Ms. Ingie wrote:Sob would you guys like me to host this in my church basement in Elmhurst? We wouldn't have a max as it can hold a fair number of people, not that there would be a big rush.
RAB wrote:Ms. Ingie wrote:Sob would you guys like me to host this in my church basement in Elmhurst? We wouldn't have a max as it can hold a fair number of people, not that there would be a big rush.
I think it might be premature to pick a venue for this nascent collection of vintage abomination, but I appreciate the offer and personally have no problem with it coming together in an Elmhurst church basement. Let's wait and see how it shakes out, ok?
--Rich
Ms. Ingie wrote:. . . Wouldn't be until March at the earliest anyway.
RAB wrote:If this happens, please nobody make "Perfection Salad." It looks positively revolting.
--Rich
Judy H wrote:RAB wrote:If this happens, please nobody make "Perfection Salad." It looks positively revolting.
--Rich
I beg your pardon. My mother used to make Perfection Salad on a regular basis. She even used that name for it. Though this recipe is missing the obligatory dab of mayo on top.
Josephine wrote:Love that igloo! And the penguins are just too much! The porcupine looks a bit like he saw a ghost, though.
Davooda wrote:In addition, I had to make two platters of four dozen "capered eggs" - hard-boiled eggs sliced in half, covered in a sour cream/mayonnaise/lemon/caper solution. Also one of her favorite recipes.
Davooda
This is precisely the thesis put forth by the article I mentioned, that the electric refrigerator enabled the middle-class to create and serve dishes that were previously prohibitively complex and expensive in which to partake. The novelty of the genre undoubtedly caused home chefs as well as promotional executives to get carried away with applications for the culinary technique. The fact is there were many more than "a few unfortunate constructs". Many things that should never have been jellied were encased in the jiggly goo, simply because they could be.Cynthia wrote:As for history--aspics and gelées have been popular since the 1700s, so not really putting in a first appearance with the refrigerator. It was just possible for them to be common then, among "ordinary people," rather than the domain of the wealthy.
d4v3 wrote:This is precisely the thesis put forth by the article I mentioned, that the electric refrigerator enabled the middle-class to create and serve dishes that were previously prohibitively complex and expensive in which to partake. The novelty of the genre undoubtedly caused home chefs as well as promotional executives to get carried away with applications for the culinary technique. The fact is there were many more than "a few unfortunate constructs". Many things that should never have been jellied were encased in the jiggly goo, simply because they could be.Cynthia wrote:As for history--aspics and gelées have been popular since the 1700s, so not really putting in a first appearance with the refrigerator. It was just possible for them to be common then, among "ordinary people," rather than the domain of the wealthy.
abe_froeman wrote:Ham salad is a big thing in my mom's hometown in Missouri (St. Joseph)- my relatives get it from some deli and it's at every family get-together, but I think they make theirs with actual ham. Maybe processed ham out of a can, but definitely not bologna.
Cathy2 wrote:At the Missouri State Fair, we had an entrant who brought 'ham' salad made with bologna. It is just the stuff my Mom likes to eat. It has another name: funeral spread.