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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 08:52 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from Sacha contains these words:
On 17/8/08 21:47, in article , "Rusty
Hinge" wrote:
The message
from Sacha contains these words:

Bit like 'mūres' which, I think, can mean both blackberries or
mulberries.
I imagine it's more often used to mean blackberries.


Mūre sauvage, oł Mūre de ronce. Mūre (seul), = mulberry

No doubt it will be shortened if the context allows...


Mūre de rance being of the River Rance or some other context?


Bramble. (Thank you, M. Harrap...)

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 08:57 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from K contains these words:
Rusty Hinge writes

Strawberries steeped in whisky with added sugar make a fine liqueur, and
you'd never know the spirit was whisky.

I made a bottle with wild strawberries this year, and it was rather
disappointing.


Strange, since wild have a much more intense flavour, but I had the same
experience


Well, mine are sharper, but with less 'classic strawberry' flavour when
eaten raw and unpickled.

Now, pale pink as they are now, I'm looking forward to decanting the
liquor, and - making a trifle.

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 09:01 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from "FarmI" ask@itshall be given contains these words:
"Sacha" wrote in message
"FarmI"
ask@itshall be given wrote:


My husband said he'd seen a soup recipe in there for Tomato and
something
or
other soup, but that it had no tomatoes in it so he thought they'd made a
mistake and meant 3 tomatoes rather than 3 onions. When I read it, the
recipe used 2 cans of marinara mix.


Hmmm, I don't much like cooking but I *really* don't like cooking that
way.
I happily use canned tomatoes but not without a slight feeling that I'm
cheating.


I love cooking but I too feel that vague guilt about tomatoes in a can. :-))


I don't. I like tinned plum tomatoes with (say) sausages, bacon, beans
and fried bread. For cooking dishes which incorporate tomatoes, I prefer
to use fresh ones.

I'm always a little surprised at US recipes that call for cheese
and it turns out to be Kraft slices or that stuff in a tube. That said,
I've eaten some wonderful meals in USA in both posh and average
restaurants
and in friends' houses, so it can't be totally 'instant cuisine'
everywhere.


No, just the blasted mags I accidently pick up. I'd thought I was buying
the Brisith Country Living and somehow got the US one. :-(((


With adverts for tornado shelters, Hominy Grits, and with tasty raccoon
recipes?

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 09:02 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from Martin contains these words:

Explain please?


Google Finocchio


It's how he walks...

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 09:17 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message

from Judith in France contains these words:

Ask Kay about her home made bread rolls, she introduced me to
breadmakers. Although the last twice I made them, they rose
beautifully but when I took the cling film off them they went down to
nothing again, I must be doing something wrong. I put the cling film
on them when they are rising so that the heat keeps in.


Put the rolls under a big plastic cake box, such as is molished by that
nice Mr. Tupper. Only take it off just before you put it in the oven.

I was given a breadmaker by a friend - she said I might be able to get
it to work.

It mixed OK (well, the paddle would keep getting stuck, otherwise that
bit went according to plan), but it wouldn't bake. Neither would the
paddle come out of its bearing.

I had a look inside, but couldn't see anything obviously wrong - I
disconnected the element and tested it with a multimeter, and that was
OK.

I put it all back together against the time I wanted a small mains
motor, and when that time came, I began dismantling it again. Hum!
What's this wire, floating aimlessly above the board? Well, it can only
go - here...

Soldering-iron out, and reassembled the thing, and everything worked -
except that you couldn't leave it to get on with the mixing, 'cos it
always jammed. It made excellent bread, though, the stuck paddle always
ripped a lump of bread out on removing the loaf from the pan.

In the end I gutted it, removed the paddle, motor, belt, etc, and
plugged the bottom of the pan with a rolled-up and squished bit of
aluminium foil. Now, I mix the dough in the Kenwood Chef (with a
dough-hook), cover the pan with anything that's handy and hang it in a
warm place, and when the dough has risen properly, bung it in the
breadmaker and set it to bake.

Lovely bread.

Bloody fiddle, though.

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 09:25 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from AriesVal contains these words:

I've stopped using my breadmaker. I make my bread in a Kenwood mixer with a
dough hook. I make two big loaves at a time using a mixture of strong
flours - this week it was a little organic white, organic wholewheat,
granary flour and some mixed seeded flour.


The only reason I use a breadmaker is that I haven't got my (gas) cooker
connected yet.

I let the dough rise once, knock back and put into two 2 lb double skinned
loaf tins and let it rise again covered with unbleached non stick baking
paper (similar to greaseproof paper but not stick). I then leave until well
risen in the tins, then place in a very hot oven for 10 mins, lower the heat
a little, and continue to bake for another 20 - 25 mins until cooked through
and the loaves sound hollow when tapped.


If I wanted a fresh loaf every day I'd make barm, which, when mixed
really thoroughly into the dough, makes (exhibition-type) bread with
very fine bubbles, an no big holes.

The baker I learnt to make real bread from (though I've been making some
sort of bread since 1950) reckoned that the longer you kept strong flour
(and assuming you keep the moths, mealworms, mites out of it) the better
it became for breadmaking.

He said he never used flour for making exhibition/competition bread
until it was at least seven years old.

I'd have liked to have prised more info out of him, but unfortunately he
pickled himself to death.

--
Rusty
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 09:29 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from Martin contains these words:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 17:07:15 +0100, AriesVal

wrote:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 17:18:58 +0200, Martin wrote:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 15:45:06 +0100, AriesVal

wrote:

[21 quoted lines suppressed]

We use a Panasonic ABM, it's easier than using the Kenwood.


Easier doesn't mean better tho :) I've used both and know which I
prefer :)


Us too and we do too. :)


MTAAAW. Been using one since the 1950s, though in those days, under
supervision.

--
Rusty
Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk
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Nick Maclaren 18-08-2008 10:18 PM

Damons? Plums?
 

In article , Rusty Hinge 2 writes:
| The message
| from (Nick Maclaren) contains these words:
|
| The version of the Larousse Francaise I saw in the Sorbonne was about
| the size of the Shorter Oxford. If OUP weren't such idiots, I and
| lots of other people would buy CD-ROMs of the OED. I haven't got the
| space for the paper version.
|
| Why? Is it a king's ransom?

Nah, but it's got an utterly ghastly interface that doesn't allow
the user to do anything like search it, and runs only under an
operating system that is equally bad.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

Sacha[_3_] 18-08-2008 10:51 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
On 18/8/08 20:42, in article ,
"Rusty Hinge 2" wrote:

The message
from Sacha contains these words:

I don't like them much so rarely ate them as a child and never straight off
the bush, so I never suffered. But they're famous for stomach ache if eaten
unripe, aren't they?


Allegedly. I never suffered, and if the parents (and grandparents)
didn't hurry up amd pick them, they began to diminish.

I guess I must have been found under a groseillier de macquereau innit.

I only like the big dessert ones, the name of which I
never remember!


Bellyachers.


No, I'm tolerably sure my ex fil didn't call them that. ;-)
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon



Sacha[_3_] 18-08-2008 10:53 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
On 18/8/08 20:44, in article ,
"Rusty Hinge 2" wrote:

The message
from Sacha contains these words:

Try ordering in an Italian one! (especially vegetables, say, fennel...)


No problem - I had an Italian mother outlaw and have an Italian sister in
law. I am the boring English person in the corner who winces when another
English person pronounces tagliatelle and zabaglione. It's figs you want
to watch out for....... ;-)


My late sis did a year at the University of Pisa as part of her
(Reading) Modern Languages degree. She soon learny to point at the
vegetable of her desire and ask for 'half a kilo of these...'


LOL!! I did that my whole time sailing down the coast of Portugal! un meio
kilo became a sort of boat's motto!

--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon



Sacha[_3_] 18-08-2008 10:54 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
On 18/8/08 20:49, in article ,
"Rusty Hinge 2" wrote:

The message
from Sacha contains these words:

This is making me think of a Scottish dish involving whisky and oats - can't
remember if fruit comes into it but think honey does. Is it brose -
something like that?


Ordinary brose is just oatmeal scalded with boiling water - a sort-of
instant porridge.

What you're thinking of is Atholl brose, which starts off the same way,
but has added cream, honey and whisky.

I approve...


If you can remember it, you mean? I'm going to try it out on the family at
the week end if I can get them all together to try it.

--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon



Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 11:20 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from AriesVal contains these words:

/slice/

He said he never used flour for making exhibition/competition bread
until it was at least seven years old.


Surely you're pulling my leg!


Nope.

I'd have liked to have prised more info out of him, but unfortunately he
pickled himself to death.


well after reading that I don't know what to think, are you saying he was an
alcoholic ?


Yep.

--
Rusty
Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk
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Rusty Hinge 2 18-08-2008 11:22 PM

Damons? Plums?
 
The message
from (Nick Maclaren) contains these words:
In article , Rusty
Hinge 2 writes:
| The message
| from
(Nick Maclaren) contains these words:
|
| The version of the Larousse Francaise I saw in the Sorbonne was about
| the size of the Shorter Oxford. If OUP weren't such idiots, I and
| lots of other people would buy CD-ROMs of the OED. I haven't got the
| space for the paper version.
|
| Why? Is it a king's ransom?


Nah, but it's got an utterly ghastly interface that doesn't allow
the user to do anything like search it, and runs only under an
operating system that is equally bad.


Hmmm.

I wonder if Open Office could be persuaded to open it?

If so, it could be converted to .odt format, saved to disc, and reburnt
onto DVD.

--
Rusty
Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk
Separator in search of a sig

Nick Maclaren 19-08-2008 10:02 AM

Damons? Plums?
 

In article ,
Martin writes:
|
| | The version of the Larousse Francaise I saw in the Sorbonne was about
| | the size of the Shorter Oxford. If OUP weren't such idiots, I and
| | lots of other people would buy CD-ROMs of the OED. I haven't got the
| | space for the paper version.
| |
| | Why? Is it a king's ransom?
|
| Nah, but it's got an utterly ghastly interface that doesn't allow
| the user to do anything like search it, and runs only under an
| operating system that is equally bad.
|
| The copy I had that came from a market in Oman only ran with Win95.

Oh, man!


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

Gordon H 19-08-2008 10:54 AM

Damons? Plums?
 
In message , Nick Maclaren
writes

In article ,
Gordon H writes:
|
| Downside: They propagate themselves quite easily, hence I have to
| watch for the seedlings every year and pull them up before they become
| very difficult, especially as they drop through my Weigela (sp?).

So do walnuts :-)

Yes, but they're easily cracked.
--
Gordon H


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