What's for dinner?
Moderator: Menolly
- Menolly
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Hi Feanor!
Welcome to The Galley.
I think we may be having a small difference in use of the term "dinner." For most of us here in the states, we mean the evening meal, after work and with the family, when we say "dinner." I have a friend in New Zealand who also refers to that as "tea," whereas "dinner" means something akin to lunch for him.
Is it the same for you? Your Tea tonight definitely sounds more like dinner to me.
Welcome to The Galley.
I think we may be having a small difference in use of the term "dinner." For most of us here in the states, we mean the evening meal, after work and with the family, when we say "dinner." I have a friend in New Zealand who also refers to that as "tea," whereas "dinner" means something akin to lunch for him.
Is it the same for you? Your Tea tonight definitely sounds more like dinner to me.

About to go fire up the grill now:
BBQ Chicken
BBQ Corn
Grilled Red Potatoes
Salad of cucumber, red onion, tomato with Italian dressing
Deviled Eggs
Bread and Butter Pickles
Dessert:
Grilled Peaches, Plums, Apricots, Strawberries, Blueberries on French vanilla ice cream.
BBQ Chicken
BBQ Corn
Grilled Red Potatoes
Salad of cucumber, red onion, tomato with Italian dressing
Deviled Eggs
Bread and Butter Pickles
Dessert:
Grilled Peaches, Plums, Apricots, Strawberries, Blueberries on French vanilla ice cream.
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- Menolly
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It all sounds wonderful, mrsnull.
The only addition I might add is to brush the grilled fruit with some melted butter and brown sugar glaze while on the grill.
I know grilled fruit tastes awesome on its own. But I really do love the caramel flavor the glaze adds to them, especially when served over french vanilla ice cream.
The only addition I might add is to brush the grilled fruit with some melted butter and brown sugar glaze while on the grill.
I know grilled fruit tastes awesome on its own. But I really do love the caramel flavor the glaze adds to them, especially when served over french vanilla ice cream.


- stonemaybe
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Ayup Stonemaybe...Stonemaybe wrote:Hair on or off?a Packet of Pork Scratchings (Rinds ?)
either way, that's one part of English culture I cannot embrace!
Hair ON of Course !

And a Big 'Hi' To you too.
I'm old fashioned in a lot of things, and have always called the 12 O'clock (or so) meal 'Dinnertime' from when I were a Nipper, and I don't think that'll change ever. But I know around the World its different.
Nekrimah !
- aliantha
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Hunh, wouldya look at that. Here in the US, pork rinds are sold as a snack food, like potato chips/crisps. I've never thought about them being anything else. But I admit that I'm not a pork rind connoisseur. (I'm also not French, nor have I ever studied French, so I had to look up how to spell connoisseur...)


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- Vader
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Nothing beats a chunk of pork with a purdy layer of fat and skin on it. Cut criss cross patterns into the skin and lay it upside down in a bit of water (don't get the meat wet, just let the skin soak) it will go all crispy and puffy while roasting - the water in the skin will just evaporate and the steam will "lift it up" like puffy pastry.
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Leftover chicken from yesterday's barbecue. Yummers.
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Heed the words of this man. (one of the best meals I've ever had was roast pork knuckle, crackling and roast veges in a beerhall in MunichVader wrote:Nothing beats a chunk of pork with a purdy layer of fat and skin on it. Cut criss cross patterns into the skin and lay it upside down in a bit of water (don't get the meat wet, just let the skin soak) it will go all crispy and puffy while roasting - the water in the skin will just evaporate and the steam will "lift it up" like puffy pastry.

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- stonemaybe
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I like both, but the scratching are definitely a giult food, and far far inferior to proper crackling. The underside should still be hot and glistening. Mmmmm.
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Probably swisschard-pasta - a specialty of my husbands'.
He makes a white sauce, cooks swisschard with it, and puts it on the pasta.
He makes a white sauce, cooks swisschard with it, and puts it on the pasta.
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them.
They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
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They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
-Flannery O'Connor
"In spite of much that militates against quietness there are people who still read books. They are the people who keep me going."
-Elisabeth Elliot, Preface, "A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael"