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or told me what you fixed for dinner last night. This leaves me to assume all

manner of aweful things about you. Like, perhaps you went to Burger King!

Oh, say it ain't so. *lol*

 

I'd much rather assume you were just way too busy, or thought that what

you were having was just too boring to post. Busy is good and fine, but don't

ever think what you cook day to day is dull. You might find it same ol', same

ol', but what you cook in your kitchen might be different for others and

inspire. Have you ever been to a potluck and had plain food that tasted so

much better, just b/c the way a person prepared the dish was new to you?

Well, that is the way to think of this group. Menu ideas, special pinches of

your favorite herbs and spices, and all those " little " things that make your

recipes unique to you. Do share some when you have a moment.

 

Today my menu is rather uninspired. My son has a Open House BBQ at the

school, so he will attend that. Since the fare there will be burgers and

macaroni salad and chips, I will fix my dinner ahead of time here. I plan to

just make a MSF Griller and a light tossed salad. Then, happily full, I will

trudge off to watch people eat greasy meat burgers and dangerously warm

mac-salad. *lol*

 

~ P_T ~

 

Speech is conveniently located midway between thought

and action, where it often substitutes for both. -John

Andrew Holmes

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, " Robin " <patchouli_troll> wrote:

> or told me what you fixed for dinner last night. This leaves me to

assume all

> manner of aweful things about you. Like, perhaps you went to Burger

King!

> Oh, say it ain't so. *lol*

 

 

I'll tell you...but you'd likely all give me hell. I've been sick for

quite awhile (several months), and its getting worse rather than better.

My diet for the last week or so has consisted of an apple, several

glasses of juice, lots of water, and sometimes half a bowl of cereal.

Not good, I know, but all I can manage to force myself to eat at the

moment. I don't think that's gonna inspire anyone.

 

--

Sherri

 

I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it.

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, Sherri <sherria@o...> wrote:

 

> I'll tell you...but you'd likely all give me hell. I've been sick for

> quite awhile (several months), and its getting worse rather than better.

> I don't think that's gonna inspire anyone.

>

> --

> Sherri

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

 

I am so sorry to read that you are ill, Sherri. I hope you get better soon.

*hug*

I will light a candle for you. Namaste.

 

~ P_T ~

 

Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future,

concentrate the mind on the present moment.

--Buddha

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Well, last night I made a stir fry with portabello mushrooms, white asparagus,

onions, garlic, endive, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts and baby bok choy and a

couple of inches of ginger. Added some teriaki stir fry sauce and served it on

whole wheat couscous. Had that for lunch today too. Yum. BUT - don't think I

eat like this all the time. I taught a lab last week on vegetables and had all

those things (and much more) left over and needed to use them... so I kinda made

it up as I went. I made that pea salad earlier, yummy... I do like stir fry,

easy and with the couscous really quick. Tomorrow, I'm probably going to make

a salad with jicama and kolorabi slices and maybe some of the Italian/tahinii

salad dressing. The only bad thing in what I make is that my fiance doesn't

like most of what was in the stir fry, mainly the mushrooms. But, I guess

that's a way of keeping it all for myself!

Genie

 

 

I would rather regret that which I have experienced than wish I had experienced

that which is past.

 

 

 

- We Remember

9-11: A tribute to the more than 3,000 lives lost

 

 

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In a message dated 09/10/2002 10:28:48 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

writes:

 

 

> Nobody confessed...

>

> or told me what you fixed for dinner last night. This leaves me to assume

> all

> manner of awful things about you. Like, perhaps you went to Burger King!

> Oh, say it ain't so. *lol*

>

 

Oh, sorry! We had homemade pizzas after karate, which everybody cried about

( " It has onions in it, " " Ooh, this is gross... " ) I had made a marinara sauce

I had seen on TV so I could save it and use it in various ways, such as a

pizza sauce. So I'm very happy to see that other marinara sauce recipe

posted today. I'm going to try to make it in a crockpot to let it simmer and

meld flavors all day long.

 

Tonight I think we are going to have baked macaroni and cheese. I hope to

make it this afternoon and actually bake it after we get back from soccer, or

hopefully have my hubby stick it in the oven if he gets home before I do...

 

September 11

Remember and Pray,

Sherri

 

 

 

 

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On Wed, 11 Sep 2002 05:53:59 EDT, you wrote:

 

 

>

>Oh, sorry! We had homemade pizzas after karate, which everybody cried about

>( " It has onions in it, " " Ooh, this is gross... " ) I had made a marinara sauce

>I had seen on TV so I could save it and use it in various ways, such as a

>pizza sauce. So I'm very happy to see that other marinara sauce recipe

>posted today. I'm going to try to make it in a crockpot to let it simmer and

>meld flavors all day long.

>

 

 

Here's my favorite pasta sauce, I *really* love this. I

generally triple the recipe and cook it in my larger

crockpot (I have a big one and a small one), then freeze a

lot. It freezes very well. Ariane is the friend who gave

it to me, the recipe has her notes and mine.

 

Cheers,

Pat

 

=========================================================

 

Ariane's Delicious Pasta Sauce Recipe

 

 

1 28 oz. can Italian tomatoes

1/4 cup olive oil (can reduce to 1/8 cup)

1 medium onion, chopped

1 clove garlic (MORE!)

1 large carrot, chopped

1 stalk of celery, chopped

3 tsp. dried oregano (MORE!)

3 tsp. basil (MORE!)

1 tsp. salt to taste

1 cup dry red wine (can omit or use less)

1 small bunch flat-leaf parsley, chopped (I never have this

so I use some dry parsley instead).

 

Blend the chopped onion, garlic, carrot and celery along

with olive oil and spices in a food processor or blender

until it's at the desired consistency. (Some prefer their

sauce chunkier, etc.)

 

Empty tomatoes in large pot on medium heat and mash with the

back of a spoon. Stir in pureed vegetable mixture. The

resulting blend should look quite thick and reddish with

traces of green and yellow visible.

 

When it starts to bubble, turn down the heat and simmer

about an hour, maybe a little more, or until blended into a

sauce.

 

Add wine and continue to simmer. Stir in parsley and let

simmer 5 more minutes. Season to taste.

 

 

-------------------------------

Ariane's Notes: I puree vegetables and toss them in with

tomatoes, adding spices later and use 1/2 cup of wine. You

can mix oregano and basil, in whatever proportions you

like. Fresh basil would be good in this too, although you

might have to use more than the amount listed. I often

double this recipe with great results. It freezes very

well, just reheat and stir and serve over pasta. Incredibly

flavorful for a meatless sauce! Recipe courtesy of Harry

Demidavicious on rec.food.cooking, who said he learned it

from a little old Italian lady. :)

-------------------------------

Pat's Notes: This time I doubled it, and I'm using the

crock pot set on high to cook it. I think it will be 2-3

hours in the crock pot on high (that's about right). I'll

freeze a lot of it.

-------------------------------

 

--

Pat Meadows

Books, books, lovely books! Great reading!

Used books at very reasonable prices.

http://www.wellsborocomputing.com/books.html

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, Pat Meadows <pat@m...> wrote:

 

> Here's my favorite pasta sauce, I *really* love this. I

> generally triple the recipe and cook it in my larger

> crockpot (I have a big one and a small one), then freeze a

> lot. It freezes very well. Ariane is the friend who gave

> it to me, the recipe has her notes and mine.

>

> Cheers,

> Pat

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Wow, thanks for this recipe. It sounds very good and I am going to have to try

it next time.

 

~ P_T ~

 

Behind every successful woman...is a substantial

amount of coffee.

--Stephanie Piro

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