Showing posts with label Food Recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Recipes. Show all posts

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Carroll County NAACP holiday party: Marinated Vegetable Salad


Carroll County NAACP holiday party: Marinated Vegetable Salad



Merry Christmas

It was good to see everyone at the Carroll County NAACP holiday party

For everyone at the holiday party that enjoyed the marinated vegetable salad that I brought; here is the recipe:

Marinated Vegetable Salad
From: Evelyn Babylon
Serving Size: 24
Preparation Time: 0:24
Categories: Salads Side Dishes

Amount, Measure, Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
1 Can - 14 Oz Laseur Peas – Drained
1 Can French Style Green Beans – Drained
1 Can Shoepeg Corn – Drained
1 Cup Green Pepper -- Finely Chopped
1 Cup Celery -- Finely Chopped
1 Cup Onion -- Finely Chopped
1 Small Jar Pimiento -- Not Drained
1/2 Cup Salad Oil -- Not Olive Oil
1/2 Cup White Vinegar
3/4 Cup Sugar

Mix all ingredients together in a 3-quart bowl.
Marinate in refrigerator overnight or 24 hours.
Serve chilled

Kevin Dayhoff December 20, 2012
[20051222 Marinated Vegetable Salad]
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Kevin Dayhoff is an artist - and a columnist for:

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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Ceviche

Click here for a larger image: http://twitpic.com/fbbgg
Ceviche

El pescado crudo marinado en limón o jugo de limón con aceite de oliva y especias y sirve como aperitivo.

Ingredientes
2 libras de filete de pescado blanco (preferiblemente bajo el mar), cortado en trozos pequeños
¼ de taza de jugo de limón fresco (o más, si es necesario)
2 cebollas en rodajas finas
1 cucharada de aceite de oliva
1 cucharada de cilantro fresco
1 diente de ajo, aplastado
1 a 2 chiles finamente picados
Pimienta Negro
1 cucharadita de sal
Procedimiento
Mezclar el jugo de limón con las rodajas de cebolla, aceite, cilantro, ajo, chiles, pimienta y la sal en un tazón.
Coloque el pescado en un vaso bajo, o el plato de cerámica lo suficientemente grande como para sostenerlo en una sola capa. Vierta la mezcla de jugo de limón por encima. El pescado debe estar completamente cubierto con la mezcla. Agregar más jugo de limón si es necesario.
Cubra bien con plástico y refrigerar por varias horas (o durante la noche) hasta que el pescado es "suave cocinada." (Asegúrese de que ha marinado el tiempo suficiente.) Servir sobre hojas de lechuga aderezada con aros de cebolla, finas tiras de pimiento, y la batata y / o el maíz en la mazorca.
Para 4 a 6.

Ceviche
Raw fish marinated in lime or lemon juice with olive oil and spices and served as an appetizer.
Ingredients
2 pounds white fish fillet (preferably sea bass), cut into small pieces
¼ cup fresh lime juice (or more, if needed)
2 onions, thinly sliced
1 Tablespoon olive oil
1 Tablespoon fresh cilantro
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 to 2 chilies, finely chopped
Black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
Procedure
Mix the lime juice with the onion slices, oil, cilantro, garlic, chilies, pepper, and salt in a mixing bowl.
Place the fish in a shallow glass or ceramic dish just large enough to hold it in a single layer. Pour the lime-juice mixture over it. The fish must be completely covered with the mixture. Add more lime juice if necessary.
Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for several hours (or overnight) until the fish is "soft cooked." (Make certain it has marinated long enough.) Serve on lettuce leaves garnished with onion rings, thin strips of pepper, and sweet potatoes and/or corn on the cob.
Serves 4 to 6.

20090825 sdsom Ceviche
20070723d OuterBanksFishing


Thursday, October 4, 2007

20071003 Living and loving in the age of asparagus

Living and loving in the age of asparagus

or

Mary Katherine Ham to Alicia Silverstone: Go Hunting

October 3rd, 2007

Although I have spent a large portion of my life as a vegetarian; as I grew older and life got particularly hectic, I gave it up – for now anyway. Who knows, tomorrow, I may go back. Whatever.

A number of years ago, as I was attempting to reason with an unreasonable person and losing miserably, a colleague said to me:

“You know what your problem is?”

“Ugh.” I really did not need advice at that particular moment; however, I prized his friendship and sheepishly asked: “What?”

“It's a dog eat dog world out there, and you're a vegetarian!"

We solved that by going out to a sub shop where I gave up the anorexic bliss of salads and voraciously scarfed down a cheese-steak sandwich.

It was a road to Damascus experience

I still lose miserably with folks who accept narcissistic fiction as fact, however, I am bigger now and I figure that if I am to be eaten alive, I might as well give folks a flavorful super-sized meal.

Then again, to be candid, I was never good at being a vegetarian. I never stopped eating animal crackers and every once and awhile at Moms, I’d dive into a steak – and I can rarely remember missing turkey at Thanksgiving.

I have a number of colleagues and some family members who are, at the moment, practicing vegetarians - and I respect that choice. Besides, I really like vegetables. Then there are folks who don’t like vegetables or are otherwise broccoli intolerant. To them I say, ya really ought to “give peas a chance.”

A member of my family, who is an avid vegetarian, recently gave some seafood a try.

Bold.

Writing for the Washington Post, Joel Achenbach says:

“Certain kinds of seafood, such as lobster, clams and crabs, are honorary forms of meat, but a small filet of a low-fat white fish should be viewed as essentially a vegetable. Raw oysters are manfood, as is any fish served with the head on and the mouth gaping in horror.

Me, I could live off of Dr. Pepper, coffee and grits. Hey, don’t knock the cooking with Dr. Pepper book. There are some great recipes in there.

I never tried the “vegan” approach. I often wondered how the term came about. When I was quite young I had a great deal of confusion over the term “vegetarian.” If vegetarians eat vegetables, what do humanitarians eat?

Mr. Achenbach calls to our attention a savior for vegans, who every once in awhile, go Jonesing for a milkshake – “soy cows.”

In the column he was initially singing the praises of his new “Fabulator 5000.”

What is a “Fabulator 5000?” I am so glad you asked. I was fascinated about this development since I am still using the Fabulator model No. 1953.

I’ll let Mr. Achenbach ‘splain:

“I love my new food printer, the Fabulator 5000, which makes the previous food printers look not just clunky but positively medieval. There's no more click-and-point nonsense on the screen, no more waiting five or six interminable minutes for the food to print. You just tell the Fab 5 what you want. The food comes out in about three or four seconds, complete with garnish and a complementary wine.”

Oh, the “soy cows?” Apparently Mr. Achenbach recently “took the kids … to Homewood Farm to see a good old-fashioned agricultural enterprise…”

“I got a look at the new soy cows, grazing in the large field just north of the orchard. The USDA apparently felt that soy milk could be produced much more efficiently if it came from cows made of soy. These cows are so green they nearly blend into the landscape. They say the soy milk is a lot better tasting (not as beany, somehow) than the stuff derived from plants, and the soy burgers are more tender. But you've probably read about how the soy cows dry up badly in drought conditions -- they literally wilt -- and even catch fire. Bored teenagers have been blamed for setting some of the cow fires.”

There is much to be appreciated by the vegetarian lifestyle; nevertheless my goal was to not be evangelical about it all.

But – and ya know there was going to be a “but” in here soon – I’ve never been fond of PETA’s Strindbergian gloom and bleakness approach to advocacy.

When I was a practicing vegetarian, invariably, some folks would suggest some linkage to me, a vegetarian, with PETA’s in-your-face humorless lactose intolerant militancy. An approach which often seems more oriented to being obnoxious and annoying instead of being compelling and persuasive to what is otherwise, a perfectly fine lifestyle, vegetarianism, for which PETA routinely does an injustice....

At a local government - social event, a local elected official’s wife was horrified that I was a vegetarian. “How can a big strapping former Marine be a vegetarian,” she gasped.

I solved that in quick order. She was a dog lover and the owner of a huge dog. I mean huge – about the size of a water buffalo.

I asked her if she had ever eaten dog. When I was in the Marines, a South Vietnamese ranger once cooked-up a mess of dog.

It tasted like chicken.

I suggested to my scowling friend that her St. Bernard could feed an entire village… And one wonders why I lost my last election?

Recently Alicia Silverstone did an ad for PETA that has garnered a great deal of attention. I can’t believe that it is winning over any converts to vegetarianism, but it has attracted attention to PETA.

Whether it is really the sort of attention that an advocacy organization wants is a bigger issue for which there is not right or wrong, it just isn’t my cup of tea.

Nevertheless, in age of so much strife and discord, I yearn for a time when peas will rule the planets, and love won’t be such a fuss. I long for the dawn of the age of asparagus.

Enter stage right, Mary Katherine Ham. Ms. Ham has done a spoof on the Ms. Silverstone ad that is a real crack-up.

Please enjoy it:

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No animals were hurt in the writing of this column.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com and Winchester Report.