Subj : Re: Int'l Pickles Week - 2
To   : Dave Drum
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Sun May 25 2025 06:47 pm

-=> Dave Drum wrote to Ruth Haffly <=-

DD> As I told her - Cheddar is an actual place so it's a "proper" noun and
DD> thus capitalised. As to the commas - it's second nature to my editor
DD> gene - and it costs nothing to be grammatically correct.

I was a newspaper proofreader and this sign was in our office:

===
"I love eating my family and my dog." "I love eating, my family, and my
dog."

Commas save lives.
===

(I am an Oxford comma fan.)

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Types of Garlic
Categories: Information, Ceideburg 2
     Yield: 1 Servings

     1    Text Only

 I buy garlic but never have paid much attention to the subtleties of
 it. Here's some interesting info on types and uses.

 HARDNECK GARLICS: These have a central flower stalk that hardens to a
 stem in the center of the garlic head. Tricky to grow and generally
 much less productive than "softneck" garlics, they are always more
 expensive.

 Examples include:

 ROCAMBOLE:  This is the most commonly planted specialty variety. The
 head is cone-shaped, with bright purple skin. The uniformly sized,
 wedge-shaped cloves are clustered radially around the central stalk.
 The cloves easily pop out of their papery skins.  It has a strong
 flavor but is rarely bitter.

 SPANISH ROJA:  Similar to the Rocambole, but with a rounded head and
 skin coloration that ranges from red to mahogany.  Grown most
 commonly in the Northwest.

 ITALIAN RED:  A generic name given to red-skinned, hardnecked garlics
 of several different varieties.

 SOFTNECK GARLICS: These do not have a central flower stalk. These are
 always used for braiding. These include:

 MEXICAN PINK:  A common variety grown in Mexico, it is characterized
 by cloves that splinter outwards from the main head, somewhat like
 leaves on an artichoke.  The flavor is often quite hot.

 EARLY and LATE CALIFORNIA WHITE:  This is the main garlic variety
 grown commercially in California.  It is very productive and is well
 adapted to growing in hot weather.  It has tight skins over both the
 cloves and the whole head, which help make this garlic one of the
 best keepers.

 ELEPHANT GARLIC:  A cross between garlic and onion.  The flavor is
 mild and the texture is similar to an onion.

 OTHER USEFUL TERMINOLOGY:

 GREEN GARLIC.  Garlic harvested before the bulb has matured and before
 skins have formed around the cloves.  It can be used like baby leeks.
 The flavor is mild but distinctly garlicky.

 FRESH GARLIC:  Juicy, mature garlic sold before the skins have set or
 dried.  This is perishable and susceptible to mold.

 CURED GARLIC:  Most garlic is cured for about a month to allow the
 skins to dry or set.

 Sibella Kraus writing in the San Francisco Chronicle, 7/14/93.

 Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; October 5 1993.

 File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/cberg2.zip

MMMMM

-- Sean

... Never make snow angels in a dog park.
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* Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200)