Subj : Re: Wiring was: Toaster oven To : Shawn Highfield From : Dave Drum Date : Thu Feb 09 2023 06:45:28 -=> Shawn Highfield wrote to Dave Drum <=- DD> private spot in the boondocks. But, if it's in a moblie home park it DD> must be a "standard" and permanently set-up unt. Not a tow behind. SH> It's been in the same location for 50 years. ;) There are tires and a SH> hitch but it would need special permission to go down the road. It SH> would also fall apart within seconds of attempting to move. My tin can had the hitch and the axles were still in place. But when it left Lot 6 in the trailer court it was in pieces on the back of a (several actually) flatbed - 6 wheel truck. Moving any trailer over 8" wide and 50" long requires special permitting from the Dept of Transportation. DD> my brother's house recovering from a broken ankle and the surgery to DD> repair same black mold took it over. So now I live in a conventional DD> bungalow and I'm not "trailer trash" any longer, SH> We have mold of some kind as we can smell it, but don't see any black SH> yet. Lost all my things to black mold in another house and this isn't SH> that smell. More of a mildew smell. Still not good. SH> ... There's a hot place with pitchforks waiting for you... It's called an alfalfa field. Bv)= MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06 Title: Lamb Cooked On Hay; w/Boulangere Potatoes Categories: Lamb/mutton, Potatoes, Herbs, Vegetables Yield: 4 Servings MMMMM--------------------BOULANGERE POTATOES------------------------- ds Olive oil 1 lg Onion; thin sliced 1 Leek; thin sliced 1 md Fennel bulb; thin sliced 2 cl Garlic 1 Fresh thyme sprig 1 ts Fennel seeds 50 g (2 oz) butter 500 ml (18 fl oz) lamb or chicken - stock 700 g (25 oz) potatoes Salt & fresh ground pepper MMMMM----------------------------LAMB--------------------------------- ds Olive oil 1/2 Bag of hay; (clean eating - hay from the petshop and - not bedding hay) 1 Rack of lamb; French trimmed FOR THE BOULANGÈRE POTATOES, set the oven @ 160ºC/325ºF /Gas 2. Heat a heavy-based pan, add some oil, then add the sliced onion, leek, fennel, garlic, thyme, fennel seeds and fry for 3-4 minutes. Meanwhile, bring the stock to the boil in a saucepan and grease a small ovenproof dish with a little of the butter. Slice the potatoes thinly on a mandoline and start to layer up the dish with alternating layers of potato and the onion mixture, seasoning with salt and fresh ground black pepper in between. For the final layer, arrange the potatoes in a neat layer and pour over the hot stock. Add a couple of knobs of butter, cover with foil and bake for one hour. Remove the foil and cook for another 30 minutes, or until cooked and crisp. FOR THE LAMB, turn the oven up to 200ºC/400ºF/Gas 6. Heat a dash of olive oil in a cocotte (a cast iron casserole dish with a lid) placed over a stove top and brown the lamb all over. Remove the lamb from the cocotte. Add the hay and a little more oil, just until the hay starts to smoke, then place the lamb on top and cover with the lid. Bake in the oven for 12-15 minutes, or until the lamb is pink. TO SERVE, remove the lamb from the hay, rest for 5-10 minutes, then carve and serve with the boulangère potatoes. Serves four. By Tom Kitchin; Saturday Kitchen Best Bites RECIPE FROM: http://www.bbc.co.uk Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives MMMMM .... Every pizza is a personal pan pizza if you try hard enough. --- MultiMail/Win * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200) .