• Tatoo was: T.O.H. Daily R

    From Dave Drum@1:2320/105 to Shawn Highfield on Monday, September 23, 2024 06:28:00
    Shawn Highfield wrote to Sean Dennis <=-

    I'd make a political crack but I won't.

    Sorry, it didn't go too off topic. :)

    No tattoos for me. Not as someone who is on blood thinners
    permanently.

    If I could get rid of mine I would. They were all got before the craze and I was no older then my 20's for the "newest" one.

    Mine are all military service related. The anchor on my upper arm I got
    on December 6 1959 - the day before I was sworn in to Uncle Sam's Yacht
    Club abd sent off to Sandy Eggo for boot camp. The cartoonish shi ---\
    gooney bird on the inside of my arm was applied as a graduation from
    boot training present to myself. And the redheaded woman on my left arm
    showed up the morning after I was discharged. I remember the third gin
    mill I went into but then things get hazy and I've no idea where I picked
    up the toots or what she cost me. But I had to make a trip to St. Louis
    (there were no tattoo parlours here in the early 60s) to get a bikini on
    her to cover her "attributes".

    Either that or wear long sleeved shirts even in th summer. It was an unenlightened era.

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

    Title: Tattooed Potatoes w/Rosemary
    Categories: Five, Potatoes, Herbs
    Yield: 5 Servings

    1/2 c Extra virgin olive oil
    1 ts Salt
    1/2 ts Fresh cracked pepper
    6 sm Fresh rosemary springs
    +=OR=+
    6 Italian parsley leaves
    3 lg Russet potatoes; unpeeled,
    - scrubbed, halved

    I had these potatoes for Christmas dinner at the home of
    my friend Lindita. She had found a similar recipe in
    Gourmet magazine that called for butter in place of the
    olive oil and a sprig of Italian parsley in place of the
    rosemary. You can use either or both of the herbs, but
    the olive oil makes these potatoes remarkable.

    Set the oven @ 400oF/205oC.

    Pour the olive oil into a med-size glass baking dish and
    add the salt & pepper. Stir to combine. Press a rosemary
    sprig or parsley leaf on the cut side of each potato
    half and place cut side down in the oil.

    Bake until the potatoes are nicely browned, 40 - 45 min.
    While the potatoes are cooking, using a spatula, gently
    move them every now and then to keep them from sticking.
    When they are ready, remove from the pan, turning them
    flat-side up and carefully leaving the pressed herb in
    place. Arrange on a platter and serve immediately.

    NOTE: A glass dish works well in this case because you
    can check for doneness by carefully holding the dish
    overhead and looking to see if the potatoes are browned.

    When you do this, be careful not to spill the hot oil. A
    metal pan will do, too, but testing for doneness won't
    be as easy.

    Serves 4 to 6

    Taken from Peggy Knickerbocker's "Olive Oil: From Tree
    To Table" published by Chronicle Books

    MM Format by Dave Drum - 01 December 2009

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen

    MMMMM

    ... So easy, a child could do it. Child sold separately.
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Dave Drum on Monday, September 23, 2024 21:07:38
    Dave Drum wrote to Shawn Highfield <=-

    Mine are all military service related. The anchor on my upper arm I got
    on December 6 1959 - the day before I was sworn in to Uncle Sam's Yacht Club abd sent off to Sandy Eggo for boot camp. The cartoonish shi ---\ gooney bird on the inside of my arm was applied as a graduation from
    boot training present to myself. And the redheaded woman on my left arm showed up the morning after I was discharged. I remember the third gin mill I went into but then things get hazy and I've no idea where I
    picked up the toots or what she cost me. But I had to make a trip to
    St. Louis (there were no tattoo parlours here in the early 60s) to get
    a bikini on her to cover her "attributes".

    When I was in the Armt stationed at Fort Sill, on the weekends, guys who
    wanted tattoo piled into my '79 Ford LTD and we barreled down to Wichita
    Falls, Texas (an hour? 90 minutes? drive; I don't remember now). All I
    asked was for gas money (gas was $1.01 back then) and money for me to get a meal to eat while I was waiting.

    I made a LOT of money doing that until I went TDY to Fort Hood.

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

    Title: Mersey Point Smoked Mackerel Log
    Categories: Seafood, Main dish, Canadian
    Yield: 1 Batch

    2 Smoked mackerel fillets
    8 oz Light cream cheese
    2 ts Lemon juice
    1 ts Onion; finely chopped
    1 tb Celery; finely chopped
    1 ts Horseradish
    Salt
    Pepper
    1 c Almonds; crushed
    1/4 c Parsley; fresh,fine chopped

    Remove skin and bones from smoked mackerel. Mix and blend smoked
    mackerel, cream cheese, lemon juice, onion, celery, and horseradish.
    Add salt and pepper to taste. Spread mixture on plastic wrap and form
    into a log. Refrigerate until firm. Combine almonds and parsley. Roll
    log in this mixture. Serve with crackers.

    From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

    MMMMM

    -- Sean

    ... No one hates a job well done!
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