• Hunter's Stew

    From Ben Collver@1:105/500 to All on Wednesday, October 15, 2025 07:16:59
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Hunters Stew
    Categories: Beef, Stews
    Yield: 4 Servings

    1 1/4 lb Beef for stew; cubed 1"
    2 tb Flour
    1/4 ts Salt
    1/8 ts Pepper
    4 sl Bacon; diced 1"
    1 lg Onion; thinly sliced
    2 3/4 c Water
    1 tb Red wine vinegar
    1 cl Garlic; minced
    1 Beef bouillon cube
    1 1/2 c Carrots; cut diagonally
    - about 1/2" thick

    Combine flour, salt, and pepper; dredge beef. Cook bacon in Dutch oven
    until crisp; drain on absorbent paper and reserve. Brown onion in
    drippings 3 or 4 minutes. Remove with slotted spoon to small bowl,
    reserve. Brown beef in remaining drippings. Pour off drippings. Add
    water, vinegar, garlic, and bouillon cube. Cover tightly and cook
    slowly 1-1/2 hours. Add carrots and continue cooking, covered, 40
    minutes. Add reserved onion and continue cooking for 10 minutes, or
    until beef and vegetable are tender. Stir in reserved bacon.

    Recipe FROM: TV Facts

    Posted by: Chris Fernald

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  • From Ben Collver@1:105/500 to Dave Drum on Saturday, October 18, 2025 09:12:14
    Re: Re: Hunter's Stew
    By: Dave Drum to Ben Collver on Sat Oct 18 2025 05:04 am

    After a nice plate of what I thought was chicken cacciatore I
    learned that Sammy hunted his meat on the roof of the hotel. Pigeons!

    Title: Pigeon Cacciatore

    Nice squab story. I've never eaten pigeons that i know of. I read a
    local history about Chinese miners who were here during the gold rush. According to this book, they were reluctant to eat Western food and
    commonly imported and grew & raised their own ingredients. However,
    they did hunt and gather. One story was about a western miner who
    tried a Chinese dish prepared with crow meat. He wrote that he had
    tried crow before and it never tasted good, but it was delicious in
    the Chinese dish.

    By the way, i am curious about your recent batches of "Hard Times"
    recipes. Some of them don't strike me as the kind of food i would
    imagine eating in hard times. Cakes, strawberries dipped in candy
    grade chocolate, etc. How did you select those recipes?

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

    Title: Honey Curried Chicken Breasts
    Categories: Chicken
    Yield: 4 Servings

    3 lb Chicken breast halves;
    - without skin
    1/3 c Orange juice
    1/3 c Honey
    1/4 c Dijon mustard
    4 ts Curry powder
    1 pn Cayenne pepper

    Spray a baking dish with non-stick cooking spray. Arrange chicken in a
    single layer, skin side down if not skinned. Combine remaining
    ingredients in a small bowl, stirring until smooth. Pour over
    chicken. Cover and refrigerate if not cooking immediately. Bake
    chicken, uncovered, in 375?F oven for 20 minutes, basting once. Turn
    chicken over, baste again, and bake 20 minutes longer or until
    chicken is tender.

    Recipe by Alison Meyer

    Adapted FROM: Canadian Living, May 1989

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  • From Dave Drum@1:218/700 to Ben Collver on Sunday, October 19, 2025 04:16:47
    Ben Collver wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    Re: Re: Hunter's Stew
    By: Dave Drum to Ben Collver on Sat Oct 18 2025 05:04 am

    After a nice plate of what I thought was chicken cacciatore I
    learned that Sammy hunted his meat on the roof of the hotel. Pigeons!

    Title: Pigeon Cacciatore

    Nice squab story. I've never eaten pigeons that i know of. I read a local history about Chinese miners who were here during the gold rush. According to this book, they were reluctant to eat Western food and commonly imported and grew & raised their own ingredients. However,
    they did hunt and gather. One story was about a western miner who
    tried a Chinese dish prepared with crow meat. He wrote that he had
    tried crow before and it never tasted good, but it was delicious in
    the Chinese dish.

    I grew up thinking that chop suey was authentic Chinese grub. Then I was living in Sunny Southern Californica and discovered the "House of Yee" in Inglewood. Owned and staffed by recent immigrants (1960s) and featuring Cantonese-style ciusine. I started at the time of their dinner menu and
    went down the list taking mental notes as I went. Discovered several of
    the entrees that went on the "repeaters" list. and a couple for the "Not
    even at gunpoint" column. And just when I was feeling smug learned that
    there were also Hunan and Peking styles to sample/experience. Oh, my ever expanding waistline.

    By the way, i am curious about your recent batches of "Hard Times" recipes. Some of them don't strike me as the kind of food i would
    imagine eating in hard times. Cakes, strawberries dipped in candy
    grade chocolate, etc. How did you select those recipes?

    I notice that too. I subscribe to the New York Times cooking section. And periodically they have a collection like that. The "Hard Times" was their header for the collection. Pull a gun on Sam Sifton - the editor. Not me.

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

    Title: Honey Curried Chicken Breasts
    Categories: Chicken
    Yield: 4 Servings

    3 lb Chicken breast halves;
    - without skin
    1/3 c Orange juice
    1/3 c Honey
    1/4 c Dijon mustard
    4 ts Curry powder

    I widh people who do curry recipes would specify *whic* curry spice is
    to be used. there is as wide a variance in curry as there is in chile.

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

    Title: Kaeng Paa Kai (Jungle Curry w/Chicken)
    Categories: Oriental, Chilies, Poultry, Herbs, Curry
    Yield: 4 Servings

    MMMMM------------------------CURRY PASTE-----------------------------
    2 tb Takrai (lemon grass);
    - bruised, thin sliced
    3 tb Shallots; coarse chopped
    2 tb Kratiem (garlic); chopped
    1/4 c Kachai (lesser ginger);
    - peeled, chopped
    8 Prik chee fa daegn haeng
    - (dried red Thai crushed
    - jalapenos)
    1 ts Green peppercorns
    1 ts Kapi (fermented shrimp
    - paste)
    ds Fish sauce

    MMMMM---------------------------CURRY--------------------------------
    4 c Chicken; in 1" pieces
    1/4 c Nam pla (fish sauce)
    3 c Chicken stock or water
    1/2 c Makhua pro (Thai eggplant)
    1/4 c Prik che fa (Thai jalaenos);
    - julienned
    1/2 c Bai maenglak (kaffir lime
    - leaves); shredded
    +=OR=+
    1 ts Lime zest

    A recent trip to Bangkok resulted in our eating at a nice
    little restaurant in a back alley near the airport. This
    dish is quite common, but both my wife and I were taken by
    the presentation described here (the rest of the recipe is
    however my wife's).

    Of course before you rush out to try this, I have to say
    that you need a heavy, and very sharp knife - a machete or a
    survivalist’s Bowie might be suitable - and a degree of
    skill in its use if you are not to have a messy accident -
    spilling the contents of the coconuts all over the kitchen
    may well be the least of your problems. So of course I point
    out that you can open the coconuts some other way, and serve
    the dish in more conventional tableware!

    Preparation:

    First prepare the curry paste by grinding the ingredients to
    a fine paste in a mortar and pestle or food processor.

    Pierce the coconuts and drain the juice into a picher. Then
    using a machete chop off the top of each coconut, just above
    the mid-point, to leave four serving bowls.

    Using a spoon scoop out the coconut 'meat' in leaf shaped
    pieces with a spoon (or use a melon baller). Add about half
    a cup of coconut to the juice for every two cups of juice,
    and refrigerate.

    Reserve half a cup of coconut meat, and reserve the rest to
    make coconut milk for other recipes.

    Heat a wok or large sautee pan over medium high heat, and
    then add a little oil and stir fry the curry paste until
    aromatic. add the chicken, and stir fry briefly and then add
    the remaining ingredients, except the lime leaves and the
    chicken stock, and stir fry until the chicken begins to
    change colour. Add the stock, and cover, simmering until the
    chicken and the eggplant is cooked through.

    Now serve the curry in the four large coconut shell bowls,
    garnished with the lime leaves, and accompanied by rice in
    the tops of the coconut shells, bring the chilled coconut
    nectar to the table as a refreshing cool drink, and don't
    forget the usual condiments (nam pla prik (chilies in fish
    sauce), dried ground chilies, and sugar).

    Colonel Ian F. Khuntilanont-Philpott; Systems Engineering,
    Vongchavalitkul University, Korat 30000, Thailand

    NOTES:

    Kachai is a relative of ginger, known as Lesser Ginger in
    some parts of the world (though I am reminded that in other
    places this appelation is used for galangal). For those of a
    botanical bent its latin name is Kaempferia Panduratum.

    The prik chee fa are a mild chile, about 6 centimetres long
    and 1 cm thick. They are known as Thai jalapenos, and if
    unavailable the Mexican variety could be substituted. If
    dried red jalapenas are not available, deseed, and devein
    fresh jalapenos, and use them instead.

    Makheua pro are a Thai variety of eggplant, about the size
    and shape of a green golfball. If unavailable you can use
    normal aubergine, but will need to adjust the cooking time.

    Bai maenglak is a sweet Thai basil. If unavailable normal
    European basil may be used.

    Recipe By: Colonel I.F.K. Philpott

    From: http://www.recipesource.com

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