Subj : Sweetning was: Coffee
To : Ruth Haffly
From : Dave Drum
Date : Wed Jun 19 2024 07:44:02
-=> Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
DD> I also drink my tea (and iced tea) straight up. My grandmother used
RH> I used to put both milk and sugar in my hot tea, just sugar in ice tea.
RH> Cut out the milk long ago, switched to a sugar sub (stevia) quite a
RH> while ago for both hot and ice tea.
DD> to serve tooth-achingly sweet iced tea - which I abhorred. I do,
RH> We adopted a descriptive phrase we heard on "Star Trek; The Next
RH> Generation" to desscribe something super sweet--Tooth Itching.
Asd me and the boob tube are not good friends I missed that.
DD> sometimes, in the cold months add a little honey to my cuppa. Never
DD> sugar.
RH> We keep both honey and raw sugar on hand for sweetening, no white sugar
RH> in the house. The raw adds just a hint of a molasses taste.
I keep sugar for recipes where it's called for. But a pound of C&H lasts
a looooooooong time. You probably couldn't use my molasses substitute
which I pick up at the Illinois Products Farmer's Market - sorghum. It's
a cousin of maize (corn) ans might trigger Steve's allergy.
DD> I leaned a trick about instant coffee. If you make your cup of coffee
DD> as normal - then put it in the microwave for a minute. It does
DD> something to the flavour that makes it almost taste like brewed
DD> coffee.
RH> This was in the pre microwave days, had to heat the water on the stove.
DD> Also pre-single serve coffee maker days. A Keurig would have made
DD> things nice for your Pop.
RH> Yes, but they were later coming onto the scene than microwaves.
DD> 8<----- SLICE ----->8
DD> My go-to watch/clock guy fell off his twig several years ago. But
DD> there is a local (and thriving) clock company with a repair department
DD> that I am told does good work. I'm all digital these days having given
DD> my last (heirloom) clock to my brother and sister-in-law. A pixture of
DD> one just like it is here
https://tinyurl.com/OLD-CLOX
RH> We use a local guy who's 3rd generation clock/watch repair man. I
RH> inherited another clock that was my grandparents, plus we have a
RH> couckoo clock we bought in Germany that have all visited him at one
RH> time or another. We've got 2 other chiming clocks, plus a few digital
RH> ones; we like the sound of a chiming clock in the house. Anyway, this
RH> guy told us how to prepare a grandfather clock for transporting; my
RH> sister and brother ignored Steve when he passed on the information and
RH> now the grandfather clock that was my great grand, grand and parent's
RH> clock doesn't work. She doesn't have the $$$ to fix it either so it's
RH> just taking up room in her house, sad.
AFAIK if you immobilise the pendulum and tie the shime tubes together
you should be good to go as long as you use reasonable caution in the
handling.
DD> People like that who think they know more than the guy who wrote the
DD> book, get little sympathy from me. It's on their shoulders.
RH> Yes but it's a shame to know the clock is just sitting there, a big
RH> dust catcher. It has the old tubular, very mellow chimes. We'd have
RH> taken it if we had the room but don't so...........
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Didivs'ka Iushka (Grandfather Soup)
Categories: Soups, Vegetables, Dairy
Yield: 1 Batch
2 c Water
2 ts Salt
1/4 c Milk or Half & Half
3 tb Butter
2 md Potato; cubed 1/2"
1 md Onion; chopped
1 Carrot; julienned
1/2 c Flour
Cube the potatoes 1/2" after peeling them. Julienne the
carrot, and chop the onion. Bring the water to a slow
boil and add the potatoes & carrot, salt, and cook for
6 minutes.
Mix the flour, 1 tablespoon of butter, and enough of
the butter to make a stiff dough. Pinch off pieces of
the dough and roll into 1/2" ball and drop into the
slow boiling soup.
Saute the onion in the remaining butter until they
start to brown. Add the milk & onions to the soup and
cook for 5 more minutes.
Origin: Oksanna Levshenko, Kiev-Ukraine, circa 1996
From: Don Houston
From:
http://www.recipesource.com
Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives
MMMMM
... Chocolate is an essential ingredient in 3 of the 4 basic food groups.
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