I remember that stuff. Elementary school cafeteria served it.
In annoying news, my final rent check hasn't posted. I mailed it out the 21st. Another check mailed the same day was posted. Grrr. I can't escape that place's incompetence.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I remember that stuff. Elementary school cafeteria served it.
In annoying news, my final rent check hasn't posted. I mailed it out the 21st. Another check mailed the same day was posted. Grrr. I can't escape that place's incompetence.
Heh. That reminds me of the first time I took Lewis home to Miami and introduced him to Cuban cooking. His mother considered it adventurous if she used a quarter teaspoon of garlic powder. I told Lewis that my mother commonly threw in a head of garlic, sometimes two, when she made ropa vieja, picadillo, or black beans. He countered with "You mean cloves, right?"
No... no, honey, I meant heads. He didn't believe me until he actually saw my mother mincing the entire head of garlic.
He loves my mother's cooking, my mother loves cooking for him. It's a mutual admiration society.
Timelies all!
I don't think I had that dish growing up.
I think we had that, but with rice instead of macaroni. Only we call it, er, hamburger and rice. So does that count then?
Emily!!
I think we had that, but with rice instead of macaroni.
We had something like that, I think with pimentos? My dad could only make it when my mother was away because she thought it was so disgusting. (Which was actually the case with most of his old family recipes, come to think of it.)
One of my favorite dishes from childhood was basically mushed-up hamburger meat sautéed with salt and parsley, with the super-creative name of "mushed-up hamburger".
brenda, I know it's not godly to judge, but EEEWW!
Of course, the family dish from my father's side involves things I normally find disgusting, ladled over crackers. So I guess it's live and let live.
Also, I'm not sure I remember what pimentos actually are. Except that they have a fluctuating number of i's, and show up in olives and... loaf.
javachik! Um... hi! Sorry, our new Web blocker at work thinks this site falls under the "chat" category, and I couldn't think of an educational reason to get it unblocked!
pimentos -- marinated red peppers. red peppers are good, pimentos, not so much
marinated red peppers.
See, now that sounds just fine! It must be the association with olives and mystery meat that predisposes me badly toward them. I hereby rescind my EW.