Subj : Turnips was: Yams To : Ruth Haffly From : Dave Drum Date : Sat Aug 10 2024 05:44:00 -=> Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=- RH> somewhere in my collection of recipies is one for Pot Au Feu, or as RH> Steve calls it, fancy French beef stew. It calls for turnips, not in RH> any great quantity. Extra turnips usually go into a mixed veggie beef RH> (or chicken) soup or stew. DD> Oddly I prefer turnips raw. Just peeled and sliced with a sprinkle DD> of salt. I can tolerate them cooked/boiled if there is something DD> of a much different flavour to "chase" them with. DD> My dad just sat there with a beatific smile on his face. RH> Did he like them? DD> He didn't say one way or the other.But I noticed he only took a DD> courtesy helping on his own plate. Bv)= RH> Sounds suspiciously like he didn't like them either. My mom never RH> served them. We always went to her parents for Thanksgiving; her mom RH> had quite a spread, to include the turnips and sweet potatoes. At RH> Christmas, her parents (and single sister) came to our house. Mom did RH> turkey for quite a few years, then switched to goose some time when I RH> was in high school. Either bird, the sides were always mashed potatoes RH> and gravy, some vegetable like corn or peas, brown & serve rolls, RH> canned (jelly) cranberry sauce, celery sticks and olives. Dessert was RH> always pumpkin pie. I do remember one year when her family couldn't RH> come up, she has shrimp cocktail as a starter but every year was RH> basically the same menu as the years before. We never had them at home. Mostly because Mom didn't like them in any key. And at my grandparent's only if my great-grandmother was cooking. The big holidays were turkey or goose, two kinds of stuffing/dressing (regular and oyster), glazed carrots, another vegetable, jellied cranberry sauce or home-done cranberry sauce w/whole cranberries (and watch out for the "unpopped" berries as they have tremendous pucker power). Also dinner rolls, salad and for desert squash or pumpkin pie, mince or raisin pie and/or pecan pie. Some years just one sort of pie. Other years as many as three different pie offerings. Or suet pudding w/"hard" sauce. If I were making this today I might use craisins on place of the more prosauic raisins. MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06 Title: Johnny Bull (Suet) Pudding Categories: Puddings, Beef, Fruits, Desserts, Sauces Yield: 4 Servings 1 c Chopped kidney suet 3 c Flour 2 ts Baking powder 3 lg Eggs 1 c Sugar 2 c Cooked raisins 1 ts (ea) ground ginger, cinnamon - allspice 1/2 ts Ground cloves 2 c Milk MMMMM------------------------LEMON SAUCE----------------------------- 1/2 c Sugar 1 tb Flour 1 ts Butter Juice of 1 lemon Grated rind of half lemon pn Salt 1 c Water MMMMM--------------------BRANDY (HARD) SAUCE------------------------- 1 c Water 2 tb Corn Starch 2 tb Butter 1/2 c Sugar 1 ts Nutmeg 1/4 c Brandy 1 ts Real Vanilla Mix 1 cup flour and suet together with hands until all strings are worked out of suet. Cream sugar and eggs together. Sift flour, baking powder & spices together. Add to creamed mixture and alternate with milk and flour/suet. Last, add raisins and mix well. Place in a cloth bag and steam over hot water for 3 hours. Serve with sauce. MAKE THE LEMON SAUCE: Mix all ingredients together and cook a few moments. Pour over pudding. MAKE THE HARD SAUCE: Mix dry ingredients and then stir them into a cup of boiling water. Boil for 5 minutes and then add butter, brandy, and vanilla. Serve hot over mince pie, gingerbread or plum pudding. From: My Grandmother's Kitchen Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen MMMMM .... Midget fortune-teller escapes from prison. Small medium at large! --- MultiMail/Win v0.52 * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .