Shellon!!!!! I forgot about the cucumber and onion dish. That is a MUST at every family gathering for us!!! I thought we were the only ones who made that!! How funny - now I know what to make the next time we get together. :)
Smelt! Oh man, I haven't had smelt but once or twice since we left the U.P.!
The Morels you can keep though - YUCK!! My mom and step-dad used to go morel picking. Watching all the bugs drop off as they cleaned them left me so ill that I could never even bring myself to taste one.
Ha, yeah, the bugs are kinda nasty and if one doesn't find enough for a meal on a picking outing, they are way too expensive to buy now. This last spring they were going to 60$ a pound, GAK!
But oh so good when cooked like my mama does em.
Smelt too, a lifetime as a child going smelt dipping with my dad, coming home with barrels of them, getting the scissors and cleaning them, then supper!
AH! So wonderful.
And pheasant, squirrel, duck..........yummy when we knew we'd also hunted them ourselves.
Abi.... Sushi's sausage gravy doesn't make the top list? :huh:
My mom used to make cucumber / onion salad, too, with vinegar, salt, and sugar. Sliced the onions and cukes very thin... better the next day!
I forgot one of our real favorites: Stroganoff with egg noodles. I tried what turned out to be an outstanding recipe for this while looking for something to make with the finest cuts of venison I got one year. The recipe is from the New York Times Cookbook.
Sushi's sausage gravy is a "Greasespot Gathering" favorite, to be sure. It is definitely a Jacob favorite as well. But sausage gravy was not a food I grew up with, in fact I think I only ever ate it once before I met Sushi.
As much as I enjoy it, I part-take of it very seldom as it is not so good for the arteries. :)
Ha, yeah, the bugs are kinda nasty and if one doesn't find enough for a meal on a picking outing, they are way too expensive to buy now. This last spring they were going to 60$ a pound, GAK!
But oh so good when cooked like my mama does em.
Smelt too, a lifetime as a child going smelt dipping with my dad, coming home with barrels of them, getting the scissors and cleaning them, then supper!
AH! So wonderful.
And pheasant, squirrel, duck..........yummy when we knew we'd also hunted them ourselves.
I remember going smelting a time or two as a kid! I remember catching a snapping turtle once while doing it, too!!
My mom and step-dad used to hunt pheasant dear, but hunting is something I never developed a "taste" for.
OMG!!! CoolChef mentioned cucumber sandwhiches in another thread and it reminded me of an old childhood favorite that I have not had in probably 20 years!!! I'm buying the fixings this weekend
Slice Tomatoes, onions and cucumbers
spread cream cheese on bread
add the veggies, salt and pepper to taste. Oh man - better than a BLT anyday!!!!!!
I Come from Norwegian/English/ French Ancestry; but mostly Norwegian. Sandbakels are my favorite Norwegian cookie. They are pressed into cupcake looking tins and generously seasoned with cardamom. My favorite spice. I could eat cardmom plain out of the jar.
Here are some of the recipes I use:
We traditionally serve our chicken made from seasoned boiled chicken stock. I use Skinless chicken and a hearty rich bouillon. Into the stock we put in the following seasonings and ingredients in amounts to suit your personal taste: onions, chives, celery, and garlic. I put a lot of each in. After it is cooked I remove and debone the chicken. Then I boil Klushi's old fashioned Noodles in the Bouillon. We serve them over mashed potatoes and with biscuits!
Gramma's Pineapple Desert
The crust:
Make a graham cracker crust with 2 cups graham cracker crumbs/ or 14 graham crackers crushed
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter or stick margarine: melted
Mix together the crust ingredient and sprinkle 3/4 of this mixture into a 9 by 13 inch pan. Reserving the remaining 1/4 of the crumbs to sprinkle on the top of the desert.
Filling:
1 10 ounce package of large marshmallows. (not the jet puffed ones..either campfire or generic marshmallows
1/2 cup milk
Melt in a double boiler; then let stand until entirely cooled.
Next fold into the totally cooled marshmallow mixture:
1/2 pint whipped cream - which has been whipped with 3 to 4 Tbs sugar and 1 tsp vanilla extract or Cool Whip may be substituted
1 20 ounce can drained Dole pineapple tidbits
1 10 ounce jar of maraschino cherries drained
Spread this mixture gently over the crumb crust and sprinkle with the remaining crumbs. Cover and chill over night before serving
(I am an innovative cook, so I usually add more than is called for or double recipes so if you prefer substitutes as I do at times go ahead...play!)
I make a similar shrimp dish, the method is the same as yours except I saute the shrimp in the butter with lots of cayenne pepper and regular pepper, some salt, and a few squeezes of lemon juice.
They're peel n' eat like yours, and we dip the french bread in the leftover butter mix and then in some sour cream to cool the heat of the cayenne. It is soooo goood!!
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Abigail
Family favorites:
Matzoh Ball Soup!!! (definitely number one on the list - cures what ails you!!!)
Stuffed Cabbage
Potato Latkes
Noodle Kugel
chopped liver
REAL corned beef sandwhiches :) (no sauerkraut and salad dressing - use cole slaw instead!!!!!!!)
Grandma's homemade fudge
chicken and rice stew
chili
rice pudding
Noodle Kugel - if you have kids (or grandkids ;) ), they will LOVE this
0
Cook up a bag of egg noodles
Mix in a large container of cottage cheese
3 - 4 eggs (I like mine on the eggier side)
throw in brown sugar and cinnamon (I guess on these, like most ingredients - mabye 1 tsp cinnamon and 1/8 - 1/4 cup sugar
raisins - you can NEVER Have too many raisins!!! buy a big box and use at least half of it
Bake in the oven on 300 for about 1 1/2 hours
Let it cool and set for 15 - 20 minutes
EAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Shellon
Some of the yummies my brothers and I grew up on and still cook for our own families
Meat 'n tators. Usually a pot roast with mashed tators and a veggie
Venison, a Michigan staple! :)
Goulash, made with elbow noodles, ground beef (I use turkey for my family), tomato's, green chili's, onions. Often served with boiled tators.
Fried chicken!
Liver and Onions, although I can't seem to get my own kids to eat it.
Wilted Lettuce
Cucumbers and Onions in a great vinegar liquid
Smelt
Morel (sp?) mushrooms
Chicken and dumplings
Home made pies
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doojable
Spaghetti and meatballs - with angel hair pasta
Baked Ziti, Lasagne, homemade ravioli
Minestrone
Beef stew
Chicken noodle soup - sometimes with little meatballs in it.
Steak with lemon served with tomato salad
potato salad made with red potatoes
chickpea stew with dumplings
I'll post a recipe later - there are quite a few of these posted already.
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Abigail
Shellon!!!!! I forgot about the cucumber and onion dish. That is a MUST at every family gathering for us!!! I thought we were the only ones who made that!! How funny - now I know what to make the next time we get together. :)
Smelt! Oh man, I haven't had smelt but once or twice since we left the U.P.!
The Morels you can keep though - YUCK!! My mom and step-dad used to go morel picking. Watching all the bugs drop off as they cleaned them left me so ill that I could never even bring myself to taste one.
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Shellon
Ha, yeah, the bugs are kinda nasty and if one doesn't find enough for a meal on a picking outing, they are way too expensive to buy now. This last spring they were going to 60$ a pound, GAK!
But oh so good when cooked like my mama does em.
Smelt too, a lifetime as a child going smelt dipping with my dad, coming home with barrels of them, getting the scissors and cleaning them, then supper!
AH! So wonderful.
And pheasant, squirrel, duck..........yummy when we knew we'd also hunted them ourselves.
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anotherDan
Abi.... Sushi's sausage gravy doesn't make the top list? :huh:
My mom used to make cucumber / onion salad, too, with vinegar, salt, and sugar. Sliced the onions and cukes very thin... better the next day!
I forgot one of our real favorites: Stroganoff with egg noodles. I tried what turned out to be an outstanding recipe for this while looking for something to make with the finest cuts of venison I got one year. The recipe is from the New York Times Cookbook.
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Abigail
Sushi's sausage gravy is a "Greasespot Gathering" favorite, to be sure. It is definitely a Jacob favorite as well. But sausage gravy was not a food I grew up with, in fact I think I only ever ate it once before I met Sushi.
As much as I enjoy it, I part-take of it very seldom as it is not so good for the arteries. :)
I remember going smelting a time or two as a kid! I remember catching a snapping turtle once while doing it, too!!
My mom and step-dad used to hunt pheasant dear, but hunting is something I never developed a "taste" for.
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anotherDan
I'd like to try this one, Abigail. Is it a Jewish thing? Is it supper or dessert?
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Sushi
All depends on the raisin percentage, ADan. Less raisins, supper. More raisins, dessert.
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Sushi
***ABIGAIL here posting on Sushi's puter**********
It is a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish Holiday dish. But I say, supper, lunch, breakfast - it has all the basics serve it when you want. :)
Oh yeah, another childhood dish that I just loved - kid friendly
Mix sour cream and sugar until you have it nice and sweet. Add a bunch of sliced bannana. Oh man, makes a yummy lunch or desert. :)
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doojable
Abi are you sure you weren't raised in New York?
My Jewish friends used to talk about sour cream and bananas all the time.
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Abigail
I wasn't, no. But my family all landed in Yonkers when they came to the U.S.
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doojable
Oh geez! Someday I hope to be able to tell you in person a story involving a person who could not say, "Yonkers."
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ChasUFarley
Mac 'n' cheese
American chop suey
Beans & hot dogs
Crab quiche
Chili (Mathman makes awesome chili)
Beef Stew & buscuits (Chas makes awesome beef stew)
Cubed steak
Potato soup (homemade)
Liver & Bacon
Fish & chips
Steamed clams (or muscles)
Pea soup & cornbread
Seafood Newburg
Grilled steak & baked taters & garden salad
Meatloaf
Baked chicken & stuffing w/ acorn squash
Pancakes (we call them "Oofie cakes" because those were Andreas' first solid food!)
Fluffernutters
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anotherDan
chas: would you post recipes for your stew and potato soup?
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ChasUFarley
BEEF STEW
1lb of stew beef or ground beef or leftover steak
3 cloves of fresh garlic - chopped
1 small onion - chopped
1 - 2lb bag of frozen mixed veggies (corn, greenbeans, peas, carrots)
2 med taters - cut in bite size pieces
1 lg can of V8 juice
2 tbsp of A1 sauce (or similar steak sauce)
2 tbsp of cooking sherry
2-3 Bay leaves
1 cup of mashed potato flakes
Spike
Brown the beef (if it's not leftovers) in a skillet with the garlic and onion. Drain grease.
Put beef, frozen veggies, V8 juice, seasonings, etc. in a slow cooker.
Cook for 4-6 hours on low.
About an hour before serving, gradually add and stir in the mashed potato flakes to thicken the stew.
Remove bay leaves, if you can find them.
Serve with biscuits.
================
TATER SOUP
6-8 taters - cut into bite size pieces (peeled or unpeeled)
1-2 cups of mashed tater flakes
1/2 stick of butter
2-3 cloves of garlic - chopped
1 small onion - chopped
1-2 cups of milk (maybe more, if you like your soup thin...)
salt
pepper
bacon bits
cheddar cheese - shredded
sour cream
diced scallions
Boil taters until very soft. Mash with butter and milk. If you like your soups very smooth you can put the cooked potatoes in a blender with milk.
Use less milk if you like your soup thick - use more milk if you like your soup thin.
(If you make it too thin, you can thicken it with the mashed potato flakes.)
Return tater mixture to soup pan.
Saute garlic & onion - add to soup.
Season with salt and pepper - to taste.
I like to make this thick and garnish it like a loaded baked potato - bacon bits, cheese, sour cream, scallions - whatever you like!
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doojable
Chas - can you post a link to these in the soup thread?
They look GREAT!
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Belle
Company Chicken (dried beef wrapped chicken in a cream of chicken sauce)
Tacos
Greek Pasta (made with fresh spinach & cannellini beans)
Hummus & Tabouleh
Chicken Nachos
Greek Chicken Salad
Tuscan Tuna Salad
Orange Walnut Salad
Chicken Caesar Salad
Ginger-Lime Salmon
French Onion Soup
Grilled Cheese Sammiches & Tomato Soup
Pick Up Sticks Scallops
Blue Cheese Bulgur Bowls
DANG! Now I'm hungry!!
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Abigail
OMG!!! CoolChef mentioned cucumber sandwhiches in another thread and it reminded me of an old childhood favorite that I have not had in probably 20 years!!! I'm buying the fixings this weekend
Slice Tomatoes, onions and cucumbers
spread cream cheese on bread
add the veggies, salt and pepper to taste. Oh man - better than a BLT anyday!!!!!!
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anotherDan
Chas.... thanks for the recipes
and thanks all for the "family favorites" lists.
Man shall not live by bread alone. That would be boring.
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RainbowsGirl
I Come from Norwegian/English/ French Ancestry; but mostly Norwegian. Sandbakels are my favorite Norwegian cookie. They are pressed into cupcake looking tins and generously seasoned with cardamom. My favorite spice. I could eat cardmom plain out of the jar.
Here are some of the recipes I use:
We traditionally serve our chicken made from seasoned boiled chicken stock. I use Skinless chicken and a hearty rich bouillon. Into the stock we put in the following seasonings and ingredients in amounts to suit your personal taste: onions, chives, celery, and garlic. I put a lot of each in. After it is cooked I remove and debone the chicken. Then I boil Klushi's old fashioned Noodles in the Bouillon. We serve them over mashed potatoes and with biscuits!
Gramma's Pineapple Desert
The crust:
Make a graham cracker crust with 2 cups graham cracker crumbs/ or 14 graham crackers crushed
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter or stick margarine: melted
Mix together the crust ingredient and sprinkle 3/4 of this mixture into a 9 by 13 inch pan. Reserving the remaining 1/4 of the crumbs to sprinkle on the top of the desert.
Filling:
1 10 ounce package of large marshmallows. (not the jet puffed ones..either campfire or generic marshmallows
1/2 cup milk
Melt in a double boiler; then let stand until entirely cooled.
Next fold into the totally cooled marshmallow mixture:
1/2 pint whipped cream - which has been whipped with 3 to 4 Tbs sugar and 1 tsp vanilla extract or Cool Whip may be substituted
1 20 ounce can drained Dole pineapple tidbits
1 10 ounce jar of maraschino cherries drained
Spread this mixture gently over the crumb crust and sprinkle with the remaining crumbs. Cover and chill over night before serving
(I am an innovative cook, so I usually add more than is called for or double recipes so if you prefer substitutes as I do at times go ahead...play!)
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now I see
Another Dan, Your shrimp sounds very good!!!
I make a similar shrimp dish, the method is the same as yours except I saute the shrimp in the butter with lots of cayenne pepper and regular pepper, some salt, and a few squeezes of lemon juice.
They're peel n' eat like yours, and we dip the french bread in the leftover butter mix and then in some sour cream to cool the heat of the cayenne. It is soooo goood!!
Cheers!
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anotherDan
I'm digging the other contributions too. I love eating in someone else's kitchen! This is a cyber version of that! Yum!
I'm gonna try it your way!
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washingtonweather
when little - I ate a lot of
Cream cheese and olive sandwiches (green olives)
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