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25 new of 85 responses total.
popcorn
response 20 of 85: Mark Unseen   Jul 17 12:19 UTC 1994

I bought _The Back of the Box Gourmet_ (mentioned in #18) on Friday.
Neat book!  It seems like the kind of book someone could collect up
really easily and publish it solely as a moneymaking venture, which
would be fine, but actually the author seems to regard these recipes
as beloved bits of Americana.  He's written an intro for each recipe
that talks a bit about the history of the recipe or of the company that
makes the product.  Did you know Hellman's mayonaise started at a
Mr. Hellman's delicatessen in NYC many years ago?  Their mayo was so
popular that people used to come by and buy it instead of trying to
make their own at home.  Eventually, the mayo became the whole business.
This is described in the intro to a "mayonaise cake" recipe.  The idea
of a mayonaise cake sounds Really Gross until you think about the
ingredients in mayonaise: eggs, oil, and lemon juice, all of which are
normal cake ingredients.  The cookbook says the final cake doesn't
taste at all mayonaise-y, just moist.

I can't wait to make some mock apple pie!  There isn't enough lead time
to do it for today's Grex birthday picnic, but one o' these days I'll
make some and bring it to a Grex event....  :)
arwen
response 21 of 85: Mark Unseen   Jul 18 22:28 UTC 1994

YUM!  I haven't had mayonnaise cake in forever.  Try it...It is really
terrific.  Hi popcorn!
arabella
response 22 of 85: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 12:42 UTC 1994

There is now a "Back of the Box, II" cookbook out.  I haven't
purchased it, but I browsed it in the bookstore.  Looks like fun,
but I'm trying to keep my cookbook purchases to a minimum for awhile.


survivor
response 23 of 85: Mark Unseen   Feb 11 03:51 UTC 1995

I saw a bread cookbook somewhere that had recipes that were made with 
malt (sprouted grain) instead of sugar or honey. But I forget what it was
called or who wrote it.  Has anyone seen this that could tell me what it
is?
        I am drastically changing my diet to deal with hypoglycemia, and 
I want to make my  own bread anyway.  This sounds really good, but when 
I saw it, I didn't have the motivation I have now to buy it. :( 
Thanks for any help you can give me.

popcorn
response 24 of 85: Mark Unseen   Feb 12 14:25 UTC 1995

It might have been the Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book.  Or book 4 of the
Donna German series of breadmaker cookbooks.  Hm.

By the way (you may already know this) when you bake bread, the yeast
eats the sugar in order to form the carbon dioxide bubbles that make the
bread rise.  So, just because you're eating a loaf of bread that started
with, say, two tablespoons of sweetener doesn't mean that you're actually
eating a whole two tablespoons of sweetener in the finished loaf.

Also (and this is also probably a topic you know more about than me, and I
could well be wrong here) I've read that sweetener is sweetener -- it's
still basically one form of sugar or another.  So substituting another
sweetener for white sugar isn't the same as avoiding sugar.  But I might be
remembering wrong, or for hypoglycemia it might be helpful to use a type
of sweetener that takes longer to digest.  I don't know.  I'd be curious to
learn more.

Good luck with the radical diet change -- those are never easy!!
raytlee
response 25 of 85: Mark Unseen   Feb 15 05:58 UTC 1995

I like Hom's "Fragrant Habour Cuisine," he has good receipe for food I grew up
eating in resturants, well written too.
chelsea
response 26 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 8 17:11 UTC 1996

I bought _The New Vegetarian Epicure_, by Anna Thomas last
night after a cooking class at Kitchen Port.  The class had
nothing to do with this book but when you enroll for a class
you get a discount coupon for 10% on anything you purchase
that day.  Evidently, this book is an updated version of
Ms. Thomas' first version, _Vegetarian Epicure_.  Has anyone
here ever tried any of her recipes?  The recipes look 
interesting, non-traditional, mostly healthy, and not
particularly difficult to assemble.
popcorn
response 27 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 01:05 UTC 1996

That was the second vegetarian cookbook I ever bought, way back in maybe 1988
or so.  To tell ya the truth, I made a few recipes out of it, found *all* of
them disappointing, and have left the book sitting in my cookbook collecting,
taking up shelf real estate, unused ever since.  I should look back at it
again and see if it's more interesting now.  Lots of other people have good
things to say about it, so it must have some redeeming features.  I'll be
interested to hear what you think of it, Mary.
chelsea
response 28 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 11 04:08 UTC 1996

We had guests over this evening and when one spotted _New_
on the kitchen shelf she pulled it off and all the while
thumbing through it raved about the earlier edition and
how it brought her some of her favorite recipes - especially
the bread recipes.

But cookbooks are like lids and pots. ;-)

I'll let you know how the recipes come out.  I'm looking
to make one of the soup recipes later in the week.
chelsea
response 29 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 13 14:26 UTC 1996

I made my first recipe out of _New Vegetarian Epicure_, 
a sweet potato and corn soup. It is delicious -
thick, not too sweet, with a single diced jalapeno 
pepper for accent.
eeyore
response 30 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 14 04:32 UTC 1996

i'm getting "baking with julia childs" for christmas...i'm VERY excited...:)
abchan
response 31 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 02:47 UTC 1996

<abchan wonders how eeyore knows what she is getting for christmas, unless
she is getting it for herself...>

When I was about nine, my mama's biggest cookbook, a book called "Cooking For
Today" attracted my attention and I told her then that I would someday take
it and she said fine.  I still want to get it.  It's got a littl bit of
everything.  I wonder if it's dated though.  I believe it's older than me...

Is there a Grex Cookbook?

There's a Recipe Archive online (I have a link from my homepages) that I've
taken some recipes off of but with my tiny kitchen, I haven't had a chance
to try any of them yet.
popcorn
response 32 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 04:49 UTC 1996

Re knowing ahead of time what you're getting for the holidays:
In my family, none of us knows each other well enough to have much idea about
what kind of holiday gift the others would appreciate, so we all tell each
other what we'd like.  It's pathetic, but it's also a lot easier to get
someone a gift they'll actually use and enjoy if they choose it.  My sister
and I usually make a shopping expedition together to get each other a Hanukah
gift.  Actually it's a lot of fun.  We see so little of each other that it's
wonderful to have an excuse to do something together.

Nope, Grex has recipe archives, but there is no Grex cookbook.  People have
talked from time to time about putting one together, but so far it's never
happened.  Hey, that could make an interesting holiday-time gift.  Hm....
The hard part is finding a volunteer to put it all together.
omni
response 33 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 07:24 UTC 1996

 It wouldn't be that hard for me, since I have the time (I'm unemployed) and
my computer can do desktop publishing. Just say the word, and I'll begin
work on it.
robh
response 34 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 15 13:09 UTC 1996

Re 31/32 - My parents have already gone over the major things
they want to get me for Christmas, to make sure I'd want them.
A situation made more bizarre by their not telling me what I'm
getting for my birthday next week.  >8)
eeyore
response 35 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 15:35 UTC 1996

i saw the cookbook about a week ago, and called my parents instantly to tell
them that it would make a WONDERFUL x-mas present.  the next night, they
stopped by work to say hi, and my mother was hiding a bag under her jacket
(enough was sticking out to see that it was from barnes and noble), and she
made the commant that if i wanted to use their NEW discount card there, to
go ahead.  i think this nmeans that i'm getting the book for x-mas.  :)
(my parents are really cool about stuff like that....:)
abchan
response 36 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 16 23:02 UTC 1996

In my family, nobody can figure out what anybody else wanted so nobody gave
anyone presents.  It made life a lot easier when growing up.

Now I have to remember silly things like getting *cards* for people for their
birthdays.  I still forget 99% of the time and send off a rushed e-mail.

I know it's just because of my different upbringing but still, I can't help
feeling guilty when looking at the nice jewelry that a very special someone
has since gotten for me...
omni
response 37 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 17 04:11 UTC 1996

  I did a little test on this, and it doesn't look like it will be all that
hard to do. Can't laser print, but I can make it look really nice, or maybe
someone can take the formatted pages and run from there.
popcorn
response 38 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 18 06:25 UTC 1996

Cool!  Jim, go for it!  Yell if you want a volunteer to edit/proofread/
whatever.  Neat!
coyote
response 39 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 27 15:38 UTC 1996

A Grex cookbook would be a really neat project.  I'm sure we could find plenty
more volunteers in we asked.  (Hey, I'd even volunteer, but I'm not sure what
I could do.)
omni
response 40 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 27 20:25 UTC 1996

 Actually, the prohect has turned into a nightmare for me. I don't have
the appropriate software/patience for this sort of thing.
coyote
response 41 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 16:33 UTC 1996

Is this cookbook made up of the recipes in the Grex recipe archives, or are
there other sources, too?
omni
response 42 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 19:09 UTC 1996

 The ones in the archives.
chelsea
response 43 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 19:43 UTC 1996

Instead of going back into archives would it be any 
easier to assemble a Grex cookbook by asking everyone
who cares to to submit three (current) favorite
recipies.

I'd think the recipies might be somewhat healthier
as this has been the trend over the past 4 or 5
years.  Also, you'd tend to get only the best
recipies this way - tried and true favorites.


chelsea
response 44 of 85: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 19:45 UTC 1996

s/recipes/recipies.

I think I made too many pies yesterday and my typos
are a dead giveaway.
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