|
|
#276765 - 07/27/08 03:34 PM
Re: Favorite Fool Moon Recipes
[Re: Aint]
|
Health & Relationships/Loss & Bereavement Mod
Registered: 09/29/05
Loc: Damn close to EVERYWHERE!
|
WINDY’S BREAKFAST BURRITOS
12 oz pkg sausage links 1 lg green bell pepper, diced 2 med onions, diced 12 eggs, beaten salt to taste black pepper, to taste 1 cup shredded monterey jack cheese 8 10-inch flour tortillas
hot sauce
1. Brown sausage links in large skillet; set aside to cool. When the links can be handled, cut into 1/2-inch slices.
2. Add a bit of fat to the skillet, if needed, and lightly sauté diced bell pepper and onion.
3. Add sausage back into pan. Add some salt and pepper to eggs, and then combine with mixture in skillet and cook over low heat, stirring occasionally, until done. Scoot the pan off the burner and cover.
4. In the meantime, place tortilla shells in a covered dish in the microwave. Heat on defrost, 15 seconds at a time, until slightly warm.
Now for the assembly...
5. Visually divide the pan mixture into 8 parts. Spoon each part onto the middle upper 2/3's of a tortilla.
6. Sprinkle 2 tablespoons of cheese atop the mixture. Add hot sauce, if desired.
7. Fold up the bottom 1/3 of the tortilla, and then fold over each side across the middle.
Olé!!
Yield: 8 burritos
From Windy's kitchen
_________________________
WindDancer
Giving feet, and then wings, to my Intuition
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
#281969 - 09/12/08 05:18 PM
Re: Favorite Fool Moon Recipes
[Re: bob]
|
Administrator
Registered: 08/01/99
Loc: New York, NY (New York)
|
Beef tongue is excellent and is sometimes served with raisin sauce, which I find awful, but many people like it.
My grandmother used to boil tongue for dinner and we'd eat the leftover meat in sandwiches the next day. It's not the finest dish in the world, but properly cooked is tasty and something I get a hankering for every so often. Let me know how yours worked out.
And now, in honor of our potential next vice president, this little number taken from "Northern Cookbook" published by the Ministry of Indian Affairs, Ottawa, Canada, edited by Eleanor A. Ellis
Jellied Moose Nose
1 Upper jawbone of a moose 1 Onion; sliced 1 Garlic clove 1 tb Mixed pickling spice 1 ts Salt 1/2 ts Pepper 1/4 c Vinegar Cut the upper jaw bone of the moose just below the eyes. Place in a large kettle of scalding water and boil for 45 minutes.
Remove and chill in cold water.
Pull out all the hairs - these will have been loosened by the boiling and should come out easily (like plucking a duck).
Wash thoroughly until no hairs remain.
Place the nose in a kettle and cover with fresh water.
Add onion, garlic, spices and vinegar
Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until the meat is tender. Let cool overnight in the liquid.
When cool, take the meat out of the broth, and remove and discard the bones and the cartilage. You will have two kinds of meat, white meat from the bulb of the nose, and thin strips of dark meat from along the bones and jowls.
Slice the meat thinly and alternate layers of white and dark meat in a loaf pan.
Reheat the broth to boiling, then pour the broth over the meat in the loaf pan.
Let cool until jelly has set. Slice and serve cold.
Enjoy.
|
|
Top
|
Reply
Quote
Quick Reply
Quick Quote
|
|
|
|
|
8558 Members
35 Forums
11692 Topics
243896 Posts
Max Online: 2631 @ 03/18/08 12:30 AM
|
|
|
|