Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Ruth Haffly <=-
We use a lot of white meat unless we've bought a whole chicken.
Then he will take the dark, I'll take the white.
I prefer the dark meat unless it's free range chicken. The dark
has way more flavour than the pale meat. A free range bird that
has lived outside a cage and scratched for its food is much
tastier (and expensive) than the battery chicken that is more
common in stores.
But there are lots of ways to add flavor to the chicken--and I've got a
well stocked spice cabinet. (G)
We prefer Costco but Sam's came to WF about 8 years ago. I've heard
rumors in the past, and again in the past few weeks, that we may be
getting a Costco also. We fill our propane tanks thru Costco as the only place in town that does it charges a flat rate, no matter how empty (or full) your tank is. Costco will pro rate it.
Not much money in that batch of chciken but a lot of "sweat equity". And I've got chicken enough to last until the next great deal. Bv)=
That's the way I like to do it. Steve smoked a brisket a couple of weeks ago so now we've got about 5 vaccuum bags in the freezer, each with enough beef for a couple of meals.
I was defrosting my upright freezer last week and came across the smoked beef roast that Dale Shipp gifted me at the last echo picnic he and Gale hosted. Dennis and I are still eating on it.
IIRC, that one was in 2017 so that roast is well aged. Glad you're
enjoying it.
This recipe - halved - will use up the last of it. My electricslicer DD> has been getting a workout. Bv)=
Electric slicers are good for some things; we have one that gets used
from time to time.
I'm making chicken breast tomorrow. Normally I like dark meat but it's pricy to get it boneless and to much time to debone it for me. Since
I'm doing a stir fry, chicken beast it optimal due to meat cooking
time. It cooks quickly.
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
done with dark meat. I bought 3 ten pound bags of leg quarters last
We use a lot of white meat unless we've bought a whole chicken. Then he will take the dark, I'll take the white.
I prefer the dark meat unless it's free range chicken. The dark has
way more flavour than the pale meat. A free range bird that has lived outside a cage and scratched for its food is much tastier (and
expensive) than
the battery chicken that is more common in stores.
But there are lots of ways to add flavor to the chicken--and I've got a well stocked spice cabinet. (G)
The legs I didn't cook right away are sucky-bagged and frozen. The
We got some breasts down at Costco the other day; they were all individually bagged (not vaccuum) in freezer weight bags so when we got home, I just put the whole thing into the freezer. I'll be able to tear off one or two bags as I need them.
I wish we had a CostCo here - I'd buy a membership in a Sarasota
second. We have a Sam's Club and I used to was a member. But, since
Sam snuffed it and his heirs turned the company over to the $$$$
people it hasn't been the same. I refuse, on principle, to do business with any part of WalMart.
We prefer Costco but Sam's came to WF about 8 years ago. I've heard
rumors in the past, and again in the past few weeks, that we may be getting a Costco also. We fill our propane tanks thru Costco as the
only place in town that does it charges a flat rate, no matter how
empty (or full) your tank is. Costco will pro rate it.
Not much money in that batch of chiken but a lot of "sweat equity".
And I've got chicken enough to last until the next great deal. Bv)=
That's the way I like to do it. Steve smoked a brisket a couple of
weeks ago so now we've got about 5 vaccuum bags in the freezer, each
with enough beef for a couple of meals.
I was defrosting my upright freezer last week and came across the
smoked beef roast that Dale Shipp gifted me at the last echo picnic he
and Gale hosted. Dennis and I are still eating on it.
IIRC, that one was in 2017 so that roast is well aged. Glad you're enjoying it.
This recipe - halved - will use up the last of it. My electric
slicer DD> has been getting a workout. Bv)=
Electric slicers are good for some things; we have one that gets used
from time to time.
Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Dave Drum <=-
Interesting on the deboning a thigh, but not useful in the specific
case (sorry). It was a stir fry and needed was the speed factor of cooking.
I suspect the tank bit was for Ruth? I have natural gas from the city line at the street.
I prefer the dark meat unless it's free range chicken. The dark has
way more flavour than the pale meat. A free range bird that has lived outside a cage and scratched for its food is much tastier (and
expensive) than
the battery chicken that is more common in stores.
But there are lots of ways to add flavor to the chicken--and I've got a well stocked spice cabinet. (G)
As do I. But, it's a lot better, IMO, to enhance what's already there
than to have to provide all of the flavour from your cans, bottles,
and grater.
Not much money in that batch of chiken but a lot of "sweat equity".
And I've got chicken enough to last until the next great deal. Bv)=
That's the way I like to do it. Steve smoked a brisket a couple of
weeks ago so now we've got about 5 vaccuum bags in the freezer, each
with enough beef for a couple of meals.
I was defrosting my upright freezer last week and came across the
smoked beef roast that Dale Shipp gifted me at the last echo picnic he
and Gale hosted. Dennis and I are still eating on it.
IIRC, that one was in 2017 so that roast is well aged. Glad you're enjoying it.
This recipe - halved - will use up the last of it. My electric
slicer DD> has been getting a workout. Bv)=
Electric slicers are good for some things; we have one that gets used
from time to time.
I like the slicer for meat and cheese that need to have uniform
slices. Otherwise - my knives are *always* kept sharp. And veggies,
etc needed
uniform slicing get done on my mandoline.
Another of the shrimp recipes - for tonight's dinner.
Title: Scalloped Shrimp
Categories: Seafood, Vegetables, Dairy, Breads
Yield: 6 Servings
... An apple is an excellent thing until you have tried a peach.
Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Dave Drum <=-
Interesting on the deboning a thigh, but not useful in the specific case (sorry). It was a stir fry and needed was the speed factor of cooking.
Still it's a nice skill to have I demoed it at the picnic that Janis
hosted for the dish I was cooking as my part of the grub. Once the meat
and bone are separated my practice is to pop the meat into the freezer
until it "stiffens up" and is not so squirmy . That lets me make more
even cuts with less danger of contributing blood to the dish.
I suspect the tank bit was for Ruth? I have natural gas from the city line at the street.
It was. I noted in my reply to her that I had already commented in the
reply to you. I too have natural gas at my home and I expect that she
does also. But, I have a gas grill and a weed burner. Ruth and Steve
have a travel trailer which will use propane for heating and cooking.
I also have a camping stove - although it doesn't get a lot of use now
that I've retired from competitive chilli cooking. Still it's nice to
know that if the power grid goes down I can set the Coleman stove on
the electric cooktop and still have a hot meal.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: One-Pan Shrimp Scampi w/Orzo
Categories: Seafood, Citrus, Pasta, Wine, Chilies
Yield: 4 Servings
1 lb Large (U25) shrimp; peeled,
- deveined
3 tb Extra-virgin olive oil
1 tb Fresh lemon zest
+=PLUS=+
1 tb Juice; from 1 lemon
1/2 ts Red-pepper flakes
Salt & black pepper
4 cl Garlic; minced
2 tb Unsalted butter
1 c Orzo or rosmarina pasta
1/3 c Dry white wine
2 c Boiling water, seafood stock
- or chicken stock
3 tb Fine chopped parsley
In a medium bowl, stir together the shrimp, 1 tbsp
olive oil, the lemon zest, red-pepper flakes, 1/2
teaspoon salt, 1/4 teaspoon pepper and half the garlic.
Set aside to marinate (this step can be done up to 1
hour in advance).
To a medium skillet, add the butter, the remaining olive
oil and garlic, and heat over medium. When the butter
starts to bubble, add the orzo and 1/2 teaspoon salt and
cook, stirring often, until the orzo is toasted, about 2
minutes, adjusting the heat as necessary to prevent the
garlic from burning. Carefully add the wine (it will
bubble) and stir until absorbed, about 1 minute. Stir in
the water or stock, reduce heat to low, cover, and cook
until the orzo is al dente, about 12 minutes.
Add the shrimp in a snug, even layer on top of the orzo,
cover, and cook until all the shrimp is pink and cooked
through, 2 to 4 minutes. Remove from heat and let sit,
covered, 2 minutes.
Sprinkle with parsley and lemon juice, season to taste
with salt and pepper and serve immediately.
by Ali Slagle
Yield: 4 servings
RECIPE FROM: https://cooking.nytimes.com
Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen
MMMMM
... Some of the worst mistakes of my life have been haircuts -- Jim Morrison
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I prefer the dark meat unless it's free range chicken. The dark has
way more flavour than the pale meat. A free range bird that has lived outside a cage and scratched for its food is much tastier (and
expensive) than the battery chicken that is more common in stores.
But there are lots of ways to add flavor to the chicken--and I've got a well stocked spice cabinet. (G)
As do I. But, it's a lot better, IMO, to enhance what's already there
than to have to provide all of the flavour from your cans, bottles,
and grater.
Quickest and easiest way to add flavor is to cook it over a wood fire grill. May not be the quickest way to cook but it does add flavor fast.
Electric slicers are good for some things; we have one that gets used
from time to time.
I like the slicer for meat and cheese that need to have uniform
slices. Otherwise - my knives are *always* kept sharp. And veggies,
etc needed uniform slicing get done on my mandoline.
I've got a mandoline but 99.99% of the time do my slicing by hand. I've
a good collection of knives and can cut fairly uniform slices by eye. Plus, the cutting board goe into the dishwasher, knife into dish water, only one thing to clean by hand. (G)
Another of the shrimp recipes - for tonight's dinner.
Title: Scalloped Shrimp
Categories: Seafood, Vegetables, Dairy, Breads
Yield: 6 Servings
Looks good. We went out to lunch after church with a friend of ours,
went to Shomar's--it advertises itself as "Southern, Greek, Modern"--
just a couple of restaurants in the state so not a chain yet. I had calabash fried shrimp with a side salad and fruit cup, brought the
fruit and about half the shrimp home. Should have gone with the Greek salad as mine was a lot of lettuce and red onion, a couple of slices
each of (roma) tomato and cucumber. Least offensive dressing was
vinegar and oil & that's what they brought out--small cups each of red wine vinegar and (I think) canola oil. Steve got the the Greek salad;
he had feta and kalamata olives plus a pepperincini pepper--next time
I'll go with that.
Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I also have a camping stove - although it doesn't get a lot of use now
that I've retired from competitive chilli cooking. Still it's nice to
know that if the power grid goes down I can set the Coleman stove on
the electric cooktop and still have a hot meal.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: One-Pan Shrimp Scampi w/Orzo
Categories: Seafood, Citrus, Pasta, Wine, Chilies
Yield: 4 Servings
I don't recall the demo. I might have stepped out for a bit? Handy
skill to have!
Like you, I have cooking alternatives but the stove here is gas so with
a lighter, I can keep on cooking. Also for winter, I have a fireplace
and the gear to cook with it plus a butane burner unit.
Mostly I'd worry about freezing pipes to the laundry room. That would
be bad news.
Tonight, making this again. I made a simple stir fry last night served over rice. Today I make fried rice with leftover stir fry mixed in.
Both already cooked, just add a scrambled egg and butter for 'frying rice'. How much butter depends on how much rice, https://postimg.cc/14k5qCTH
(earlier picture but same dish mostly).
Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I also have a camping stove - although it doesn't get a lot of use now that I've retired from competitive chilli cooking. Still it's nice to know that if the power grid goes down I can set the Coleman stove on
the electric cooktop and still have a hot meal.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: One-Pan Shrimp Scampi w/Orzo
Categories: Seafood, Citrus, Pasta, Wine, Chilies
Yield: 4 Servings
8<----- EDIT ----->8
I don't recall the demo. I might have stepped out for a bit? Handy skill to have!
You may have been out back where MLoo was "husking" the durian.
Like you, I have cooking alternatives but the stove here is gas so with a lighter, I can keep on cooking. Also for winter, I have a fireplace and the gear to cook with it plus a butane burner unit.
That first part threw me for a bit until I realised that newer gas stoves have piezo-electric igniters. All the ones I ever owned had pilot lights. But, then, I'm lookng 82 years old in its unblinking eyes.
Mostly I'd worry about freezing pipes to the laundry room. That would be bad news.
I worry about the pipes in my kitchen. The house is on a slab and the
water supply for the kitchen sink runs in an outside (insulated, but
stil) wall. When we had out cold snap (-15ºF) after it being speedo
weather on Xmas I opened the cabinet doors beneath the sink to prevent
huge inconvenience (and plumbing bills)
Tonight, making this again. I made a simple stir fry last night served over rice. Today I make fried rice with leftover stir fry mixed in. Both already cooked, just add a scrambled egg and butter for 'frying rice'. How much butter depends on how much rice, https://postimg.cc/14k5qCTH
(earlier picture but same dish mostly).
Were some of those red strips chilies? Or was that just the way they
laid in the rice? I do some stir fries once in a while but we have a
*very* good selection of Asian restaurants here ... and enough of them
are authentic the let me sample Japanese, several regions of Chinese,
That, Vietnamese, Korean and Indian. Oddly, one of my favourite Thai
places is owned by a Burmese family - Thai Basil.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Black Pepper Pork
Categories: Thai, Pork, Chilies, Vegetables
Yield: 4 servings
385 g (10 oz) pork tenderloin;
- sliced
1 md White onion; thin sliced
6 cl Garlic; minced
1 Red bell pepper; in thin
- strips
2 Prik chee nu daeng chilies;
- (Red Birdseye) chopped
1 Thumb-sized piece Ginger; in
- thin strips
1/4 C Oyster sauce
1 tb Black peppercorns
1 tb Sugar
1 tb Oil
1/4 c Spring onions; chopped
Heat oil in a wok.
Sautee pork until slightly brown.
Add the garlic, ginger, Thai chilies, and black pepper
corns. Sautee until aromatic.
Add the onions and bell peppers. Sautee until onions
are slightly translucent.
Add the sugar and oyster sauce and stir for a minute.
Garnish with chopped spring onions.
Recipe by: Muoi Khuntilanont (a professional chef)
From: Colonel Ian Khuntilanont-Philpott
RECIPE FROM: http://www.chetbacon..com
Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives
MMMMM
... MS-DOS=suit & tie, Macintosh=cool shades, Amiga=high heels & leather
Carol Shenkenberger wrote to Dave Drum <=-
Like you, I have cooking alternatives but the stove here is gas so with a lighter, I can keep on cooking. Also for winter, I have a fireplace and the gear to cook with it plus a butane burner unit.
That first part threw me for a bit until I realised that newer gas stoves have piezo-electric igniters. All the ones I ever owned had pilot lights. But, then, I'm lookng 82 years old in its unblinking eyes.
Tonight, making this again. I made a simple stir fry last night served over rice. Today I make fried rice with leftover stir fry mixed in. Both already cooked, just add a scrambled egg and butter for 'frying rice'. How much butter depends on how much rice, https://postimg.cc/14k5qCTH
(earlier picture but same dish mostly).
Were some of those red strips chilies? Or was that just the way they
laid in the rice? I do some stir fries once in a while but we have a
*very* good selection of Asian restaurants here ... and enough of them
are authentic the let me sample Japanese, several regions of Chinese,
That, Vietnamese, Korean and Indian. Oddly, one of my favourite Thai
places is owned by a Burmese family - Thai Basil.
Yes, more 'modern gas stove/oven' than the old ones with pilot lights (grin).
On the stir fry, the bits were bell peppers cut to strips but some were further cut to sortof square shapes. We did that rice dish last night again. It's always good and super easy since it was all cooked already leaving you to just melt butter and add leftover rice and stir fry then toss it about to heat it up.
10 minutes at most.
As do I. But, it's a lot better, IMO, to enhance what's already there
than to have to provide all of the flavour from your cans, bottles,
and grater.
Quickest and easiest way to add flavor is to cook it over a wood fire grill. May not be the quickest way to cook but it does add flavor fast.
As may be. And depending on the wood used. Then there's the
convenience factor. Lots easier to fire up the stove than the grill or fire pit.
8<----- HACK ----->8
Electric slicers are good for some things; we have one that gets used
from time to time.
I like the slicer for meat and cheese that need to have uniform
slices. Otherwise - my knives are *always* kept sharp. And veggies,
etc needed uniform slicing get done on my mandoline.
I've got a mandoline but 99.99% of the time do my slicing by hand. I've
a good collection of knives and can cut fairly uniform slices by eye. Plus, the cutting board goe into the dishwasher, knife into dish water, only one thing to clean by hand. (G)
I don't have a mechanical dishwasher. Just the meat ones at the ends
of my arms. Bv)= If I'm doing quantity or the stuff needs to be
uniform
for presentation or ease of cooking the mandoline and the "onion"
chopper get a workout. Mostly they clean up with a good hot water
rinse - unless I've been cutting meats.
Another of the shrimp recipes - for tonight's dinner.
Title: Scalloped Shrimp
Categories: Seafood, Vegetables, Dairy, Breads
Yield: 6 Servings
Looks good. We went out to lunch after church with a friend of ours,
went to Shomar's--it advertises itself as "Southern, Greek, Modern"--
just a couple of restaurants in the state so not a chain yet. I had calabash fried shrimp with a side salad and fruit cup, brought the
fruit and about half the shrimp home. Should have gone with the Greek salad as mine was a lot of lettuce and red onion, a couple of slices
I wish we had a Greek restaurant here. Closest thing is the Star 66
Cafe at the truck 'rm up stop. The owners are from Macedonia and
Albania -
IOW Northern Greece .... same chow. Their only regular Greek offering
is spanokopita. Once in a while Janos (John) will have a jones for
some spanokopita w/bechamel. It's not popular with the truckers but he
has a list of people (like me) who will show up and help him eat it if
he lets us know it will be on the menu.
I don't understand why they don't ad this soup to their mix. Theyare DD> known throughout the area for great soups.
Title: Greek Lemon Chicken Soup (Avgolemono)
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus
Yield: 5 servings
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I prefer the dishwasher if possible but have also done things like that
by hand washing. Just have to be careful when you reach into the sink
with those or knives.
Another of the shrimp recipes - for tonight's dinner.
Title: Scalloped Shrimp
Categories: Seafood, Vegetables, Dairy, Breads
Yield: 6 Servings
Looks good. We went out to lunch after church with a friend of ours,
went to Shomar's--it advertises itself as "Southern, Greek, Modern"--
just a couple of restaurants in the state so not a chain yet. I had calabash fried shrimp with a side salad and fruit cup, brought the
fruit and about half the shrimp home. Should have gone with the Greek salad as mine was a lot of lettuce and red onion, a couple of slices
I wish we had a Greek restaurant here. Closest thing is the Star 66
Cafe at the truck 'rm up stop. The owners are from Macedonia and
Albania - IOW Northern Greece .... same chow.
Their only regular Greek offering is spanokopita. Once in a while
Janos (John) will have a jones for some spanokopita w/bechamel.
It's not popular with the truckers but he has a list of people
(like me) who will show up and help him eat it if he lets us know
it will be on the menu.
Nice that he lets you know it's on the menu. We've got a kebab (gyro) place in WF but for a good sit down Greek meal we need to go into
Raleigh.
I don't understand why they don't ad this soup to their mix. They
are known throughout the area for great soups.
Title: Greek Lemon Chicken Soup (Avgolemono)
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus
Yield: 5 servings
They must have some reason--have you asked?
I prefer the dishwasher if possible but have also done things like that
by hand washing. Just have to be careful when you reach into the sink
with those or knives.
When I am washing my knives they never leave my hand until they are
put in the dish rack. No worriews there.
I wish we had a Greek restaurant here. Closest thing is the Star 66
Cafe at the truck 'rm up stop. The owners are from Macedonia and
Albania - IOW Northern Greece .... same chow.
Their only regular Greek offering is spanokopita. Once in a while
Janos (John) will have a jones for some spanokopita w/bechamel.
It's not popular with the truckers but he has a list of people
(like me) who will show up and help him eat it if he lets us know
it will be on the menu.
Nice that he lets you know it's on the menu. We've got a kebab (gyro) place in WF but for a good sit down Greek meal we need to go into
Raleigh.
Otherwise he has too much waste/unsold product.
I don't understand why they don't ad this soup to their mix. They
are known throughout the area for great soups.
Title: Greek Lemon Chicken Soup (Avgolemono)
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus
Yield: 5 servings
They must have some reason--have you asked?
I have to assume it doesnt keep well in the steam table. But I'll ask
and if I hear anything different I'll post it here.
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
I prefer the dishwasher if possible but have also done things like that
by hand washing. Just have to be careful when you reach into the sink
with those or knives.
When I am washing my knives they never leave my hand until they are
put in the dish rack. No worriews there.
I always put knives in one specific area and move any soap suds aside before putting my hand there. Handles are always pointed toward me so I can grab them first.
I wish we had a Greek restaurant here. Closest thing is the Star 66
Cafe at the truck 'rm up stop. The owners are from Macedonia and
Albania - IOW Northern Greece .... same chow.
Their only regular Greek offering is spanokopita. Once in a while
Janos (John) will have a jones for some spanokopita w/bechamel.
It's not popular with the truckers but he has a list of people
(like me) who will show up and help him eat it if he lets us know
it will be on the menu.
Nice that he lets you know it's on the menu. We've got a kebab (gyro) place in WF but for a good sit down Greek meal we need to go into
Raleigh.
Otherwise he has too much waste/unsold product.
Can it be frozen in meal size portions?
I don't understand why they don't ad this soup to their mix. They
are known throughout the area for great soups.
Title: Greek Lemon Chicken Soup (Avgolemono)
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus
Yield: 5 servings
They must have some reason--have you asked?
I have to assume it doesnt keep well in the steam table. But I'll ask
and if I hear anything different I'll post it here.
This would probably freeze well also. I made chicken/rice soup last
night using a rice blend. Much better than the canned stuff or even
home made with just brown rice.
When I am washing my knives they never leave my hand until they are
put in the dish rack. No worriews there.
I always put knives in one specific area and move any soap suds aside before putting my hand there. Handles are always pointed toward me so I can grab them first.
We each have our methods which we are comfortable using. Dennis seems
to wash dishes by erosion under a running hot water tap w/no soap (s'truth).
I've told him to leave my dishes and I'll do them later - w/Dawn, a
dish brush and a 3M sponge w/scrubbie on the back.
Nice that he lets you know it's on the menu. We've got a kebab (gyro) place in WF but for a good sit down Greek meal we need to go into
Raleigh.
Otherwise he has too much waste/unsold product.
Can it be frozen in meal size portions?
No doubt, but this is a busy 24/7 truck stop (and general public)
place which is seldom less the 40% full.
I don't understand why they don't ad this soup to their mix. They
are known throughout the area for great soups.
Title: Greek Lemon Chicken Soup (Avgolemono)
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus
Yield: 5 servings
They must have some reason--have you asked?
I have to assume it doesnt keep well in the steam table. But I'll ask
and if I hear anything different I'll post it here.
This would probably freeze well also. I made chicken/rice soup last
night using a rice blend. Much better than the canned stuff or even
home made with just brown rice.
I did ask ... and I was right. I make this soup for "special"
occasions usually w/chicken but sometimes using leftover turkey. I
makes a *LOT*
for a pair of old bachelors. Fortunately it freezes well.
Title: Hearty Chicken, Vegetable & Wild Rice Soup
Categories: Poultry, Vegetables, Rice, Herbs, Cheese
Yield: 19 Servings
Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-
We each have our methods which we are comfortable using. Dennis seems
to wash dishes by erosion under a running hot water tap w/no soap (s'truth).
One of my dad's housekeepers did that too; I tried to get to the dishes before she did so I could use some soap.
I've told him to leave my dishes and I'll do them later - w/Dawn, a
dish brush and a 3M sponge w/scrubbie on the back.
I use a dish cloth (crocheted cotton), usually Palmolive dish soap and various scrubbers as needed. Several years ago one of our daughter gave
us a chain mail scrubber for cast iron, plus we have assorted other
nylon and silicone scrubbers.
Nice that he lets you know it's on the menu. We've got a kebab (gyro) place in WF but for a good sit down Greek meal we need to go into
Raleigh.
Otherwise he has too much waste/unsold product.
Can it be frozen in meal size portions?
No doubt, but this is a busy 24/7 truck stop (and general public)
place which is seldom less the 40% full.
So he usually sells out of it? I had the impression that he usually had left overs, which, as I said, could be frozen.
Lundberg makes a nice rice blend that we like for a lot of things. It
has wild rice, red and brown rice and at least one other kind, forget right now what. It used to have a green rice in the mix but they discontinued that some years ago, much to our disappointment. I'd originally bought some at a natural foods store in HI, just to try for something different, and Steve really liked it so it became a regular purchase.
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