Subj : Shrimp was: Chilies [1] To : Dave Drum From : Ruth Haffly Date : Sun Dec 22 2024 17:09:16 Hi Dave, DD> I mostly write dates on the stuff I sucky-bag. It does help. RH> I do that too, but to keep track of what I have and how much of what I RH> have, the inventory on the door is a big help. It lets if I need to RH> pick up some ground beef if I want to make meat balls or chicken leg RH> quarters if we want to marinade/grill chicken for a Saturday night RH> supper. DD> Leg quarters (Marylands) do not make the freezer. When there is a DD> "killer" special on ... like 59c/lb - a 10# bag somes home with me and DD> right into the crock pot(s). Then it gets broken down into meat, bones DD> and skin. The bones get used for stock, the skin used to thicken that DD> stock, and the DD> shredded chicken that didn't go into the big pot of chicken & noodles DD> makes it into the freezer in batch sided packs. The chicken fat DD> (schmaltz) goes into the ice box for various tasty things. I've mentioned the restaurant in the area where I grew up that specialises in marinaded and charcoal grilled chicken. There's a copycat recipe out; my mom got a copy of it and she's do it for supper, with leg quarters only, many a Saturday night supper with potato salad and some sort of side vegetable. At the 2015 Boyd Pond picnic that Nancy hosted, I brought a bottle of the commercial sauce and made the knock off version one night for supper. (Steve did the grilling, in the rain.) The home made recipe version was a hands down favorite (and I'll post it, but not today). Anyway, we buy the leg quarters to use here. Good if you only want a small amount (leg or thigh) or a larger amount (quarter) of chicken. DD> My counter space is so scant that the tops of both the fridge and the DD> freezer hold much stuff. RH> Same here, we also have stuff on the tops of cabinets. (G) DD> I can't do that. My cabinets are hung from the ceiling. I've had that in various places, was glad to see the open tops in this house when we were house hunting. DD> Source: Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book - Fine Old Recipes; DD> : Culinary Arts Press, 1936. RH> I've got a copy of that floating around somewhere in my cook book RH> collection. DD> The only 2 cookbooks I still own are the early 1960's New York Times DD> Cookbook and the BH&G cookbook I bought in the early '70s. All the DD> rest have found new homes and their contents are in my Meal Master. DD> The last cookbook I bought - "Two Fat Ladies - Obsessions" is wrapped DD> and DD> will be gifted to my S-I-L as a holiday gift. I like picking them up, reading them and trying something new now and again. The shrimp recipe was from a cook book I picked up at the campus Sharing Shop--free thrift shop--I'll probably sort thru my books and make a donation at some point. DD> Here's one of my favourite dishes that I discovered whilst browsing DD> the NYT cookbook my Mom gave me: (both versions - original and my DD> take) DD> Title: Baked Fish Parmigiana DD> Categories: Five, Seafood, Cheese, Sauces DD> Yield: 4 Servings DD> 4 Fish filets or steaks DD> 1 c Tomato sauce DD> Salt & fresh black pepper DD> 1/2 c Grated Parmesan cheese DD> 2 tb Butter; melted I think they're both in my saved recipe file on Steve's set up. --- Catch you later, Ruth rchaffly{at}earthlink{dot}net FIDO 1:396/45.28 .... If you're trying to drive me crazy, you're too late. --- PPoint 3.01 * Origin: Sew! That's My Point (1:396/45.28) .