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I hear ya. It didn't seem that long ago when a cheap home cooked meal was
fish... whatever the market had that day. Not so anymore... now fish is a "special meal." I think I paid 12.99/lb for sole a couple of weeks back. Hell, lobster is less expensive. --Mike P.S. I spent most of my teen years in Cheshire, CT "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... My mom used to make one hell of a chowder from a variety of seafood similar to the kinds described in the article. I sure remember the days of inexpensive fish at the fish markets. My mother was from Boston, but there was plenty of fish and shellfish available in New Haven when I was growing up there. I think the damned huge factory fishing ships have ruined the sea as a resource. On 1/17/2007 9:50 PM, Mike wrote: Thanks Harry. Nice story , and so true. Made me hungry for that 'chowdah' my grandmother used to make back in the day. I'm originally from MA, but she was born in ME. --Mike "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... The New York Times January 17, 2007 Sea Sends Distress Call in One-Note Chowders By MOLLY O’NEILL Stonington, Me. DICK BRIDGES has big, calloused hands, hands that have been thickened by half a century of fishing, hands that can build a life and shape a community. They are not the sort of hands you expect to see mincing onions in a church kitchen. But on a recent Saturday evening Mr. Bridges grasped a flimsy knife, reached for a sack of yellow onions and launched into a soliloquy about fishing in America and the dish that tells the story: chowder. ... |
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