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Hahaha...what I wanted to do was to make it and then cook it right then, I figured it wouldn't take much other than a little time in the oven. Sounds great for a cool fall day! I would say spring, but right now I'd have to buy all those ingredients instead of picking them out of my garden
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Don't blame you. The "tomatoes" they sell in stores don't taste good anyway.

I make a similar sauce -- but do not blend it because I like mine chunky -- and when I cook for our family of four I just cover one of my big cookie sheets with the sauce ingredients. Maybe Chicken Grandma will have more precise measurements.
 
I'm not really expecting precision...I just know me, and I would end up using too much onion or something & it would turn out blech. lol...some things in the kitchen I can master, but some things I just plain suck at.
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Anyone within about 1/2 hour of Ann Arbor have fertile eggs to sell? I have a broody I feel bad for.
;)
 
bought·en(bôt
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n) Chiefly Northern U.S.
v.

A past participle of buy.
adj.
1. Commercially made; purchased, as opposed to homemade: boughten bread.
2. Artificial; false. Used of teeth.
Regional Note: American regional dialects allow freer adjectival use of certain past participles of verbs than does Standard English. Time-honored examples are boughten (chiefly Northern U.S.) and bought (chiefly Southern U.S.) to mean "purchased rather than homemade": a boughten dress, bought bread. The Northern form boughten (as in store boughten) features the participial ending -en, added to bought, the participial form, probably by analogy with more common participial adjectives such as frozen. Another development, analogous to homemade, is evident in bought-made, cited in DARE from a Texas informant


Fuzzy, sorry to hear about your little hen.

Baking improves the taste of store tomatoes beyond belief
 
Quote:
bought·en(bôt
prime.gif
n) Chiefly Northern U.S.
v.

A past participle of buy.
adj.
1. Commercially made; purchased, as opposed to homemade: boughten bread.
2. Artificial; false. Used of teeth.
Regional Note: American regional dialects allow freer adjectival use of certain past participles of verbs than does Standard English. Time-honored examples are boughten (chiefly Northern U.S.) and bought (chiefly Southern U.S.) to mean "purchased rather than homemade": a boughten dress, bought bread. The Northern form boughten (as in store boughten) features the participial ending -en, added to bought, the participial form, probably by analogy with more common participial adjectives such as frozen. Another development, analogous to homemade, is evident in bought-made, cited in DARE from a Texas informant


Fuzzy, sorry to hear about your little hen.

Baking improves the taste of store tomatoes beyond belief

OMG this is hilarious, I did not realize that was a real word either even though I sometimes say it!! Now i can tell my BF to stop correcting me, hehe.

I will have to try baking tomatoes I get from the store until I can get a crop to pick from. :)
 
Giselle's baby?? (Sorry, I know you changed the name, but it escapes me right now... Homer?)


Yep it is Homers baby. Nice lookin boy but needs a mate or a roaster
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Homer has turned into quite a stud goose once he got his mojo back. Has two girlies and he keeps those eggs fertile.
The one baby gosling I kept of his I named Gisele. Was sexed as a girl :(. Turned into George last fall.
 
Bob- You are back! :) Glad to have you back.

Olive- Sorry about the bunny.

Fuzzy- Sorry about Rose.


We got the heifer!!!!! Will post more about it tonight, and lots of pictures. :D
 
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