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John H[_2_] November 29th 11 10:49 PM

Great boat food
 
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Tim November 30th 11 12:56 AM

Great boat food
 
On Nov 29, 4:49*pm, John H wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Saved for future reference.....

X ` Man November 30th 11 12:03 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:
On Nov 29, 4:49 pm, John wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Saved for future reference.....


Taste is subjective, which explains my "blech" at the idea of smothering
a nice piece of smoked salmon with a chipotle sauce, or serving it with
beans, rice and collards.

I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?



Drifter[_2_] November 30th 11 01:03 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 7:03 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:
On Nov 29, 4:49 pm, John wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't
have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the
collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well
also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of
water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for
about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the
onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put
collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces
and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Saved for future reference.....


Taste is subjective, which explains my "blech" at the idea of smothering
a nice piece of smoked salmon with a chipotle sauce, or serving it with
beans, rice and collards.

I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?



Why? Because taste is subjective. You said it yourself. Must be that you
don't believe what you write.

--
1-20-13 The end of an error

iBoaterer[_2_] November 30th 11 01:35 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
? tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


That's blasphemy! Collards simply need to be boiled with a couple of ham
hocks, a little sugar and a pinch of baking soda, onion.

iBoaterer[_2_] November 30th 11 01:36 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:
On Nov 29, 4:49 pm, John wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
? tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Saved for future reference.....


Taste is subjective, which explains my "blech" at the idea of smothering
a nice piece of smoked salmon with a chipotle sauce, or serving it with
beans, rice and collards.

I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?


You just wanted to be negative as usual. I don't see where John said he
"smothered" his salmon. So you don't put any sauce on anything?

iBoaterer[_2_] November 30th 11 01:37 PM

Great boat food
 
In article m,
says...

On 11/30/2011 7:03 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:
On Nov 29, 4:49 pm, John wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't
have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the
collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
? tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well
also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of
water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for
about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the
onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put
collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces
and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.

Saved for future reference.....


Taste is subjective, which explains my "blech" at the idea of smothering
a nice piece of smoked salmon with a chipotle sauce, or serving it with
beans, rice and collards.

I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?



Why? Because taste is subjective. You said it yourself. Must be that you
don't believe what you write.


No one else does either. Well, except Suckling Don.

Califbill November 30th 11 05:34 PM

Great boat food
 
"John H" wrote in message
...

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have
any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water
in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12
minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and
saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards
back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat
mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to
eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6
years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he
owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat.
Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to
steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give
most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard
Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3
minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking.
Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard.


John H[_2_] November 30th 11 05:47 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 08:03:24 -0500, Drifter wrote:

On 11/30/2011 7:03 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:
On Nov 29, 4:49 pm, John wrote:
We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't
have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the
collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well
also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of
water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for
about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the
onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put
collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces
and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.

Saved for future reference.....


Taste is subjective, which explains my "blech" at the idea of smothering
a nice piece of smoked salmon with a chipotle sauce, or serving it with
beans, rice and collards.

I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?



Why? Because taste is subjective. You said it yourself. Must be that you
don't believe what you write.


....and knows nothing of my chipotle cream sauce. Living a life of negativity must be miserable.

X ` Man[_3_] November 30th 11 05:47 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/11 12:47 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 08:03:24 -0500, wrote:

On 11/30/2011 7:03 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/29/11 7:56 PM, Tim wrote:



I like salmon, smoked or otherwise, and I like red beans and rice, but
together? And all the hot sauces and spices? Why mask the taste of good
food, especially a delicate food like salmon, with hot sauces?



Why? Because taste is subjective. You said it yourself. Must be that you
don't believe what you write.


...and knows nothing of my chipotle cream sauce. Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

John H[_2_] November 30th 11 05:50 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill" wrote:

"John H" wrote in message
.. .

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have
any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water
in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12
minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and
saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards
back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat
mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to
eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6
years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he
owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat.
Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to
steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give
most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard
Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3
minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking.
Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard.


Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked.

I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like salmon at all until she
had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes, and we have it about
every other week.

I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked, baked, fried, broiled
or whatever.

iBoaterer[_2_] November 30th 11 06:25 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill" wrote:

"John H" wrote in message
.. .

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have
any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
? tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water
in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12
minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and
saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards
back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat
mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to
eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6
years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he
owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat.
Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to
steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give
most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard
Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3
minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking.
Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard.


Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked.

I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like salmon at all until she
had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes, and we have it about
every other week.

I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked, baked, fried, broiled
or whatever.


I grill fish all of the time, Haddock because of it's mild flavor is
best (to me) on the grill with just a brushing of melted butter and some
lemon pepper.

Wayne.B November 30th 11 07:04 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.


iBoaterer[_2_] November 30th 11 07:34 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.


Oh, you know how it is. If Harry doesn't eat it, it's no good, if Harry
doesn't own it, it's no good, blah, blah, blah!!!


X ` Man November 30th 11 08:07 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.

John H[_2_] November 30th 11 09:09 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 14:04:34 -0500, Wayne.B wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.


It's gotta be a bitch.

Disgusted November 30th 11 09:42 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.



For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.

Drifter[_2_] November 30th 11 09:49 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 4:09 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 14:04:34 -0500, wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.


===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.


It's gotta be a bitch.


What is this hold you have over Krause? I've never seen anything like it.

--
1-20-13 The end of an error

X ` Man November 30th 11 10:30 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.



For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.



In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?

Disgusted November 30th 11 10:45 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.



For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.



In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?


Was your second major, foul language?

X ` Man November 30th 11 10:54 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/11 5:45 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.


For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.



In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?


Was your second major, foul language?



You don't like ****? You've got a head full of it.
Go play with your equally mentally challenged right-wingers here and, of
course, iLoogy, the "moderate" 14-year-old boytoy of iSnotty.

Drifter[_2_] November 30th 11 11:52 PM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 5:54 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 5:45 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life.
And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.


For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.


In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?


Was your second major, foul language?



You don't like ****? You've got a head full of it.
Go play with your equally mentally challenged right-wingers here and, of
course, iLoogy, the "moderate" 14-year-old boytoy of iSnotty.


The holiday season has has certainly fouled your usual good nature Try
to ignore Christmas, Kwanza, and Chanukah displays and celebrations, and
maybe you'll get through the season without bursting a blood vessel.
--
1-20-13 The end of an error

John H[_2_] December 1st 11 01:47 AM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 16:49:52 -0500, Drifter wrote:

On 11/30/2011 4:09 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 14:04:34 -0500, wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.


It's gotta be a bitch.


What is this hold you have over Krause? I've never seen anything like it.


I'm his personal black cloud. I just float over Huntingtown, MD. Every so often I take a leak...I
mean...rain.

John H[_2_] December 1st 11 01:48 AM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 18:52:43 -0500, Drifter wrote:

On 11/30/2011 5:54 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 5:45 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life.
And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.


For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.


In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?

Was your second major, foul language?



You don't like ****? You've got a head full of it.
Go play with your equally mentally challenged right-wingers here and, of
course, iLoogy, the "moderate" 14-year-old boytoy of iSnotty.


The holiday season has has certainly fouled your usual good nature Try
to ignore Christmas, Kwanza, and Chanukah displays and celebrations, and
maybe you'll get through the season without bursting a blood vessel.


....and tell him not to look to Heaven. Wet stuff may come down.

X ` Man[_3_] December 1st 11 01:53 AM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/11 8:47 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 16:49:52 -0500, wrote:

On 11/30/2011 4:09 PM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 14:04:34 -0500, wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.

It's gotta be a bitch.


What is this hold you have over Krause? I've never seen anything like it.


I'm his personal black cloud. I just float over Huntingtown, MD. Every so often I take a leak...I
mean...rain.



You're a disgusting racist and deserve to be outed for that at every
opportunity.

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

Drifter[_2_] December 1st 11 03:07 AM

Great boat food
 
On 11/30/2011 8:53 PM, X ` Man wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man


You are sick.

--
1-20-13 The end of an error

John H[_2_] December 1st 11 12:50 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 22:37:48 -0500, wrote:

On Tue, 29 Nov 2011 17:49:41 -0500, John H
wrote:

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


Country (or SE DC) collards
From the big black lady that lived behind me in Anacostia

Perhaps updated a little

2568.8 in reply to 2568.7
Hog Jowls, onion, mushrooms and beef broth.

Cut the fatty part off of both sides of the hog jowl (saving that
meaty part in the middle) and put it rind down in the pan. Burn it.
Chop up a large onion or two and put them in there, burn them too.
Throw in a can of mushroom pieces. The fat will cook out of the rind
and prevent it from actually burning but you want everything browned.
You can flip over the hog jowls and burn the other side a while too.
Meanwhile dice up the meat part and toss that in. You can pull out the
fat parts then and throw it away. You have a lot of the flavor in the
pan and the onion/mushroom mix.
Crunch a couple cloves of garlic and toss them in along with some salt
and a few grinds of black pepper.
Keep cooking this on high heat while tossing it around until the meat
is well browned.

At this point I splash in a shot or two of bourbon to deglaze the pan
and make a sort of gravy out of all of that brown stuff. Stir that up
with a spatula being sure you get everything off the bottom of the
pan. (cheap white wine works too)

As soon as you see this start to cook down, toss in a can of beef
broth, a can of water and a bag of greens, Cover and bring to a boil,
then reduce heat and simmer a couple hours. The greens will collapse
into the broth pretty fast. You can stir them up to make that go
faster.

They are really better if you put them in the fridge and heat them up
again tomorrow. It seems to take the sharpness out of the greens.


Well...I've never seen hog jowls at our local stores, so that's probably out. I substitute the bacon
to get the fat. And, after cooking the greens down the first time, and draining them, there seems to
be enough water left in them to cook, albeit slowly, for another hour or so. Never tried the beef
broth, but I wouldn't use more than a half cup or so.

You're right about letting them set. I usually make a batch witch will last about four big servings.
That last bowlful is always the best.

John H[_2_] December 1st 11 12:51 PM

Great boat food
 
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 22:07:13 -0500, Drifter wrote:

On 11/30/2011 8:53 PM, X ` Man wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man


You are sick.


Well, we've gone over that before.

Actually, as he figures anyone who didn't vote for or agree with 'Bama is a racist, I'm in pretty
good company! From him, that's a compliment!

X ` Man[_3_] December 1st 11 01:00 PM

Great boat food
 
On 12/1/11 7:51 AM, John H wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 22:07:13 -0500, wrote:

On 11/30/2011 8:53 PM, X ` Man wrote:

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man


You are sick.


Well, we've gone over that before.

Actually, as he figures anyone who didn't vote for or agree with 'Bama is a racist, I'm in pretty
good company! From him, that's a compliment!



Lots of people who did not vote for Obama are *not* racist. It's not
your voting history that makes you a racist.

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

iBoaterer[_2_] December 1st 11 02:10 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.


For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.



In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?


Was your second major, foul language?


For an alleged writer, he sure comes off as a stupid, foul boor!

iBoaterer[_2_] December 1st 11 02:11 PM

Great boat food
 
In article ,
says...

On 11/30/11 5:45 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 5:30 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 4:42 PM, Disgusted wrote:
On 11/30/2011 3:07 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 11/30/11 2:04 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:47:38 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Blech to you, your chipotles, your cream sauce and your life. And, of
course, to your ruining smoked salmon.

===

Give it up Harry.

Living a life of negativity must be miserable.



I don't have use for racist pigs like herring, whine.


For not having time you sure spend enough of it commenting. Blech.


In the minds (and I use the term loosely) of the really stupid,

"no use for" means the same as "not having time."

No wonder this country is fu*ked.

Try high school again, **** for brains, and this time...pay attention in
English class.

Nice handle, by the way. Did you come up with it after a week or so of
not bathing?


Was your second major, foul language?



You don't like ****? You've got a head full of it.
Go play with your equally mentally challenged right-wingers here and, of
course, iLoogy, the "moderate" 14-year-old boytoy of iSnotty.


This from Don's lover....

Black Cloud December 1st 11 08:49 PM

Great boat food
 
On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 14:04:23 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 07:50:03 -0500, John H
wrote:

Well...I've never seen hog jowls at our local stores, so that's probably out. I substitute the bacon
to get the fat. And, after cooking the greens down the first time, and draining them, there seems to
be enough water left in them to cook, albeit slowly, for another hour or so. Never tried the beef
broth, but I wouldn't use more than a half cup or so.

You're right about letting them set. I usually make a batch witch will last about four big servings.
That last bowlful is always the best.


They are shrink wrap packed in the case where the salt pork and ham
hocks are at Publix. You get more smoky taste from them than bacon.


I'll look, but I don't think our Safeway carries them. Oh, and I meant to say, I never mix beef
broth and pork. If I need a liquid I'll use chicken broth. I think it goes better with pork. If I'm
making gravy to go with roast pork, for example, I'll use chicken broth. Works well.

X ` Man[_3_] December 1st 11 08:54 PM

Great boat food
 
On 12/1/11 3:49 PM, Black Cloud wrote:
On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 14:04:23 -0500, wrote:

On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 07:50:03 -0500, John
wrote:

Well...I've never seen hog jowls at our local stores, so that's probably out. I substitute the bacon
to get the fat. And, after cooking the greens down the first time, and draining them, there seems to
be enough water left in them to cook, albeit slowly, for another hour or so. Never tried the beef
broth, but I wouldn't use more than a half cup or so.

You're right about letting them set. I usually make a batch witch will last about four big servings.
That last bowlful is always the best.


They are shrink wrap packed in the case where the salt pork and ham
hocks are at Publix. You get more smoky taste from them than bacon.


I'll look, but I don't think our Safeway carries them. Oh, and I meant to say, I never mix beef
broth and pork. If I need a liquid I'll use chicken broth. I think it goes better with pork. If I'm
making gravy to go with roast pork, for example, I'll use chicken broth. Works well.



Wow. If you didn't look like you were HIV-positive, you could get a job
at Waffle House.

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

iBoaterer[_2_] December 1st 11 09:01 PM

Great boat food
 
In article , dump-on-
says...

On 12/1/11 3:49 PM, Black Cloud wrote:
On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 14:04:23 -0500,
wrote:

On Thu, 01 Dec 2011 07:50:03 -0500, John
wrote:

Well...I've never seen hog jowls at our local stores, so that's probably out. I substitute the bacon
to get the fat. And, after cooking the greens down the first time, and draining them, there seems to
be enough water left in them to cook, albeit slowly, for another hour or so. Never tried the beef
broth, but I wouldn't use more than a half cup or so.

You're right about letting them set. I usually make a batch witch will last about four big servings.
That last bowlful is always the best.

They are shrink wrap packed in the case where the salt pork and ham
hocks are at Publix. You get more smoky taste from them than bacon.


I'll look, but I don't think our Safeway carries them. Oh, and I meant to say, I never mix beef
broth and pork. If I need a liquid I'll use chicken broth. I think it goes better with pork. If I'm
making gravy to go with roast pork, for example, I'll use chicken broth. Works well.



Wow. If you didn't look like you were HIV-positive, you could get a job
at Waffle House.


Harry thinks anybody that isn't so bloated that their fingers look like
they are about to explode looks like they are HIV positive. He and Dr.
Fourchin must have always been obese!

Califbill December 3rd 11 06:21 AM

Great boat food
 
"John H" wrote in message
...

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill"
wrote:

"John H" wrote in message
.. .

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have
any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water
in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12
minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions
and
saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards
back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat
mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to
eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6
years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he
owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat.
Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to
steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give
most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard
Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about
3
minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking.
Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard.


Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked.

I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like
salmon at all until she
had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes,
and we have it about
every other week.

I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked,
baked, fried, broiled
or whatever.


--------------------------------------------------------

We do not get Haddock here, but if it is a mild, white fleshed fish. Put a
little olive oil and a dab of butter in a skillet. Gives the butter flavor
without the bad fat, and put a little Italian bread crumbs on the filet and
fry a little on each side until done. Or a little crushed pecan or walnut
as a covering and same quick fry. We do Yellowtail with a non-fat Mayo and
Dijon mustard smear and fry it. Ahi I will sometimes slice in thin sections
and marinade like an Asian Poke recipe, a little sesame oil, reduced sodium
Soy sauce and some sesame seeds. Then quick sear in a nonstick skillet with
a little oil or non stick spray. Since I still have about 10# of Ahi from
the last one I caught, I try lots of different ways including Poke to
prepare it.


eqxk57 December 3rd 11 10:56 AM

[quote='John H[_2_];908266']We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the
fish.

In that case, off the surface of my mind, you can do a roasting beef tenderloin & later piece & serve chilly along with good bread & comes and an range of propagates such as caramelized red onion & garlic clove, horseradish mustard etc. Other activities you may think about tend to be chilly fried chicken, seafood salad or even marinated ceviche, Barbequed BBQ poultry salad, and drawn pork, which may be served space temperature.

Around the salad finish, grilled sweet potato, chilly crackers with vegetables, marinated cucumber, hammer toe & spicy pinto bean, or even mixed greens along with very finely sliced Vidalia onion & fresh sliced peaches having a sweet onion vinaigrette are a few suggestions.

Dips: roasting poblano & tomatillo, caramelized onion & smoked cigarettes gouda, or smoked cigarettes tomato basil; bake away a few thinly sliced france or italian language bread, brush with essential olive oil along with a sprinkle of the preferred seasoning & function with the falls. You might also consider doing a smooth breads topped & baked along with summer time veggies: yellow-colored & zucchini lead pages, red onion, thinly chopped up eggplant, etc. and maybe your preferred parmesan cheese after that make off and reduce to have an appetizer or some type of frittata.

For treat, why not think about red, white & azure sugars cookie bar pieces or individual shortcakes that you can assemble on the boat?

Black Cloud December 3rd 11 01:33 PM

Great boat food
 
On Fri, 2 Dec 2011 22:21:33 -0800, "Califbill" wrote:

"John H" wrote in message
.. .

On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill"
wrote:

"John H" wrote in message
. ..

We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed
something good to go with the
fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have
any of the collards,
which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though.

Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards:

Collard Greens

Grocery store bag full of Collards
Large onion
4-5 cloves garlic
5 slices bacon
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar
½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also)

Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems).

Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water
in a pot and put all the
greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12
minutes. Drain.

In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions
and
saute' them with the
bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards.

Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards
back in pot and add the
ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat
mixed in well. Cover and
simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to
eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6
years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he
owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat.
Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to
steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give
most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard
Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about
3
minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking.
Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard.


Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked.

I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like
salmon at all until she
had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes,
and we have it about
every other week.

I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked,
baked, fried, broiled
or whatever.


--------------------------------------------------------

We do not get Haddock here, but if it is a mild, white fleshed fish. Put a
little olive oil and a dab of butter in a skillet. Gives the butter flavor
without the bad fat, and put a little Italian bread crumbs on the filet and
fry a little on each side until done. Or a little crushed pecan or walnut
as a covering and same quick fry. We do Yellowtail with a non-fat Mayo and
Dijon mustard smear and fry it. Ahi I will sometimes slice in thin sections
and marinade like an Asian Poke recipe, a little sesame oil, reduced sodium
Soy sauce and some sesame seeds. Then quick sear in a nonstick skillet with
a little oil or non stick spray. Since I still have about 10# of Ahi from
the last one I caught, I try lots of different ways including Poke to
prepare it.


Thanks Bill. I've thought I might try it with some Paul Prudhomme's blackened redfish spices. It's
not redfish, but that stuff tastes pretty good. I'm going to try it with the butter and bread
crumbs. Some friends caught a haddock, big one, while in Alaska, had it flash frozen, and brought a
freezer-full home with them.

Black Cloud December 3rd 11 01:35 PM

Great boat food
 
On Sat, 3 Dec 2011 10:56:57 +0000, eqxk57 wrote:


'John H[_2_ Wrote:
;908266']We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight.
Needed something good to go with the
fish.

In that case, off the surface of my mind, you can do a roasting beef
tenderloin & later piece & serve chilly along with good bread & comes
and an range of propagates such as caramelized red onion & garlic clove,
horseradish mustard etc. Other activities you may think about tend to be
chilly fried chicken, seafood salad or even marinated ceviche, Barbequed
BBQ poultry salad, and drawn pork, which may be served space
temperature.

Around the salad finish, grilled sweet potato, chilly crackers with
vegetables, marinated cucumber, hammer toe & spicy pinto bean, or even
mixed greens along with very finely sliced Vidalia onion & fresh sliced
peaches having a sweet onion vinaigrette are a few suggestions.

Dips: roasting poblano & tomatillo, caramelized onion & smoked
cigarettes gouda, or smoked cigarettes tomato basil; bake away a few
thinly sliced france or italian language bread, brush with essential
olive oil along with a sprinkle of the preferred seasoning & function
with the falls. You might also consider doing a smooth breads topped &
baked along with summer time veggies: yellow-colored & zucchini lead
pages, red onion, thinly chopped up eggplant, etc. and maybe your
preferred parmesan cheese after that make off and reduce to have an
appetizer or some type of frittata.

For treat, why not think about red, white & azure sugars cookie bar
pieces or individual shortcakes that you can assemble on the boat?


Maybe I'll paint my boat pink while I'm at it.

North Star December 3rd 11 03:25 PM

Great boat food
 
On Dec 3, 9:35*am, Black Cloud wrote:
On Sat, 3 Dec 2011 10:56:57 +0000, eqxk57 wrote:

'John H[_2_ Wrote:
;908266']We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight.
Needed something good to go with the
fish.


In that case, off the surface of my mind, you can do a roasting beef
tenderloin & later piece & serve chilly along with good bread & comes
and an range of propagates such as caramelized red onion & garlic clove,
horseradish mustard etc. Other activities you may think about tend to be
chilly fried chicken, seafood salad or even marinated ceviche, Barbequed
BBQ poultry salad, and drawn pork, which may be served space
temperature.


Around the salad finish, grilled sweet potato, chilly crackers with
vegetables, marinated cucumber, hammer toe & spicy pinto bean, or even
mixed greens along with very finely sliced Vidalia onion & fresh sliced
peaches having a sweet onion vinaigrette are a few suggestions.


Dips: roasting poblano & tomatillo, caramelized onion & smoked
cigarettes gouda, or smoked cigarettes tomato basil; bake away a few
thinly sliced france or italian language bread, brush with essential
olive oil along with a sprinkle of the preferred seasoning & function
with the falls. You might also consider doing a smooth breads topped &
baked along with summer time veggies: yellow-colored & zucchini lead
pages, red onion, thinly chopped up eggplant, etc. and maybe your
preferred parmesan cheese after that make off and reduce to have an
appetizer or some type of frittata.


For treat, why not think about red, white & azure sugars cookie bar
pieces or individual shortcakes that you can assemble on the boat?


Maybe I'll paint my boat pink while I'm at it.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


My, my.. Johnny... you have a real fetish for any and all things pink!
I'll repost this as a real treat for you. The way things in the US of
A are going, your granddaughters could be marching with this group.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4DZQhfrl5Y

Drifter[_5_] December 3rd 11 03:38 PM

Great boat food
 
On 12/3/2011 10:25 AM, North Star wrote:
On Dec 3, 9:35 am, Black wrote:
On Sat, 3 Dec 2011 10:56:57 +0000, wrote:

'John H[_2_ Wrote:
;908266']We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight.
Needed something good to go with the
fish.


In that case, off the surface of my mind, you can do a roasting beef
tenderloin& later piece& serve chilly along with good bread& comes
and an range of propagates such as caramelized red onion& garlic clove,
horseradish mustard etc. Other activities you may think about tend to be
chilly fried chicken, seafood salad or even marinated ceviche, Barbequed
BBQ poultry salad, and drawn pork, which may be served space
temperature.


Around the salad finish, grilled sweet potato, chilly crackers with
vegetables, marinated cucumber, hammer toe& spicy pinto bean, or even
mixed greens along with very finely sliced Vidalia onion& fresh sliced
peaches having a sweet onion vinaigrette are a few suggestions.


Dips: roasting poblano& tomatillo, caramelized onion& smoked
cigarettes gouda, or smoked cigarettes tomato basil; bake away a few
thinly sliced france or italian language bread, brush with essential
olive oil along with a sprinkle of the preferred seasoning& function
with the falls. You might also consider doing a smooth breads topped&
baked along with summer time veggies: yellow-colored& zucchini lead
pages, red onion, thinly chopped up eggplant, etc. and maybe your
preferred parmesan cheese after that make off and reduce to have an
appetizer or some type of frittata.


For treat, why not think about red, white& azure sugars cookie bar
pieces or individual shortcakes that you can assemble on the boat?


Maybe I'll paint my boat pink while I'm at it.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


My, my.. Johnny... you have a real fetish for any and all things pink!
I'll repost this as a real treat for you. The way things in the US of
A are going, your granddaughters could be marching with this group.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4DZQhfrl5Y


What a nice group of lovely young fit women.

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1-20-13 The end of an error


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