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Cooked a Snoek last night. It was, unfortunately, a frozen snoek shipped in
from South Africa, but it was still tasty as hell, with a very distinguishable flavor. For those who don't know (like me), a snoek is apparently (according to one website) a type of Barracuda. According to another, its a sal****er Pike (at least it fillets like one), and according to the slices of fish I got, it looks like an eel, or maybe a barbel. The slices were about a foot long, about 1 inch thick, and about 4 inches tall. Very strange. Also very bony, with two sets of 'Y' bones in the abdomen. First I had to fillet it...not a simple task, but I managed to get every bone out and still have abundant meat for dinner. Its a scaleless fish, so I left the skin on, and scored the skin a few times to reduce curling. I barbequed the fillets over hot coals, first with the skin side down, and basted the meat side with an Apricot sauce. (large glob of Mango Chutney, large glob of Apricot jam, big squirt of honey, dash of vinegar, dash of olive oil, pinch of salt, spoonful of sugar, dash of soy sauce). Rolled the fillets over, painted on some more sauce, and let the meat side get caramelized. Served it with buttered snap beans and toasted pine nuts, and baby potatoes glazed in soy and pepper. Washed it down with a nice South African Pinotage. Yum. Merry Christmas, everyone!! --riverman |
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"riverman" wrote in message ... For those who don't know (like me), a snoek is apparently (according to one website) a type of Barracuda. According to another, its a sal****er Pike (at least it fillets like one), and according to the slices of fish I got, it looks like an eel, or maybe a barbel. The slices were about a foot long, about 1 inch thick, and about 4 inches tall. Very strange. Also very bony, with two sets of 'Y' bones in the abdomen. Sounds like a descendant of the pike if it has Y bones... Awesome dinner, had my mouth watering! Merry Christmas, everyone!! Same to you and yours Jeff T. |
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riverman wrote:
Cooked a Snoek last night. ... Yum. Merry Christmas, everyone!! Yum, indeed. Sounds good, Myron. I didn't get out goose hunting this year so the Holiday Feast here at Chez Forty is gonna be deep fried calamari with dried tomato and chipotle aioli, cioppino ala Forty, and an orange, avocado and endive salad. I love a feast ! The joys of the season to all in roffiana !! -- Ken Fortenberry |
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Forty writes:
the Holiday Feast here at Chez Forty is gonna be deep fried calamari with dried tomato and chipotle aioli, cioppino ala Forty, and an orange, avocado and endive salad My wife(born a Cappiarola) would heartily approve. At our place, we mix the Italian specialities with my WASPy mix of cocktail shrimp, prime rib and all Tom |
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"Tom Littleton" wrote in message ... Forty writes: the Holiday Feast here at Chez Forty is gonna be deep fried calamari with dried tomato and chipotle aioli, cioppino ala Forty, and an orange, avocado and endive salad My wife(born a Cappiarola) would heartily approve. At our place, we mix the Italian specialities with my WASPy mix of cocktail shrimp, prime rib and all Tom Buncha friggin' commies! THE proper Christmas dinner was, is , and always will be; Roasted turkey (without any sordid aberrations of mixtures of *anything* stuffed in its body cavity), mashed taters, giblet gravy (made from scratch and containing none of that smoke-in-the-bottle crap), a pan of cornbread dressing (made with about a cup of homegrown sage), cranberry sauce (the kind that comes in a can and wiggles like Jello), and for dessert a pumpkin pie and that red Jello dish with all that stringy stuff in it. If you don't like the traditional Christmas Dinner and want to eat all that EYE-talian stuff, go get your own damn holiday and call it All Mobster's Eve or Saint Soprano's Day or something. Danl |
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"Danl" wrote in message ... THE proper Christmas dinner was, is , and always will be; Roasted turkey (without any sordid aberrations of mixtures of *anything* stuffed in its body cavity), mashed taters, giblet gravy (made from scratch and containing none of that smoke-in-the-bottle crap), a pan of cornbread dressing (made with about a cup of homegrown sage), cranberry sauce (the kind that comes in a can and wiggles like Jello), and for dessert a pumpkin pie and that red Jello dish with all that stringy stuff in it. If you don't like the traditional Christmas Dinner and want to eat all that EYE-talian stuff, go get your own damn holiday and call it All Mobster's Eve or Saint Soprano's Day or something. Danl I'm slow cookin' a venison tenderloin in the crock-pot with potatoes, carrots, onions (white and yellar), mushrooms, various spices--includin' bayleaf, garlic, brown sugar, honey, lemon juices, meat soakin' up red wine marinade even as I type. Is that ok, or do I just toss it and begin again? Op --no cook, but one hell of an eater-- |
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Guyz-N-Flyz wrote: "Danl" properly noted: THE proper Christmas dinner was, is , and always will be; Roasted turkey (without any sordid aberrations of mixtures of *anything* stuffed in its body cavity), mashed taters, giblet gravy (made from scratch and op deerly sinned and asked: Is that ok, or do I just toss it and begin again? to which i respond: definitely toss it. uh... any way you can toss it over here? i'll pay overnight delivery. jeff (who's evening dining will be limited to the consumption of 2 bottles of wine followed by a bottle of 10 year old port and perhaps a case of beer - gifts of the season from folks in whom kindness and the xmas spirit abides. so far, none of the kind souls have gifted me a hot meal, so i'll just have to make do.) |
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"Danl" wrote in message
... THE proper Christmas dinner was, is , and always will be; Roasted turkey (without any sordid aberrations of mixtures of *anything* stuffed in its body cavity), mashed taters, giblet gravy (made from scratch and containing none of that smoke-in-the-bottle crap), a pan of cornbread dressing (made with about a cup of homegrown sage), cranberry sauce (the kind that comes in a can and wiggles like Jello), and for dessert a pumpkin pie and that red Jello dish with all that stringy stuff in it. Piffle. Hash brownies and egg nog for breakfast. Then eat anything (and everything) you can find the rest of the day. Hint: hide the hash brownies because it's *bad* if that's all you have to eat... -- Stan Gula http://gula.org/roffswaps |
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Dan'l notes:
If you don't like the traditional Christmas Dinner and want to eat all that EYE-talian stuff, go get your own damn holiday and call it All Mobster's Eve or Saint Soprano's Day or something. Duly noted....Lisa says her people will be in touch with you shortlyg........ Tom |
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"Guyz-N-Flyz" wrote I'm slow cookin' a venison tenderloin in the crock-pot with potatoes, carrots, onions (white and yellar), mushrooms, various spices--includin' bayleaf, garlic, brown sugar, honey, lemon juices, meat soakin' up red wine marinade even as I type. Is that ok, or do I just toss it and begin again? Op --no cook, but one hell of an eater-- me and ms. speight will be there by, oh, say, 8ish... yfitp wayno & ree (that "f" was plural) |
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Stan notes:
Hint: hide the hash brownies because it's *bad* if that's all you have to eat... explain why again...? pass the egg nog, and BTW, go PATS!!! Tom |
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"Tom Littleton" wrote in message
... Stan notes: Hint: hide the hash brownies because it's *bad* if that's all you have to eat... explain why again...? I forget. What were we talking about? Oh wow, brownies. |
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"Jeff Miller" wrote in message news:lhnGb.45583$hf1.8494@lakeread06... to which i respond: definitely toss it. uh... any way you can toss it over here? i'll pay overnight delivery. jeff (who's evening dining will be limited to the consumption of 2 bottles of wine followed by a bottle of 10 year old port and perhaps a case of beer - gifts of the season from folks in whom kindness and the xmas spirit abides. so far, none of the kind souls have gifted me a hot meal, so i'll just have to make do.) There'll be plenty of the good stuff left come Spring-time. Maybe we can convince our favorite, knuckle-draggin', southern red-neck chef, good 'ol Lennie to fix us a proper venison meal. I promise provide all the *proper* fixin's, as long as it's not too long, cold, and hard a Winter. In case the Winter is long, cold, and hard, we may just have to fix ourselves a mess of pickled hard-boiled eggs and mass quantities of beer! Op |
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"Wayne Harrison" wrote in message .com... "Guyz-N-Flyz" wrote I'm slow cookin' a venison tenderloin in the crock-pot with potatoes, carrots, onions (white and yellar), mushrooms, various spices--includin' bayleaf, garlic, brown sugar, honey, lemon juices, meat soakin' up red wine marinade even as I type. Is that ok, or do I just toss it and begin again? Op --no cook, but one hell of an eater-- me and ms. speight will be there by, oh, say, 8ish... AM or PM? yfitp wayno & ree (that "f" was plural) What "f"? Op |
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"Guyz-N-Flyz" wrote in message nk.net... "Wayne Harrison" wrote in message .com... "Guyz-N-Flyz" wrote I'm slow cookin' a venison tenderloin in the crock-pot with potatoes, carrots, onions (white and yellar), mushrooms, various spices--includin' bayleaf, garlic, brown sugar, honey, lemon juices, meat soakin' up red wine marinade even as I type. Is that ok, or do I just toss it and begin again? Op --no cook, but one hell of an eater-- me and ms. speight will be there by, oh, say, 8ish... AM or PM? yfitp wayno & ree (that "f" was plural) What "f"? Obviously, you need to pay more "f"ing attention. -- TL, Tim http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
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"Stan Gula" wrote in message ... "Tom Littleton" wrote in message ... Stan notes: Hint: hide the hash brownies because it's *bad* if that's all you have to eat... explain why again...? I forget. What were we talking about? Oh wow, brownies. Careful, Stan. You're going to turn into "Bad Santa". -- TL, Tim http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
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Pass the brownies please............I am in agreement with Dan'l except i like
ham baked tater biscuits and chocolate pie Handyman Mike Standing in a river waving a stick |
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Sounds yummy Riverman! I'll just have to make do with a fine piece of
lambchop, simmered for about 4 to 5 hours in the oven. :-) As I'm here, de-lurking for the moment, I wish all roffians a great christmas and allready a fantastic 2004! -- Herman |
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Handyman Mike wrote:Pass the brownies please............I am in agreement with
Dan'l except i like ham baked tater biscuits and chocolate pie That all sound great to me, but am I the only one where the family had a tradition of oysters in the cornbread dressing? Big Dale |
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"Big Dale" wrote in message ... That all sound great to me, but am I the only one where the family had a tradition of oysters in the cornbread dressing? No |
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"Wayne Knight" wrote in news:A56dnSs44Nw8R3eiRVn-
: "Big Dale" wrote in message ... That all sound great to me, but am I the only one where the family had a tradition of oysters in the cornbread dressing? I won't say it was a tradition, but I remember Mom putting oysters in the turkey stuffing...delicious! Frank Church |
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"Tom Littleton" wrote in message ... Dan'l notes: If you don't like the traditional Christmas Dinner and want to eat all that EYE-talian stuff, go get your own damn holiday and call it All Mobster's Eve or Saint Soprano's Day or something. Duly noted....Lisa says her people will be in touch with you shortlyg........ Tom Errr...ummm...hey, Tom....Could you please tell Lisa's people "thanks" for the Christmas present. I don't want to seem ungrateful or anything but we don't know how to properly prepare horsehead. Maybe it's another one of those Italian dishes. Danl PS Please ask them to leave any future livestock related presents in the kitchen rather than my bed, ok? |
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"Danl" wrote in message ... "Tom Littleton" wrote in message ... Dan'l notes: If you don't like the traditional Christmas Dinner and want to eat all that EYE-talian stuff, go get your own damn holiday and call it All Mobster's Eve or Saint Soprano's Day or something. Duly noted....Lisa says her people will be in touch with you shortlyg........ Tom Errr...ummm...hey, Tom....Could you please tell Lisa's people "thanks" for the Christmas present. I don't want to seem ungrateful or anything but we don't know how to properly prepare horsehead. Maybe it's another one of those Italian dishes. Danl PS Please ask them to leave any future livestock related presents in the kitchen rather than my bed, ok? hilarious, but somewhat ominous... yfitons wayno (i mean, hell, tlitt is scary as hell *without* connections to the underworld...) |
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wayno notes:
wayno (i mean, hell, tlitt is scary as hell *without* connections to the underworld...) now, that is hilarious! On a lot of levels, no less. yfitks Tom p.s. You should've seen where Lisa and I had the wedding reception, and you would know what I mean...... |
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Dan'l writes:
Errr...ummm...hey, Tom....Could you please tell Lisa's people "thanks" for the Christmas present. much obliged..... we don't know how to properly prepare horsehead you don't prepare it, you leave it where you found it, and moveg Tom p.s. I might even admit that horsehead might be preferable to a few items on the Christmas Eve "seven fishes" menu |
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