stewed coot wrote:She's lame, clumsy, and brings nothing to my table.
d4v3 wrote:I minced the pineapple and added it along with the juice to my concoction. It was absolutely delicious on the lamb, and nobody discovered the extemporaneousness of the pineapple-mango-lime chutney. In fact, I might even make it again.
stewed coot wrote: She's even credited with designing cookware. It sure seems to be a classic case of connections rather than talent-although I guess the talent lies in promotion.
eatchicago wrote:On the topic of jelly, there was an episode of "Ham On The Street" on Food Network where the host guy set up three bingo cages and put balls in each one labeled with types of cheese in one, types of bread in the other, and types of jelly in the third.
His theory was that you could randomly take a type of bread, a type of cheese, and a type of jelly and come up with a tasty grilled cheese and jelly sandwich.
d4v3 wrote:As to the perky Ms. R², you can put me firmly in the court of "can't stand her". I understand her purpose, and I realize that people must find her appealing or she would not exist in her present form. I just find her on-air character abrasively annoying. I can't stand watching Lucille Ball for the same reason (especially in the Mr. Mooney days), but I can still appreciate her talent.
I am also sure she is a nice person.
earthlydesire wrote: Mario Batali, an excellent chef, did a couple of shows and aside from his Iron Chef gigs which are mainly about doing the cooking dare, if you will, stopped doing shows. He's smart. He doesn't wear something into the ground, squeezing every little tiny bit of worth out of it in his pursuit of money.
crrush wrote:One of the best jellies to experiment with in this category of deliciousness: ancho-chipotle pepper jelly. I found a recipe in Food and Wine a few years ago, and it is lovely with ham, rare roast beef, flank steak, goat cheese...you name it.
kafein wrote:My dirty little secret: An egg mc muffin is actually pretty delicious with a 1/2 packet of strawberry jam squeezed on it. Sweet and salty, fruity and cheesy.
stevez wrote:kafein wrote:My dirty little secret: An egg mc muffin is actually pretty delicious with a 1/2 packet of strawberry jam squeezed on it. Sweet and salty, fruity and cheesy.
Having not set foot in a McDonald's in over 2 decades I'm not sure if this is still the case, but our company did a multi-media slide show for the introduction of the Egg-A-Muff and I seem to remember they were served with jelly as an automatic accompaniment.
David Hammond wrote:...I do think that the sweet-heat dimension is one that is insufficiently represented on my table.
germuska wrote:David Hammond wrote:...I do think that the sweet-heat dimension is one that is insufficiently represented on my table.
Hammond, have you ever tried Jufran Banana Sauce?
David Hammond wrote:I seem to remember it being a bit thicker than regular catsup, which helped it stick better to, for instance, a hot dog.
David Hammond wrote:germuska wrote:David Hammond wrote:...I do think that the sweet-heat dimension is one that is insufficiently represented on my table.
Hammond, have you ever tried Jufran Banana Sauce?
Thanks for asking, Joe.
ReneG was kind enough to gift me with a bottle of Jufran some years ago and as I recall we finished it off in fairly short order. I seem to remember it being a bit thicker than regular catsup, which helped it stick better to, for instance, a hot dog.
Hammond
David Hammond wrote:germuska wrote:David Hammond wrote:...I do think that the sweet-heat dimension is one that is insufficiently represented on my table.
Hammond, have you ever tried Jufran Banana Sauce?
Thanks for asking, Joe.
ReneG was kind enough to gift me with a bottle of Jufran some years ago and as I recall we finished it off in fairly short order. I seem to remember it being a bit thicker than regular catsup, which helped it stick better to, for instance, a hot dog.
MAG wrote:The only moment that she even acknowleged anyone other than the owners' presence was a comment made after her producer asked my husband and I to switch seats, which was "Yeah, she's prettier than he is." After they wrapped, she spoke to no one other than her team or the owner. No "thanks so much", no "sorry I was so late, I got held up" to the waitstaff, not even so much of an acknowlegement that anyone else existed even though there were like 10 people in the restaurant, including staff. I found it very much at odds with her supposed perky, cute and friendly persona. Perhaps she was having a bad day, God knows we all have them, but I was just pretty shocked that she couldn't even walk to the bar of a very small restaurant and spend 5 minutes introducing herself or shake the hands of a very small group of people.
David Hammond wrote:I do think that the sweet-heat dimension is one that is insufficiently represented on my table.