• Tattoo

    From Dave Drum@1:396/45 to Shawn Highfield on Thu Sep 26 05:01:34 2024
    Shawn Highfield wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    The only true tattoo removal is a skin graft. OWTCH! Of course time
    will fade much of the ink in the tattoo. But not abliterate it.

    The one on my forearm that see's the most sun is faded, the shoulder
    ones are still pretty much as bright and colourful as they were when
    they were done. The left shoulder was a nice safe home made gun with a guitar string for a needle. LOL

    I'm sort of amazed at how "mainstream" tattoos have become. I've seen
    some dandies. A girl I worked with had full "sleeve" tats on both arms
    mostly with a rainbow theme. And her boss (mine too) was married to a
    tattoo artiste. She had just one visible spot of ink with the name and birthdate of yor son in a heart. Go figger.

    I came upon this recipe whilst lookin for something else and tought of
    you and your other half and your dietary restrictionsd ....

    I make a similar soup but don't hassle w/gluten-free. And mine will, of
    course, have chunks of chicken meat in it since I am an omnivore. Bv)=

    MMMMM---- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Gluten-Free Matzo Ball Soup w/Chicken Broth
    Categories: Grains, Poultry, Soups
    Yield: 3 servings

    1/4 c Coconut flour
    1/2 c Quinoa flour
    1 c Steel cut oats
    1/4 c Oil
    4 lg Eggs
    1 c Water
    1 ts Salt
    Fresh ground black pepper
    1/2 ts Baking soda

    MMMMM----------------------CHICKEN BROTH-----------------------------
    2 1/2 lb Bony chicken pieces
    2 Celery ribs w/leaves; in
    - chunks
    2 md Carrots; in chunks
    2 md Onions; quartered
    2 Bay leaves
    1/2 ts Dried rosemary; crushed
    1/2 ts Dried thyme
    10 Whole peppercorns
    2 qt Cold water

    MAKE THE BALLS: Heat a cast iron skillet over a medium
    flame. Pour in the steel-cut oats and toast them,
    stirring frequently with a spatula or wooden spoon until
    they are golden brown and smelling delightful. Pour in a
    cup of cold water and keep stirring until the oats have
    soaked up most of the water. Turn off the heat.

    Pour the flours, salt, pepper, and baking soda into a
    medium-sized mixing bowl, and stir them together.

    Beat the eggs in a small bowl, then add them to the dry
    ingredients. Mix well. Add the cooked steel-cut oats,
    and stir well. Cover the bowl and refrigerate it while
    you make the broth.

    MAKE THE BROTH: Place all ingredients in a soup kettle or
    Dutch oven. Slowly bring to a boil; reduce heat until
    mixture is just at a simmer. Simmer, uncovered, for 3-4
    hours, skimming foam as necessary.

    Set chicken aside until cool enough to handle. Remove
    meat from bones. Discard bones; save meat for another
    use. Strain broth, discarding vegetables and seasonings.
    Refrigerate for 8 hours or overnight. Skim fat from
    surface.

    COOKING THE MATZO BALLS: Do not attempt to cook your
    matzo balls in your broth - they act like little
    sponges, and you may end up with matzo balls with no
    soup.

    Pour about 5" of cold water into stock pot. Do not wash
    the pot first, the residual chicken or turkey fat and
    broth will help flavor your matzo balls. Salt the water
    liberally, turn the burner on high, and bring the water
    to a rolling boil.

    Take the bowl of matzo ball batter out of the
    refrigerator. Scoop tablespoonfuls of the batter out of
    the bowl, quickly mold each spoonful of batter into the
    rough semblance of a sphere, then drop the ball gently
    into the boiling salt water. Repeat until all the batter
    has been used up. This will cool your cooking water, so
    let the water heat back up to a simmer, then turn down
    the heat. The matzo balls need to simmer gently - a
    rolling boil may make them disintegrate. Let the matzo
    balls simmer for half an hour, then use a slotted spoon
    to gently transfer them to your soup. Simmer the matzo
    balls in the soup for five or ten minutes in order to
    allow them to soak up some flavor before you serve.

    by Ellen Sandbeck

    RECIPE FROM: https://www.motherearthnews.com

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

    MMMMM

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  • From Shawn Highfield@1:154/700 to Dave Drum on Fri Sep 27 03:40:54 2024
    Hi Dave,
    On <Fri, 26 Sep 24>, you wrote me:

    I came upon this recipe whilst lookin for something else and tought
    of you and your other half and your dietary restrictionsd ....

    Always nice. Thanks for thinking of us Dave!

    of course, have chunks of chicken meat in it since I am an omnivore.

    I would too. I would just (for the most part) give most of the chicken to Andrea other then a small taste. I love meat, it just doesn't love me.

    Title: Gluten-Free Matzo Ball Soup w/Chicken Broth

    Saved. I will report back when the weather is cooler how it turns out.
    It's still hot enough here I'm BBQing and not using the oven.

    Shawn


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