You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   186-210 
 211-235   236-260   261-285   286-310   311-335   336-360   361-385   386-410   411-435 
 436-460   461-485   486-494        
 
Author Message
25 new of 494 responses total.
eeyore
response 211 of 494: Mark Unseen   Feb 28 06:10 UTC 2001

You know that you are more than welcome to. :)

Sooo....when was the next time you guys are going to be around.....? :)
abc
response 212 of 494: Mark Unseen   Mar 1 01:26 UTC 2001

Yahoo! Maps claims a 10 hour drive.  Uh...I'll have to get back to you on
that.
eeyore
response 213 of 494: Mark Unseen   Mar 1 06:06 UTC 2001

Remind me...one of these days when I'm not feeling lazy, I'll post a recipe
for the lasagna....it's kinda easy, and super nummy.
danr
response 214 of 494: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 22:01 UTC 2001

Glad to hear the snickerdoodles came out well, Mary.

I know this is a bit late, but someone asked for a cabbage recipe, so 
here is yet another recipe from the yet-unpublished Romanchik Family 
Slovak Cookbook.

Romanchik's Halusky

Rhere are many ways to make halusky, which is a small dumpling. In the 
Romanchik family, we always made halusky with potatoes and almost 
always ate them with fried cabbage.  When you fry cabbage in butter or 
margarine, its natural sweet
ness comes out.

My grandmother liked halusky. She would often cook a huge pot of 
halusky and bring it over to our house. She would always say it was 
because she couldn't eat the whole pot herself.  While this was true, 
we knew she did it mainly because she wanted to see us.

Dumplings
------------------------
2 medium potatoes
1 egg
1 teaspoon salt
about 2 cups flour

Fried Cabbage
-----------------------
1 small cabbage
1 small onion
butter or margarine

To make the dumplings, first peel and dice the potatoes. Put the 
potatoes into the blender with about 3 ounces of water. Blend on grate 
speed for only a second or two. Don't puree the potatoes; you want them 
to be a little chunky.

Pour into a bowl and quickly break the egg into the bowl. This keeps 
the potatoes from turning dark. Add flour and mix to make a stiff dough.

In a large pot, boil two or three quarts of water. Drop small spoonfuls 
of the dough into the boiling water. Boil the dough for eight to ten 
minutes, dump into  a colander, and rinse with cold water.

NOTE: If you make this dish often, you might want to invest in a 
spaetzle maker. My grandmother bought one for my sister and me, and 
believe me, with this gadget, you can make a potful of halusky very 
quickly. Another nice thing about the spaetzle maker is 
that the size of the halusky is very consistent.

To make the fried cabbage, you simply dice the onion and saut<\i> in 
butter or margarine in a large pot. Next, chop the cabbage and add to 
the pot. Cover the pot and fry the cabbage slowly for about 20 minutes. 
Combine the cabbage and dumplings and add 1/3 
cup browned butter or margarine. Add salt and pepper to taste.

My grandmother would also eat halusky with cottage cheese instead of 
cabbage. To serve it this way, crumble the cottage cheese onto the 
dumplings and stir in 1/3 cup browned butter or margarine.

In Slovakia, they also serve halusky with a goat cheese, called 
bryndze, and bacon. Unfortunately, here in the United States, this goat 
cheese can be hard to find. Slovaks in the U.S. probably used cottage 
cheese as a substitute for bryndze.
mary
response 215 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 13:30 UTC 2001

By the way, Dan, I entered your Snickerdoodle recipe in our orchestra's
contest for best cookie.  It came in second and only missed first by two
votes.  The winning cookie had everything but the kitchen sink thrown in. 
Except for nuts.  Our conductor goes into anaphalactic shock if he eats
nut products.  Such an episode is what landed him in ER and got the whole
LSO thing going. 

danr
response 216 of 494: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 03:04 UTC 2001

Interesting story about the origins of LSO. Too bad the snickerdoodle 
didn't win. It should have gotten extra points for simplicity. I was 
thinking of making some today, in fact. I'll have to make some tomorrow 
instead.
keesan
response 217 of 494: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 03:49 UTC 2001

We have tried various combinations of disabling all but the hard drive
controller on the controller card and disabling the hard drive controller
onboard, and having floppy and hard drives and sound cards unplugged, and
cannot get all the pieces to work together and Bill wants to get some sleep
and will take home his computer without a sound card in it.  Any ideas on why
it looks at the B drive for 60 sec and then times out (I cannot get answers
to what happens next) would be appreciated.  There is a BIOS extension card
that is needed or it will not recognize the 1.2 G C: drive.  THere is a 81M
D: drive.  Video, sound, CD-ROM plugged into the secondary onboard IDE
controller rather than the sound card (since it won't boot with the sound card
plugged in).  A modem.  IRQs the same as on two other computers.  Floppy
drives A: (boots from this with sound card out), B: - needs to have this in
or it will not boot at all - cannot unplug it or tell BIOS it is not there.
I think this card worked outside of this computer, with one hard drive and
two floppy drives.  I don't know if we tried it with one hard drive in this
computer.  We did nto try it before with a sound card or CD-ROM drive.

Anyone interested in coming over some time to help?  

"It just kept getting worse and worse".  He took it home in a nonbooting
condition.  The board worked with another hard drive and floppy drive (not
from this computer).  We will try again with one component added at a time.
i
response 218 of 494: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 13:58 UTC 2001

(You might have wanted to post that in another cf, keesan.)
keesan
response 219 of 494: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 17:03 UTC 2001

Oops!  I certainly did.  Walter, want to help us with a 486 to pentium
conversion?  Do you think moving the previous post to some other place would
actually get us any useful help?  If so, I will figure out how to do so.
i
response 220 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jan 5 19:01 UTC 2002

Plainish Beef Arm Pot Roast
Food & Drug Mart was selling nice-looking about-brick-size hunks for
$1.49/#, so i decided to try something new.  Browned it in a dutch oven
with a bit of olive oil, salt, & pepper, then threw in a chopped-up big
yellow onion & got that a bit cooked, then added water & simmered it.
After a couple hours i pulled off the big/obvious fat with a fork (threw 
away) and added more water.  Couple more hours and i ate some (tender &
yummy if needing a bit more salt & pepper).

Now i've got a dutch oven in the fridge with ~1.5# of pot roast & ~24 oz.
of yummy juices...  Eat it plain for a few meals with bread to get the
juices?  Back to the stove & add potatoes, etc. to dress it up?  



keesan
response 221 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 01:48 UTC 2002

My mother made pot roast in a pressure cooker.  That is the only thing she
knew to make in a pressure cooker.  It was much faster and tasted the same.
We have extra cookers if you want to try one.
scott
response 222 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 13:53 UTC 2002

I'd be interested in pressure cooker, Sindi.
keesan
response 223 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 18:51 UTC 2002

Our extras are aluminum only, is that okay with you?
We cook all our beans and grains in them, also potatoes.  Bring up to 15
pounds (or 5 for potatoes in water) and turn off.  The residual heat on the
electric burner cooks things the rest of the way.
jmsaul
response 224 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 16 15:27 UTC 2002

How old are your spare cookers?  The new designs are supposed to be a lot
safer than older ones.
keesan
response 225 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 16 16:26 UTC 2002

The unsafe ones were pre 1950.  Ours all have safety features.  (The little
rubber stopper is designed to blow out if the pressure gets too high).  There
were lots of companies getting into the pressure canning act during WWII
(victory gardens) and they did not all design well.  Presto has been making
good cookers for fifty years now and that is what we have.
jmsaul
response 226 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 16 16:39 UTC 2002

Glad to hear it.  ;-)
jaklumen
response 227 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 17 01:31 UTC 2002

Presto pressure cookers rock, end of story.  What my folks have, what 
my friend who is my parent's age uses, and gave to us.  Very reliable.
It's been unbeatable for cooking small meats.
carson
response 228 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 21:52 UTC 2002

(this is a recipe for a blueberry pasty.  most of you who are familiar with
pasties know them as the meat pie carried by immigrant miners during the 
early days.  recently, a business in Marquette sponsored a contest to
develop blueberry pasties of both the sweet and savory variety, not 
necessarily with meat.  this was the winner of the sweet division.)

---

Carson's Blueberry Pasty

Pastry:

1¼ cup flour, chilled                   2 tbsp shortening, chilled, diced
¼ tsp salt                              8 tbsp butter, chilled, diced
¼ tsp cinnamon                          ice water (about 5 tbsp.)


Combine flour and salt in food processor.  Add shortening and butter and
pulse until crumbly.  Add ice water, a tablespoon at a time, pulsing
between additions, until dough holds together when pinched between
fingers.  Shape dough into four balls, then flatten into discs and
refrigerate.


Filling:

2 cups blueberries                      ¼ cup water
½ cup sugar                             1 tsp lemon peel
½ tsp cinnamon                          ¼ tsp allspice
cream cheese, diced (optional)          Granny Smith apple, diced (optional)
golden raisins (optional)

Combine blueberries, water, sugar, lemon peel, cinnamon, and allspice in
saucepan.  Bring to a boil, then boil and stir for about 8 minutes.  Set
aside to cool. 

Preheat oven to 375º.  Roll out pastry discs into circles about 1/8"
thick.  Add 2 or 3 tbsp of blueberry filling to center, along with cream
cheese, apple, and raisins, as desired.  Fold pastry over topping.  Seal
and crimp, then pierce with fork.  Place pasties on cookie sheet, then
place in oven.  Bake at 375º for 30-40 minutes, or until golden brown.
Remove from oven and serve hot.

jmsaul
response 229 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 23:53 UTC 2002

That looks really good.  I'm saving this one.
jaklumen
response 230 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 04:18 UTC 2002

Thanks, Carson =)  I chose to save this one as well, since I'd like to 
see if it's as delicious as it looks =)
carson
response 231 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 04:26 UTC 2002

(I wish I could say how well it tastes, but, honestly, I haven't tried it
yet!  I can vouch for the filling.  however, I was in such a rush to get
the pasties in by deadline that I didn't have time to taste-test the 
finished product.)
cmcgee
response 232 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 14:20 UTC 2002

Do you have the savory winner?  That sounds intriguing as well.
slynne
response 233 of 494: Mark Unseen   Jul 30 16:33 UTC 2002

I will totally have to try to make these someday. 
orinoco
response 234 of 494: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 05:42 UTC 2002

Er, how do you dice cream cheese?

These do sound pretty tasty, though.
valerie
response 235 of 494: Mark Unseen   Oct 12 03:20 UTC 2002

Carson, if you still have the blueberry pasty recipe, could you repost it?
On my screen, the version you posted has unprintable characters for some of
the measurements.  For example it says <BD> cup sugar and <BC> cup water.
I'm guessing you cut-and-pasted it from a program that used a different
character set.
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   186-210 
 211-235   236-260   261-285   286-310   311-335   336-360   361-385   386-410   411-435 
 436-460   461-485   486-494        
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss