Monday, March 4, 2019

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 6 topics

Janet <Janet@somewhere.com>: Mar 04 11:24AM

In article <ge3a57Fg2p4U1@mid.individual.net>, firstname@lastname.oc.ku
says...
 
> > In the UK we often say "mash" for making tea. Maybe you don't use that in
> > the States.
 
> Where in the UK is this common?
 
Working class Lancashire, 60 years ago when tea was still sold loose
and brewed in a teapot.
 
I doubt anybody nowadays says they're going to "mash the tea" with
teabags.

 
Janet UK
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:33AM -0600

On Mon, 4 Mar 2019 04:23:34 -0000 (UTC), Jinx the Minx
 
>> ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
 
>If you knew even the faintest about Catholicism, you'd know it is
>"Catholic", not "catholic".
 
Actually I know more about the catholic religion than 95% of the
catholics. The reason I spell it with a c instead of a C is because
that is how much I respect the religion, a religion that is 100% based
on the rape of a 12 year old girl and spread through fear by the
murder and torture of millions of people. So do I think catholics
should deserve anything at all? That would have to be a resounding
fuck no. They do not even deserve to be alive. Every catholic alive
now supports that religion, that means they support how that religion
came to be. That means the millions of deaths and tortured people, the
raped and molested children, all the money that was ever stolen, all
of the wars that were started is all fully supported by every catholic
aka christian that now lives today. This is why christians are such
horrible people, no matter how nice of a facade they put up it is all
a lie. Deep down they are murdering bastards, and that just wont do.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:36AM -0600

On Mon, 04 Mar 2019 16:28:17 +1100, Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>>that's just basic education. Learning how to punctuate, capitalize,
>>spell.
 
>Starting a sentence with a capital, for instance? :)
 
Good one bruce, LOL
 
but the thing is, this is usenet. I have had this discussion before
with several people. Usenet is more like a bulletin board. Where you
post notes, letters, reminders, various quips anecdotes or whatever
else is on your mind. Punctuation and capitol letters really would not
have much meaning on a bulletin board that may sit in an office or on
a fridge, and the same applies for usenet.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
"Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Mar 04 03:51AM -0800

"Janet" <Janet@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:MPG.36e71b3dd8676a0b989b09@news.individual.net...
> and brewed in a teapot.
 
> I doubt anybody nowadays says they're going to "mash the tea" with
> teabags.
 
We can buy loose tea here. I've never mashed it though.
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Mar 04 03:59AM -0800

> aka christian that now lives today. This is why christians are such
> horrible people, no matter how nice of a facade they put up it is all
> a lie. Deep down they are murdering bastards, and that just wont do.
 
a true christian does not murder and torture. those people are christian in name only.
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:14AM -0600

On Sun, 3 Mar 2019 16:04:38 -0800 (PST), dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>
wrote:
 
 
>> ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
 
>I'm looking for cheap dried chiltepin. I had a pill bottle of the stuff but it's all gone. I'm not looking for dried jalapeno at this time.
 
>https://www.pepperscale.com/chiltepin-pepper
 
 
Have you been like to home depot or any local nursery? They sometimes
have those potted plants that are completely full of those small but
hot as hell peppers... I was curious one day so I decided to taste one
because I was unsure of the heat.. I just bit into it just to get a
sample of the flavor and that was so hot I could like barely breathe..
And that was just from a small taste...
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:15AM -0600

On Mon, 04 Mar 2019 20:51:11 +1100, Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>Sounds like wasabi (fake wasabi generally): it builds up fast and
>leaves fast, whereas most chili peppers are creepers that take their
>time to build up and also to leave.
 
By "fake wasabi" do you just mean horse radish?
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:19AM -0600

On Sun, 3 Mar 2019 20:09:06 -0800, "Julie Bove"
>after grinding.
 
>Try eating a pinch of ground ginger. Cleanse your palate. Then take a tiny
>taste of fresh ginger. The taste difference will blow you away!
 
 
yes I am familiar with ginger, I grow the stuff. I have made pumpkin
spice many times and at times made too much and just stored it in the
cabinet, only to come back later and realize that the ginger in it is
basically "flat" with no flavor at all.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:24AM -0600

On Sun, 3 Mar 2019 20:04:20 -0800, "Julie Bove"
>> TALKING ABOUT!!!!
 
>That's not true at all. My daughter actually likes the pre-ground due to the
>milder taste.
 
The milder tastes is because of the grind not because of the age.. The
finer the grind the more taste..
 
for instance cayenne pepper is actually just red pepper finely ground
The spicy chili pepper known most famously in Mexican and Indian
cuisines is indeed cayenne, though it is also red. There is no
distinction between cayenne and red pepper aside from the name. Some
manufacturers use one name over the other to distinguish the grade of
"heat" of the pepper powder, but this distinction is not universal. To
clear any confusion in the kitchen, if a recipe calls for cayenne, it
means red, and if it calls for red, it means cayenne. They are
unmistakably interchangeable
 
https://www.ehow.com/about_5457205_cayenne-pepper-same-red-pepper.html
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Mar 04 10:25PM +1100

On Mon, 04 Mar 2019 05:15:46 -0600,
>>leaves fast, whereas most chili peppers are creepers that take their
>>time to build up and also to leave.
 
>By "fake wasabi" do you just mean horse radish?
 
Yes, I think that's always the main ingredient. It's called "wasabi"
on the packaging though.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 04 03:27AM -0800

On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 6:46:11 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
> >more heat just leave the seeds in.
 
> Of course! Who cuts out the good stuff? That would be like buying
> whiskey and taking out the alcohol before you drink it.
 
Depends what you're looking for in a flavor profile. I often have
scrambled eggs with jalapenos, but I omit the seeds. What I'm
looking for is a grassy pepper flavor with moderate heat.
 
Other dishes, I want all the heat and leave the seeds in.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Mar 04 10:29PM +1100

On Mon, 4 Mar 2019 03:27:50 -0800 (PST), Cindy Hamilton
>scrambled eggs with jalapenos, but I omit the seeds. What I'm
>looking for is a grassy pepper flavor with moderate heat.
 
>Other dishes, I want all the heat and leave the seeds in.
 
Yeah, that makes sense. Personally, I'd always leave the seeds in and
use less chili pepper if necessary.
"Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Mar 04 03:53AM -0800

<ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl> wrote in message
news:e92q7ep44rp13g57ftt0h4lngg3pv5q322@4ax.com...
> spice many times and at times made too much and just stored it in the
> cabinet, only to come back later and realize that the ginger in it is
> basically "flat" with no flavor at all.
 
Same with pepper.
"Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Mar 04 03:55AM -0800

<ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl> wrote in message
news:jg2q7ep3t6pbdr42i3ta98q9j2cl8b96cu@4ax.com...
>>milder taste.
 
> The milder tastes is because of the grind not because of the age.. The
> finer the grind the more taste..
 
Nope.
> means red, and if it calls for red, it means cayenne. They are
> unmistakably interchangeable
 
> https://www.ehow.com/about_5457205_cayenne-pepper-same-red-pepper.html
 
I rarely use either. Don't care.
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:55AM -0600

On Mon, 04 Mar 2019 22:29:38 +1100, Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>>Other dishes, I want all the heat and leave the seeds in.
 
>Yeah, that makes sense. Personally, I'd always leave the seeds in and
>use less chili pepper if necessary.
 
 
Now let me give you a recipe and give me your opinion as to weather
you go seeds or no seeds...
 
The recipe is simple
 
Ingredients
Jalapeno peppers
cream cheese
maple syrup
bacon
 
Cut the peppers in half scrape (or not scrape) the seeds and ribs out,
fill with a cream cheese maple syrup mixture wrap in bacon
 
Place in an oven until bacon is crisp
 
 
Now tell me would you scrape the seeds out or not scrape the seeds
out?
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:08AM -0600

On Sun, 3 Mar 2019 21:56:44 -0800, "Julie Bove"
>> started premaking thin crust and that would about 25 or so years ago.
 
>You wouldn't know leavening if it bit you in the ass.
 
>https://www.foxnews.com/food-drink/how-to-make-dominos-thin-crust-pizza-at-home
 
Wow are you serious with that?
 
Ask yourself how can you tell if a pizza has a leavening? Does it
bubble when cooking? That is a sure fire way of knowing weather a
pizza has some type of yeast in it. When it is cooked in a very hot
oven bubbles will form over the pizza. There is a special tool that we
used in order to pop those bubbles because they could get real big and
push all the topping to one side. So we had to pop those bubbles. Thin
crust pizzas (the premade ones) never bubbled.
 
But back to you. You of all the news outlets chose fox as your source
of information? First television news media is complete crap. They
will do whatever or say whatever just so that you will watch their
commercials
 
From your article @ fox
"The best way to get a pizza crust really thin is to sheet the dough
into the pan, which is done by most professionals using a dough
roller. "
 
I will say that in some industrial setting where they premake their
crusts they may use rollers or more precisely machines will roll the
dough.
 
However such as in a dominos pizza shop there are no rollers at all.
In order to make a thin crust you would first press in on the inside
of the outer edge and sort of roll your fingers under to make a lip in
the dough. then with the outside edges of your hands you place then on
either side of the dough inside the grove of the lip you made. Then
slowly you begin to stretch the dough by sliding your hands apart and
spinning the dough. eventually you can pick up the dough and "slap" it
back and fourth in your hands creating a very thin pie shaped dough.
 
 
And that is the way that the ball bounces!!
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 04 03:16AM -0800


> POG is the best
 
> Pepperoni - onion - green pepper
 
> POG is the code we used when we hand wrote all of our orders
 
I don't care for cooked green pepper. You can have my share.
 
My typical homemade pizza is
 
Crust
Brushed with garlic-flavored olive oil
A VERY small amount of cheese
Diced tomatoes
 
Bake
 
Top with minced parsley and basil when it comes out of the oven.
 
It occurred to me that I haven't had a pizza with broccoli on it
in quite some time. I'll probably try to have some on hand for
my next pizza.
 
Cindy Hamilton
"Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Mar 04 03:48AM -0800

<ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl> wrote in message
news:9u0q7e1up709ss8ss9r8c8ir13js8j84j2@4ax.com...
 
>>You wouldn't know leavening if it bit you in the ass.
 
>>https://www.foxnews.com/food-drink/how-to-make-dominos-thin-crust-pizza-at-home
 
> Wow are you serious with that?
 
Yeah. I even looked at the Dominos website. I'll post the link.
 
https://www.dominos.com/en/pages/content/nutritional/ingredients.jsp#
 
 
The ingredients even list leavening! Now you might find some flatbread
pizzas that don't have leavening but that's not a standard pizza. *All*
pizza crust has leavening. You're an idiot if you think it doesn't.
> used in order to pop those bubbles because they could get real big and
> push all the topping to one side. So we had to pop those bubbles. Thin
> crust pizzas (the premade ones) never bubbled.
 
You ARE an idiot. What you refer to is likely called a docking tool. I have
one for making crackers. I don't like thin crust pizza. I don't even like
pizza very much. Not even what I make from scratch. I do make good pizza. I
think being married to an Italian all those years put me off of pizza. Not
that I liked it much before I married him. I didn't.
> of information? First television news media is complete crap. They
> will do whatever or say whatever just so that you will watch their
> commercials
 
I just threw up the first link that I saw. Now I put up another. The Dominos
website itself. Like I said... I was married to an Italiam *and* I've been
baking from scratch since I was 8.
 
 
> I will say that in some industrial setting where they premake their
> crusts they may use rollers or more precisely machines will roll the
> dough.
 
Who cares? I don't eat that crap.
> slowly you begin to stretch the dough by sliding your hands apart and
> spinning the dough. eventually you can pick up the dough and "slap" it
> back and fourth in your hands creating a very thin pie shaped dough.
 
I only put that link up to show you the ingredients. I do not slap my dough
or spin it. I think that's pretty much all for show. Let your dough rest for
long enough. It won't shrink back on itself and you can roll it or pat it
out or whatever as thin as you like.
 
> And that is the way that the ball bounces!!
 
It must have bounced off your head and knocked some brain cells out.
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Mar 04 03:52AM -0800

On Monday, March 4, 2019 at 12:53:28 AM UTC-5, Julie Bove wrote:
> > us have to like what you do nor do we have use tortillas and call them
> > pizza.
 
> I tried the tortilla thing years ago. Nope.
 
i tried pita; pitas differ depending on the brand/style. but it worked. not as well as regular pizza dough, but it tasted fine.
 
 
Janet <Janet@somewhere.com>: Mar 04 11:15AM

You asked earlier but in the interests of science research I waited
until I'd timed it
 
My pepper grinder can fill a teaspoon in 9 seconds.
 
Janet UK
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Mar 04 10:16PM +1100


> You asked earlier but in the interests of science research I waited
>until I'd timed it
 
> My pepper grinder can fill a teaspoon in 9 seconds.
 
That's just not good enough. I need 8 seconds max.
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 04 05:50AM -0600

>until I'd timed it
 
> My pepper grinder can fill a teaspoon in 9 seconds.
 
> Janet UK
 
If you use a coffee grinder whether it is a burr grinder or a bladed
grinder you will always have a electric pepper grinder. And one that
is serious about coffee will always have a coffee grinder.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
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Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 04 02:56AM -0800

On Sunday, March 3, 2019 at 4:17:27 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
> > good demo of don't do what I do, do what I tell you!
 
> We have a Mexican woman and her husband that lives in our condo. It just kills me when she calls me "sir." That pretty much shows me how beaten down life was for her on the mainland. It is alright, however, to be called "sir" if I'm a guest in a hotel but in the real world, I'd prefer "uncle."
 
> That's Hawaiians for you - they don't feel comfortable with inequalities of class. Most of the people of my generation are the grandchildren of immigrants. We are very much aware that we are the descendants of immigrants. We haven't forgotten - not yet anyway.
 
My husband calls people "sir" all the time. It's how he was raised.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Mar 04 10:01PM +1100

On Mon, 4 Mar 2019 02:56:06 -0800 (PST), Cindy Hamilton
 
>> We have a Mexican woman and her husband that lives in our condo. It just kills me when she calls me "sir." That pretty much shows me how beaten down life was for her on the mainland. It is alright, however, to be called "sir" if I'm a guest in a hotel but in the real world, I'd prefer "uncle."
 
>> That's Hawaiians for you - they don't feel comfortable with inequalities of class. Most of the people of my generation are the grandchildren of immigrants. We are very much aware that we are the descendants of immigrants. We haven't forgotten - not yet anyway.
 
>My husband calls people "sir" all the time. It's how he was raised.
 
I've been called 'sir' once, outside of a servile retail/hospitality
context. The guy was 20 years younger than me and came to fix our car.
I thought it was unusual.
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