no way, I leave that up to the wife, am I the only one like that on here?
I have done beans on toast when my wife was in hospital![]()
Wow, I should try that.
Life is too long to drink cheap wine.
Life is too long to drink cheap wine.
As a serious consumer of Franzia and Vella, I resemble that remark. A retiree's budget rarely allows for Asti and the related stuff. And didn't you mean "short"?
No, I definitely mean long. Too many meals and bottles of wine to ignore the quality issue completely. Drank plenty of plonk as a young man so I don't feel the need to any more. I'd rather enjoy the vino than join a country club or spend money on similar things. I don't drink expensive wine but I don't drink two buck Chuck anymore either. $10-15 a bottle gets pretty good red or white at Costco and that's what I typically spend. Maybe $20 for a birthday.
Back about 1960, my destitute buddy and I were taking a college night course, as I recall, something called "political geography". On our way home he wanted to stop by the liquor store. Oklahoma was newly "wet", so liquor stores were just opening. He asked me if I had some money, and I came up with 35 cents. We stopped at the liquor store, and he bought a 65 cent bottle of apple wine. We drank that bottle between the college and OKC, and I was deathly sick for 3 days. In the last 50 years or so, I haven't drank more than a quart of wine TOTAL of any kind. There may be some high class stuff, but it seems I have acquired an immunity of sorts.
I do breakfast at our house. This morning it was breakfast tacos made with range eggs, elk, venison, onions, potatoes, jalopenas, garlic, and to give it a stick with you all day burn, dad's habanero pepper powder. All of this in one skillet and then stuffed into flour tortillas.
Don't get me wrong, I am sure your bread is very good. I enjoy the "hands on" type of bread baking though.
Tom, Yes you really should. And so should everybody else. Wines are made to complement food (note complement, not compliment) and they make it so much more enjoyable. It costs no more to have a few bottles open than one. Possibly even less. If you have only one there is always the thought that there is not much left "so I might as well finish it". You would never think "I must finish these four bottles". We are only here once, make the most of it.
$10-15 a bottle gets pretty good red or white at Costco and that's what I typically spend. Maybe $20 for a birthday.
I worked for a while in a white bread high volume bakery. The dough was raised in big tubs on rollers, I want to say about 15' long x 5' wide x 4' deep. My job was to punch down the dough as the yeast created gas pockets. You lottery "punched" the dough with your fists. Tub after tub after tub. Then I rolled the tubs into a machine that separated them into loaf size and dumped them into the baking tins.
I have never made bread since.
We should get Muhammad to creat a food and cooking forum. If he'd post a "recipe template", we could all post recipes that would fit a format that could be printed and saved in a recipe box.
My personal opinion is that the advent of high volume/super fast white bread is much of the reason that we have had such a sudden rise in gluten intolerance in this country. Sad thing is that many people prefer this type of crumb to one that is slowly fermented and much more digestable.
Any thoughts from the staff on this idea? Only tried-and-true family recipes, so no copyright problems? Maybe a separate forum on grilling/cooking? Too much work? Too much of a PITA?