Thanks deb! I suspected that.
Oops. Yes, I meant day old or any already cooked rice. We use jasmine here everyday so we always have left overs.
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Thanks deb! I suspected that.
Thanks deb! I suspected that.
Oops. Yes, I meant day old or any already cooked rice. We use jasmine here everyday so we always have left overs.
I envy you with the meat variety you have, but here because the very strict dietary low in Judaism, and because ouer country is as it is, we dont have even 10% of it. We ( the one that cares )can't eat a lot of animals and the one that we can they need to be killed and prepared by the cosher whay! So no hunting!
To comper home grown and hom made food to comercial food is like comparing Mazda to Ferrari! You can't!
And about the ones that can't eat your fresh egg become their tast, you should send them to junk rehab!
. Homemade fried rice for those that don't have a lot of money. I start buy frying the slice ham steaks into small cube until golden. I mix eggs and small diced tomatoes next and add to pan withday off jasmine rice. I season with salt and pepper, soy sauce. Maybe a swirl of fish sauce if its not salty enough and a pinch of sugar to replace the the horrible accent that most Asian food has. I usually add onions green or white if I have them available in the saute process. I serve with fried eggs and sliced cucumbers... I just happen to be out of cucumbers so they are missing tonight. Soooo good!
Whoo that was a short post!![]()
I agree with you completely!
I wished That we could have some dear and other exotic Chosher aninals, I have never had venison or Bison!
When I was young, my parents and all my freinds parents could not afford eating meat mor than twice a week so it was precious
Touday the the manufacturing process is so chip that it is more available, but it comes on the quality levels of the products!
Basically the comercial chicken that it is slmost 100% some Cornish cross, is a chick! After 52 dayes of fattening! And I agree that it couldn't bilt its taste, it is like a piece of soap. Did you know that a Cornish cross if it isn't processed in time could brake it shanks due the massive whigt of it's brest?
What about wild fish in Canada? Nice fresh wild salmon or Halibut sounds terrific! Do uou use them?
Whoo that was a short post!![]()
I agree with you completely!
I wished That we could have some dear and other exotic Chosher aninals, I have never had venison or Bison!
When I was young, my parents and all my freinds parents could not afford eating meat mor than twice a week so it was precious
Touday the the manufacturing process is so chip that it is more available, but it comes on the quality levels of the products!
Basically the comercial chicken that it is slmost 100% some Cornish cross, is a chick! After 52 dayes of fattening! And I agree that it couldn't bilt its taste, it is like a piece of soap. Did you know that a Cornish cross if it isn't processed in time could brake it shanks due the massive whigt of it's brest?
What about wild fish in Canada? Nice fresh wild salmon or Halibut sounds terrific! Do uou use them?
I type faster than I can think (flicked off keys on TWO lap tops, so went back to desk top computers...new keyboard replaced quicker & cheaper!). Means I may write something out quickly...quicker than most but does it make sense...maybe not?
Ah yes, forgot about our buffalos...bison is the correct term that you have used...good on you! Good meat...in the hamburger, you may have to add some fat to get more flavour but very much like beef but said to be better for you. Sustained the original peoples of North America well. I am told that meat from elk, they would not hunt it because it takes up more energy/calories to digest it than it gives back...so many would not bother with elk...same I am told of mushrooms and yet, if I had to give up meat, mushrooms would be my "meat" substitute.
Meat WAS a precious commodity and we are very spoilt to be able to plan for part of it in each meal. At one time, a chicken held great value and to avoid them being stolen, they roosted in your house to keep them from being taken at night but humans and other predators...precious chickens. The North American Canadian cook is likely to choose the meat and build the meal around that part, being the main course. I see now some diets are pushing meat as only a rare special part of human eating. We should be eating more like human ancestors like chimpanzees...a diet in fruits and veg being what we are more genetically geared to be on. Cave persons as hunter/gatherers, fumbling around throwing rocks and spears...more like we were less likely to bring home the "Butterball" turkey than find some wild roots to stave off starvation...oh well. Advancing our evolutions but maybe not improving our quality of living.
Wild fish...yes, lots of choices and farmed fish (not so good as wild simply because fish would be expected to move about, not be captive in larger than natural schools and potential polluted).
Wild salmon, well on the WEST coast...I am being told the radiation from Japan's nuclear issue is now on the West Coast. All the rave about eating more fish as it is healthy is not so true, sad, sad. As a youth, I worked at a cannery cleaning salmon for canning. I would eat my own canned salmon sandwiches on the docks at lunch time. I mean I use to go to grab a fish on the conveyer belt and come away with only me holding the back bone...that was on the Pink salmon...yes, many who have worked at meat plants will not EAT meat...but I grossed the other workers out, munching on salmon sandwiches because I had caught it, I had canned it. I am a bad person for teasing... :/
I did note that any of the huge salmon...fisheries persons came and recorded information on the big fish (huge monsters--Chinook salmon), all were destined for the Asian markets for the center piece for weddings and other celebrations. The local people could not afford big fish like that unless we caught it ourselves...
Halibut...oh yes...but it was us humans again that ruined that. Halibut is a ground fish and one of the rushes to settle the WEsT Coast of Canada was the discovery of gold. What use to be use to extract gold...but mercury. Mercury sinks in water...so the ground fish would get in with that and the big breeder fish that live for a long time, would consume more and more to poison their very flesh. I remember there were 250 to 300 pound Halibut that were massive in size...very imposing...but we never kept those or wanted to hook on one (all muscle, not to be brought ON your small boat without first removing its head, some shot it with small rifle to remove brain). A halibut alive could smash your boat to pieces...break your arm easily. We did catch 80 pounders and keep those ones...we drug that to shore backwards (tail tied to the back of the boat) in the water and removed the head on the beach...it is one of the very best tasting fishes. I know, I know...why do the rare ones taste SO good...maybe why they are uncommon?
My spouse and I, we lived on the WEsT Coast for 25+ years. I know you are not to eat shellfish but when we moved to the northern end of Vancouver Island it was not too populated...at low tides you could use a stick with a point on it to harvest Abalone off the rocks ...that is my death bed meal of choice--fried abalone--BUT since it takes 25 years for an Abalone (mother of pearl is the shell...beautiful creature that deserves to be left to live) to replicate...the abalone fishery was abolished...divers could not harvest them when we left the area decades ago. Virtually wiped them out...does not do a species well to taste good to humans... We also harvested mussels off the rocks...so long as it was not a red tide time (poison yourself), just boiled and with butter. Another favourite, prawns...again a taboo for you as in shellfish. I only miss the prawns thinking back to all we could eat on the Coast. I may purchase it flash frozen, so oft times better than fresh as you never did know how long the prawn boats were out to sea and if fresh but not alive, sitting in the sun could turn bad. Frozen for us is good enough. What I miss was a child, my father would put down his own prawn traps, come back after one tide change and we would put out newpapers on the tables, boil butter with cloves of garlic and there were five gallon pails of prawns...eat them till any cuts on your hands screamed from the salt. Prawns as big as small crayfish with eggs. But as with all things...we feasted until there was no more... Another thing that changed...people would lift up your traps for crab or prawns if you were not there at tide change...always the locals out checking their own traps...helping themselves laughing because YOU missed tide change. When we left, they were not helping themselves to the unguarded catch...they were stealing the traps too. Sigh...times a changing. :/
My husband and I would go out in our little boat on a calm day...troll for salmon, jig in deep holes for halibut and red snapper (best part...cheeks, you get enough snapper cheeks to make fish and chips--that was the tenderloin of the sea!). I would clean fish as it was caught right off the boat. Our favourite salmon was Sockeye (the brilliant red fleshed one) which we stock piled in the freezers at home, I canned in the fall time in glass jars for sandwiches. Oh my, lovely fish. Again, overfished and now with the radiation...you do not have to be envious because you would not want to be eating fishes on that Coast. Sigh.
We have messed in our own nests...polluted our seas and I just wonder, how many 100's of years for cheap power must pass before fishes of the sea are safe again?
I did hear a funny proposition the other day...they are now saying the oceans are alive and a being themselves...a creature that thinks and can act--slowly but an actual living being. Scientists are saying that if that being the Sea, tho large and slow and not a being we are use to dealing with...ever acts up against mankind...we truly are in trouble.
I remember the East Coast, the Grand Banks...they said the fish in that ocean would never run out...HA! We reap what we sow and we seem not to give back or replenish....and indeed, know when we should stop and wait for it to come back again.
Doggone & Chicken UP!
Tara Lee Higgins
Higgins Rat Ranch Conservation Farm, Alberta, Canada