On 06-07-23 13:33, Ruth Haffly <=-
spoke to Ben Collver about Kasha (Buckwheat) <=-
I never thought of it as having a stuffing-ish flavor but I can
imagine it now that you mention it. Probably depends on the stuffing
(or dressing) you grew up with. BTW, if it's in the bird, it's
stuffing; (fixed) outside of the bird, it's dressing. (G) Since Steve smokes our birds, most of the time I make dressing. We'll put an apple, onion and some herbs inside the cavity.
The Betty Crocker recipe said 5 minutes, but it took me about
12-15 minutes too.
Sounds like somebody transcribed the recipe wrong, left off a "1" in
front of the "5".
(or dressing) you grew up with. BTW, if it's in the bird, it's
stuffing; (fixed) outside of the bird, it's dressing. (G) Since Steve smokes our birds, most of the time I make dressing. We'll put an apple, onion and some herbs inside the cavity.
When my Mother cooked a whole chicken roaster in the oven, she never
used a stuffing. It was always a dressing. She made a cornbread
dressing in a pan large enough to hold the chicken and then roasted
the chicken on top of the dressing. That way it absorbed all of the drippings for a better flavor.
The Betty Crocker recipe said 5 minutes, but it took me about BC>12-15 minutes too.
Sounds like somebody transcribed the recipe wrong, left off a "1" in
front of the "5".
The menus here come with a calorie statement. The listing for
raspberry sorbet says (970). Obviously wrong, but it has not been corrected for
years.
On 06-09-23 16:07, Ruth Haffly <=-
spoke to Dale Shipp about Stuffing/dressing <=-
folks must have gotten a really good deal on roasting hens. At the
time, somebody in town had a cold storage locker facility; I remember having to go there to pick up a chicken. We had a cat at the time that
at every time Mom roasted a chicken, would make herself known at the supper table. Dad would carve up the chicken, then, after everybody was served, take the part that "went over the fence last" (his words) and
put it into the cat's dish. We had chicken probably once a week for
some months so the cat was kept quite happy.
How often have the menus been reprinted in the time you have been
there? It could be that they're waiting until the menus need reprinting before correcting the mis-statememt. Makes you wonder, tho, how may
other calorie counts are off. Do they include other nutrition
information like carbs, fat, sodium, etc?
folks must have gotten a really good deal on roasting hens. At the
time, somebody in town had a cold storage locker facility; I remember having to go there to pick up a chicken. We had a cat at the time that
at every time Mom roasted a chicken, would make herself known at the supper table. Dad would carve up the chicken, then, after everybody was served, take the part that "went over the fence last" (his words) and
put it into the cat's dish. We had chicken probably once a week for
some months so the cat was kept quite happy.
There is a small bone in that piece. I hope your cat could digest it
(or avoid it). Whenever we did a ham in the oven, our last dog would
sit in front of the door waiting for his treat. He was probably
sensing the good ham smell.
How often have the menus been reprinted in the time you have beenreprinting RH> before correcting the mis-statememt. Makes you wonder,
there? It could be that they're waiting until the menus need
There is a rather complete "My nutrition" page which shows all of that sort of thing for many items. Our actual menus are printed about once
per month and about half of the items are new. I think that the item title and descriptions are taken from some sort of master recipe data base, with the full recipe going to the kitchen chef. That said, the menus we see are cut and paste from that master.
There is a claim that corporate is reviewing the nutrition pages, but
I'm not certain.
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