont really like raw broccoli (although I 
dont hate it so I'll eat it) but I like cooked broccoli that has gone 
cold. I like it better than hot cooked broccoli. 
lumen
response 36 of 74: Mark Unseen   Aug 29 22:19 UTC 2005

To revive an old item (to anyone that's reading):

We tried out a watermelon gazpacho recipe in last Friday's Life-- it was
fab!

I'll post it if anyone's interested.
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