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Site Owner Joined May 28 2009
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Living with RSD Yummy Candles So Delicious! Pie cooking MPL CREATIVE RESOURCES RsdFriends Helping Humans BE A PIONEER fibromyalgia sufferers IRELAND |
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About Me
I am a Mother of three children and a Grandmother of five . I am a Chef and a published cookbook author . I enjoy preparing gourmet foods for my family and friends . However ; my true passion is baking . I am an outdoor person who loves camping , fishing , horseback riding , hiking , most most of all I love to travel to exotic destinations . My idea of a perfect day is to spend it on a boat out on the ocean , coming home and grilling then chilling . I enjoy helping others. I have five forms of arthritis and a birth injury. I have written two books Yankee Cooking with Southern Charm A Complete Illustrated Guide to cooking with arthritis As A hobby I enter recipe contests. I have won over fifty national contests and cooked off on the Food Networks Ultimate Recipe Showdown in 2008 I am glad you have found my website I hope you enjoy yourself here. Please feel free to join in on any discussion . Post a CommentOops!The words you entered did not match the given text. Please try again. 18 Comments
Oh thank God that someone else in this world knows what it is like to have to be peeled off of the ceiling!
This panic order disease is not only VERY REAL - it is ruthless. Ms. Winner, you really described this well. As if we need more panic attacks. Oh goodness, they are so bad I have gone to the ER. Thank goodness for my Dr. I was put on a medication that halted them completely. It is like imploding into a brain where a bullet needs to be excised, with no way out. Like those novels where Irish children get lost in castle garden mazes of tall evergreens, or better labeled NEVERgreens as they can not find their way out...ever..... BRILLIANT topic, Ms. Winner!
Hi Melinda! Hope your trip goes well and you have a great time. I'm plugging along much as usual - not much happening in other words!
Hi Melinda
Everyone is so friendly -I do not have time to participate at present in full but hope this will change. Ro
ya gotta look at the vid i just posted. omg ~ its so funny!!!! Jess found it, you need to get one of these things for Oct!!!!
Look at the video under funny vids I just posted, LOLL!
I LOVE THE SONG YOU PUT ON THE HOME PAGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Haven't heard it in SO LONG!!!! Love, NOMOREFLATCOOKIES, (thnx to premade) LOL
Thanks for the welcome - sorry it took me so long to get here. It's a great site.
Back to civilization, after driving home through torrential downpours and LIGHTENING!!!!!!!!!!!! Beautiful.
Well, I want to write a little about my knees! I have osteoarthritis in both knees and really started having trouble walking, to the point of falling a bit. Kind o embarrassing and extremely painful! Finally, I went to Dr. Baneau in Novato, Calif. He showed me my X-Rays and boy did I see the problem up close and personal. I went into surgery 2 weeks later and got one knee replaced with a brad new Titanium knee and a year later got the other knee done. I recovered from the first replacement way faster than the second. The reason I bellieve is because I started to travel way too quickly after the second one. I went to Europe on one of my favorite things to do, on a Barge with friends that you drive yourself down the Canals. It is kinda of Physical and I really should have waited but I cannot stand to miss out on a good time!!! I have gotten a lot better lately and have found that Kaprex a natural joint supplement that I got from my nutritionist works for me. It really seems to help with the pain and I am exercising better and more often and walking way better. I found you really have to keep moving to kick this joint stiffness and depression you can develope when you have pain every day for a long time. I really cannot stand to stay still and am always finding some way to get into trouble!!! I am singing again with another Jazz Band and doing some stain glass work, making mosaic pots and trays and learning more everyday!!! Love and KEEP MOVING ( hopefully in the right direction!)
hey i finally find some time to some visit but your not on. I am off on thursday maybe we can get caught up. I am in school now so I need to go to class. Good luck on your surgery. Say hi to Jim for me.
hey Mindy Lou,
Not much going on here, just gettin ready for the kids to go on their trip. Oh! and I'm going for surgery on my other hand on Wed. still wishing u were here for moral support. Come home soon. |
c. = cup
T. = tablespoon
tsp. = teaspoon
lb. = pound
lg. = large
Pinch = app. 1/8 of teaspoon
Allemande: one of the four mother sauces. It is an egg-enriched velouté. A velouté is a white stock-based sauce.
Al dente: usually referring to pasta—slight crunch to the bite.
Au jus: the drippings released from meats as they are slow cooked.
Bake: to cook food in the oven, usually with little fat or liquid. Also refers to the cooking of baked goods.
Bard: the process of wrapping meat in a thin layer of fat to retain moisture.
Baste: to pour or spoon liquid over food while cooking.
Béarnaise sauce: an emulsified butter sauce made with egg yolks and clarified butter, seasoned with tarragon, shallots, and vinegar. Usually served with steak.
Béchamel sauce: This is also one of the four mother sauces. It is a white sauce made from a butter and flour roux. There are hundreds of sauces that start with this classic white sauce.
Beurre blanc sauce: a classic French sauce made from a wine and vinegar reduction finished off with butter.
Blanch: to immerse food into boiling water briefly to par cook. The food will then be finished using a second cooking method. This method is also used in the canning process of fruits and vegetables to remove the skins.
Braise: to simmer foods on the stovetop in a very small amount of some form of fat to brown.
Break: usually means a cream sauce has separated during the cooking process.
Butterfly: to cut food in half but not all the way through; when completed, it will resemble a butterfly with open wings and will lay flat on any surface.
Caramelize: to cook food over a fairly high heat until the foods’ natural sugars are fully released, and the food turns caramel in color.
Chiffonade: to roll leafy vegetables and cut into small strips.
Chutney: an Indian condiment made from fresh fruits, vegetables, and spices; usually spicy and sweet.
Confit: usually refers to duck or goose that has been slow cooked in large amounts of fat and stored in the fat until service.
Deglaze: to use liquid to remove the remits of the item cooked in a pan, such as meat, fish, poultry, and vegetables. Wine is usually the first choice for deglazing—some use stocks, broths, and water.
Egg wash: equal parts of water and beaten egg used to brush on baked goods for added color during baking and to seal pastry before baking.
Espagnole: one of the four mother sauces. It is a brown stock-based sauce used to make various other sauces. For example, to make this sauce you could start by using a beef stock and finish with seasonings and slurry.
Fillet: To remove the bones from fish, meat, or poultry.
Ganache: a creamy mixture of melted chocolate and heavy cream used over cakes and desserts.
Julienne: to cut vegetables or any food into small, even strips.
Leaven: the act of rising in baked goods. This usually happens when leavening agents are used such as baking soda, baking powder, potato starch, air, and whipped eggs.
Marinate: to soak foods in a seasoned liquid to enhance flavor.
Mince: The procedure used to chop food in tiny little pieces. This is usually performed with a chef’s knife.
Mirepoix: celery, carrots, and onions that are chopped and used as a soup base and to season other foods while cooking.
Mother sauce: There are four basic sauces that are referred to as mother sauces simply meaning they are the base sauce where many other sauces are created from them. Some believe there are five, the fifth being emulsified sauces such as mayonnaise and hollandaise sauce.
Pipe: This is when you are decorating cakes, cookies, and pastry using a pastry bag and a decorating tip. It is also when you are filling foods with a filling using a pastry bag.
Poach: to cook food in liquid.
Puree: to puree, grind, or mash solid foods to a smooth consistency.
Reduce: to boil liquid to concentrate its flavor and thickening.
Render: to cook down, melt the fat in meat.
Roux: flour and butter or any fat mixed to form a paste. Used to make a base for sauces or stews.
Sauté: to cook food quickly on the stovetop over high heat with little fat.
Sear: to brown quickly over high heat.
Simmer: to cook food over low heat for long periods of time.
Metric Conversion Chart
US Canadian Australian
1/4 tsp 1 mL 1 ml
1/2 tsp 2 mL 2 ml
1 tsp 5 mL 5 ml
1 Tbl 15 mL 20 ml
1/4 cup 50 mL 60 ml
1/3 cup 75 mL 80 ml
1/2 cup 125 mL 125 ml
2/3 cup 50 mL 170 ml
3/4 cup 175 mL 190 ml
1 cup 250 mL 250 ml
1 quart 1 liter 1 litre
Weight
1 ounce 30 grams 30 grams
2 " 55 " 60 "
3 " 85 " 90 "
4 " 115 " 125 "
8 " 225 " 225 "
16 " 455 " 500 " (1/2 kilogram)
Temperatures
Fahrenheit Celsius
32 degrees 0 degrees
212 " 100 "
250 " 120 "
275 " 140 "
300 " 150 "
325 " 160 "
350 " 180 "
375 " 190 "
400 " 200 "
425 " 220 "
450 " 230 "
475 " 240 "
500 " 260 "
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