Recent content by CrémeBrulée

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    Do you have The Good Housekeeping Cookbook from 1943?

    Nah, I just want the missing pages so I can have a full index for the book. I've already tried the libraries, but found nothing. I did check the Good Housekeeping website this morning, and they don't seem to offer any possibilities for sending general enquiries through e-mail. Publisher's my...
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    Do you have The Good Housekeeping Cookbook from 1943?

    Thanks. I hadn't thought of the publisher.
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    Do you have The Good Housekeeping Cookbook from 1943?

    I have had no results from the other cooking forum I post in, so now I’m trying here. My copy of this book is missing some pages from the index, and I would appreciate it if someone who has the book could either fax me a photocopy of the missing pages or e-mail me some scans. The missing...
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    How Many Cookbooks Do You Have?

    It’s good to know I’m not alone :chef: I recently counted my food books and the tally was 92 books that can strictly be called cookbooks, plus about 30 more that deal with cookery and cuisine in some way, including 2 ingredient encyclopedias, several foodie travel books and biographies...
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    Sifting flour question

    I only sift baking cocoa and icing sugar, both of which can have very persistent clumps that whisking would not remove, and potato starch and cornstarch when adding straight to hot liquids, as they tend to clump otherwise. I only ever sift flour to search for bugs. I have never found flour lumps...
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    Do people eat rays (skate) ?

    Where I live skate is traditionally eaten a) fermented (basically it's allowed to putrefy for some weeks) b) salted. It's then cooked and served up with potatoes, melted sheep's tallow and pumpernickel bread. It smells like an ammonia factory. Understandably, most of those who do eat it only...
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    Cookie or candy? You be the judge (Sarah Bernhardt cookies)

    Sarah Bernhardt cookies These delicious confections were created in honour of and named after actress Sarah Bernhardt. They are a great favourite of mine, and I try to make some every year for Christmas. They are well worth the effort. Macaroons: 400 g. finely ground, blanched almonds 600...
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    Kitchen Disasters

    I once tried making caramel potatoes with canned potatoes. Never again. The potatoes exploded in the pan - my guess is that there was water inside them from having been cooked without the skins - and droplets of boiling sugar went flying everywhere. I have burn scars on my face and one of my...
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    Breakfast food

    My workday breakfast consists of súrmjólk ("sour milk" - really a type of runny yogurt, but you could use buttermilk instead) with a little bit of brown sugar, and cornflakes mixed in. Fruit can be used instead of cornflakes. Bananas and apples are good with it. A breakfast I like on weekends...
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    Food as souvenirs?

    I'm not alone in this. I have friends and acquaintances who go crazy shopping in the USA for everyday supermarket items like Spam, corned beef, drink mixes and Jello flavours not available in Europe. Some of them have been exchange students or au pairs in the USA and they miss American everyday...
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    Food as souvenirs?

    More foreign foods Duh! I’d forgotten about Britain. I’ve bought shortbread in Scotland, always bring back a tin of tea from a different tea company whenever I visit England (Harrods is next on the list), and English butter creams. I also remembered Turkey – I visited the city of Bursa...
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    Food as souvenirs?

    (inspired by FXAdam's post about National Spices under General Cooking Questions) What foods have you or would you bring home after visiting another country, state or city? I think food is one of the best ways to really bring back memories of an enjoyable stay somewhere. It can also make great...
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    National Spices

    Katzer's spice dictionary is amazing. Just to look helpful ;-) here is as very small list: Spain: saffron, pimiento (sweet paprika), capers Hungary: paprika - the key ingredient in goulash France: Herbes de Provence (herb mix)
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    Bread Machines- Thing of the past?

    I still see them in electronics shops here, but they are not being advertised much any more. My mother had one for a couple of years and ended up selling it. We didn't like the bread - it had an odd texture and only tasted good while warm. But we did use it for kneading the dough every time we...
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    ISO: recipes with saffron

    Ishbel, that sounds tempting. Does it freeze well?
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