9 CFR Ch. III (1–1–14 Edition) § 316.11
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Carolina Gold Rice Pudding
Carolina Gold Rice Pudding Yield 6 to 8 portions Time 4 hours or overnight to soak the rice, 15 or 20 minutes to cook it, and about 20 minutes to prepare the pudding Cooking Remarks This recipe comes together in a short series of steps: cook the rice in milk and sugar, make a stirred custard or crème anglaise, combine the two, and fold in whipped cream. The rice cooks best when the pot is covered, but the milk has a powerful urge to boil over. Best solution: a standard electric rice cooker. These cookers work as well as a double boiler when it comes to insulation, and the pot insert is typically nonstick. Cover the insert until the rice comes to a boil, then vent the rising steam by pulling the lid slightly off center. As the rice absorbs the milk, close the lid completely. If you don’t have a rice cooker, use a saucepan, but keep your eye on it. Equipment Mise en Place For this recipe, you will need a 5½-cup electric rice cooker and a heavy-bottomed medium saucepan (or two medium saucepans); a wooden spoon; a medium mixing bowl; two large mixing bowls; a whisk; a ladle; a fine-mesh strainer; a quart of ice cubes; a stand mixer, handheld mixer, or balloon whisk to whip the cream; and a rubber spatula. Ingredients for the rice 5.7 ounces (¾ cup) Anson Mills Carolina Gold Rice 12 ounces (1½ cups) whole milk 4 ounces (½ cup) spring or filtered water 1.75 ounces (¼ cup) sugar ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt c teaspoon ground cinnamon 2 tablespoons currants (optional) for the custard 12 ounces (1½ cups) whole milk c teaspoon fine sea salt ½ vanilla bean, split in half lengthwise and pulp scraped or 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 4 large egg yolks 1.75 ounces (¼ cup) sugar 6 ounces (¾ cup) cold heavy cream Copyright Anson Mills. -
We're A' Jock Tamson's Bairns
Some hae meat and canna eat, BIG DISHES SIDES Selkirk and some wad eat that want it, Frying Scotsman burger £12.95 Poke o' ChipS £3.45 Buffalo Farm beef burger, haggis fritter, onion rings. whisky cream sauce & but we hae meat and we can eat, chunky chips Grace and sae the Lord be thankit. Onion Girders & Irn Bru Mayo £2.95 But 'n' Ben Burger £12.45 Buffalo Farm beef burger, Isle of Mull cheddar, lettuce & tomato & chunky chips Roasted Roots £2.95 Moving Munros (v)(vg) £12.95 Hoose Salad £3.45 Wee Plates Mooless vegan burger, vegan haggis fritter, tomato chutney, pickles, vegan cheese, vegan bun & chunky chips Mashed Tatties £2.95 Soup of the day (v) £4.45 Oor Famous Steak Pie £13.95 Served piping hot with fresh baked sourdough bread & butter Steak braised long and slow, encased in hand rolled golden pastry served with Champit Tatties £2.95 roasted roots & chunky chips or mash Cullen skink £8.95 Baked Beans £2.95 Traditional North East smoked haddock & tattie soup, served in its own bread Clan Mac £11.95 bowl Macaroni & three cheese sauce with Isle of Mull, Arron smoked cheddar & Fresh Baked Sourdough Bread & Butter £2.95 Parmesan served with garlic sourdough bread Haggis Tower £4.95 £13.95 FREEDOM FRIES £6.95 Haggis, neeps and tatties with a whisky sauce Piper's Fish Supper Haggis crumbs, whisky sauce, fried crispy onions & crispy bacon bits Battered Peterhead haddock with chunky chips, chippy sauce & pickled onion Trio of Scottishness £5.95 £4.95 Haggis, Stornoway black pudding & white pudding, breaded baws, served with Sausage & Mash -
Fried Bread Pudding Balls Serves 15-20 People
Fried Bread Pudding Balls Serves 15-20 people Ingredients: Three loaves of French bread 10 eggs ½ gallon milk 4 cups sugar 2 quarts heavy cream 4 cups white chocolate chips 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Parchment Paper Canola Oil for Frying (enough for at least 2 inches deep in frying vessel) Praline sauce for drizzle over bread pudding balls Ingredients: 1 Cup of Melted Butter 1 ½ cups of brown sugar ½ quart Heavy Cream Instructions: combine all three ingredients and set aside at room temperature Bread Pudding Instructions: Preheat oven to 300 degrees Heat heavy cream and allow to simmer, carefully stirring so not to burn. Add white chocolate chips and stir until melted. Remove from heat and set aside. In separate bowl, add eggs, sugar and vanilla extract and blend well. Add the milk to the egg mixture. Slowly add the warm heavy cream and chocolate chip mixture. Line a 9x13 pan with parchment paper. Spray paper with cooking spray. Tear French bread into large chunks placing them in pan. Pour half of egg and milk mixture over the bread, pressing firmly to soak up the milk. Using your fingers, mash the soaked bread to make one solid piece in the pan. Then add the remaining milk and egg mixture. This should be very wet. Spray foil with cooking spray and cover the bread pudding. It is important to spray the foil because the bread will rise and stick to it if not greased. Bake at 300 degrees for 40 minutes covered. Uncover and bake another 20 minutes or until golden brown. -
Supplementary Table S2. Food Items Within Each Other Food Group Food
Supplementary Table S1: Individual food items within each major protein source food group Food group Individual food items Red meat beef; lamb; pork Processed meat sausage; bacon; ham Poultry crumbed chicken; chicken/poultry Oily fish oily fish Non‐oily fish white fish; breaded fish; battered fish; tinned tuna Legumes/pulses baked beans; pulses; hummus Vegetarian protein soy burgers/sausages; tofu; Quorn; other vegetarian alternatives alternatives salted peanuts; unsalted peanuts; salted other nuts; unsalted Nuts other nuts low fat hard cheese; hard cheese; soft cheese; blue cheese; low fat Cheese cheese spread; cheese spread; cottage cheese; feta cheese; mozarella cheese; goat cheese; other cheese Yogurt full fat yogurt; low fat yogurt whole milk; semi‐skimmed milk; skimmed milk; powdered milk; Dairy milk goat/sheep milk soya milk with calcium; soya milk without calcium; rice/oat other Plant milk vegetable milk whole eggs; omelette; eggs disaggregated from mayonnaise in Eggs egg sandwiches Supplementary Table S2. Food items within each other food group Food group Individual items stewed/cooked fruit; prunes; other dried fruit; mixed fruit; apple; banana; berries; cherries; grapefruit; grapes; mango; Fruit melon; orange; orange‐like small fruits; peach, nectarine; pear; pineapple; plum; other fruit mixed vegetables; vegetable pieces; coleslaw; mixed side salad; avocado; broad beans; green beans; beetroot; broccoli; butternut squash; cabbage; carrots; cauliflower; celery; Vegetables courgette; cucumber; garlic; leeks; lettuce; mushrooms; -
Easy Rice Pudding.382010.Pub
Easy Rice Pudding Note: Children can learn to measure while Helping make recipe. Ingredients: NOte Easy Rice Pudding 2/3 cup white rice, uncooked En Español 2 cups warm water 1 teaspoon butter or margarine (optional*) Serving Size: 2/3 cup 1/2 cup dry milk, non-fat Yield: 4Note: Children can 2 Tablespoons sugar learn to measure while help- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla ing make this recipe. servings 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon Time: 40 minutes 1 cup water 1/2 cup raisins or other dried fruit Instructions: 1. Combine rice, water, and butter or margarine in large microwave safe dish. Cover loosely, so steam will escape. 2. Cook in microwave on high for 5 minutes or until mixture comes to a boil. Reduce setting to defrost (50% power), and cook an additional 10 minutes. 3. Mix other ingredients together while rice is cooking. Easy Rice Pudding (continued) 4. Without allowing rice to cool, remove cover and quickly stir milk-water-raisin mixture into hot rice. Cover loosely again and continue cooking on defrost (50% power) for 10 minutes. After cooking time is finished, let pudding sit, covered, for 10 minutes. 5. Stir gently and put in individual serving dishes. 6. Eat warm or cover and refrigerate immediately. Enjoy the refrigerated pudding within 2 days. Serving Size: 2/3 cup, yield: 4 servings, Time 40 minutes Cost per recipe-0.88¢; per serving-0.22¢ SNAP-Ed Connection Recipe Finder htt://recipefinder.nal.usda.gov/index.php Buffalo County Wisconsin Nutrition Education Program 407 S. Second Street, Alma, WI 54610. -
Livermush Is a Unique Regional Pork Dish That Can Only Be Found in a Small Area of North Carolina
Archived thesis/research paper/faculty publication from the University of North Carolina at Asheville’s NC DOCKS Institutional Repository: http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/unca/ º [Music Througout] º >> [Voice over]: Livermush is a unique regional pork dish that can only be found in a small area of North Carolina. Livermush is made by mixing pork scraps, pork liver, cornmeal, and spices; which are then formed into a brick. The most common way to prepare livermush is to cut the brick into half inch slices and fry them in butter. These slices are often served alone or in between two halves of a biscuit with yellow mustard or grape jelly. The production of livermush has been industrialized in the last century by local companies such as Mack's Livermush & Meats in Shelby, North Carolina and Neese's in Greensboro, North Carolina; but before livermush was mass produced it was made at home. This food tradition is thought to have been brought to Western North Carolina by German immigrants. Germans, like many other Europeans, came to America hoping to build better lives without poverty or persecution. Many Germans first settled in Pennsylvania but then journeyed to the Appalachian mountains of North Carolina. According to the United States Census of 1792 approximately 20,000 Germans were living in North Carolina. This makes up five percent of the population at the time. These Germans took an old dish, pon hoss, from their homeland and made the old recipe work for the new world. Pon Hoss developed into scrapple in Pennsylvania and into livermush in North Carolina. -
Mountain Recipes: Cooks in High Places – Mountain Specialties
Mountain Recipes COOKS IN HIGH PLACES : MOUNTAIN SPECIALTIES Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Rome, 2020 Required citation: FAO. Mountain Partnership Secretariat. 2020. Mountain recipes: Cooks in high places – Mountain specialties. Rome. https://doi.org/10.4060/cb0229en The designations employed and the presentation of material in this information product do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) concerning the legal or development status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The mention of specific companies or products of manufacturers, whether or not these have been patented, does not imply that these have been endorsed or recommended by FAO in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. The views expressed in this information product are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of FAO. ISBN 978-92-5-133067-8 © FAO, 2020 Some rights reserved. This work is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO licence (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/igo/legalcode). Under the terms of this licence, this work may be copied, redistributed and adapted for non-commercial purposes, provided that the work is appropriately cited. In any use of this work, there should be no suggestion that FAO endorses any specific organization, products or services. The use of the FAO logo is not permitted. -
Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 22, No. 3 Burt Feintuch
Ursinus College Digital Commons @ Ursinus College Pennsylvania Folklife Magazine Pennsylvania Folklife Society Collection Spring 1973 Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 22, No. 3 Burt Feintuch Susan J. Ellis Waln K. Brown Louis Winkler Friedrich Krebs Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag Part of the American Art and Architecture Commons, American Material Culture Commons, Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, Cultural History Commons, Ethnic Studies Commons, Fiber, Textile, and Weaving Arts Commons, Folklore Commons, Genealogy Commons, German Language and Literature Commons, Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons, History of Religion Commons, Linguistics Commons, and the Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits oy u. Recommended Citation Feintuch, Burt; Ellis, Susan J.; Brown, Waln K.; Winkler, Louis; and Krebs, Friedrich, "Pennsylvania Folklife Vol. 22, No. 3" (1973). Pennsylvania Folklife Magazine. 53. https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/pafolklifemag/53 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Pennsylvania Folklife Society Collection at Digital Commons @ Ursinus College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Pennsylvania Folklife Magazine by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Ursinus College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Contributors to this Issue B RT FEI T H , Philadelphia, Penn ylvania. currentl a doctoral tudent in Folklore and Folklife at the niver ity of Penn I ania. H e i a graduate of the Penn ylvania tate niver ity, wher h tudied und r Profe or amuel P. Bayard dean of Penn- ylvania' folklori t . J J. ELLI , Philadelphia, Penn ylvania, pre ent here her M .A. -
1 Hairy Bikers Mums Know Best Series:1 Category:Sweet
Hairy Bikers Mums Know Best Series:1 Category:Sweet Programme:N/A Submitted By:Irene Paterson Recipe Title:Mays Clootie Dumpling Ingredients:9 cups plain flour 3tsp salt 3tsp baking soda 3tsp cream of tartar 3 cups sugar 2pkts mixed spice ¾lb shredded suet 3oz currants 18oz sultanas/dark raisins or mixture of both 1pt + buttermilk to mix Method:Sieve flour, salt, bicarb, cream of tartar and spices into a large bowl. Add sugar, fruit, suet (mum would sit for hours shredding fresh suet but a pack is easier) and mix well add the paper wrapped coins. Mix in buttermilk until the mixture reaches a thick dropping consistency. Boil a lot of water in a big pan put an old plate in the bottom of the pan to prevent the pudding sticking. Drop the pudding mix into a clean pillow case and tie firmly with string leaving a little gap for expansion. When the pot is at a fast rolling boil, gently lower the pillowcase in make sure there is enough water to cover the pudding. Quickly bring back to the boil and keep on a fast simmer for 4 hours. Remove from the pot and untie string invert onto a plate and set in front of an open fire to dry the skin. Lovely eaten as soon as skin is dry and pudding still hot, warmed and served with custard or fried for breakfast with a runny egg. Notes:A Clootie Dumpling was made for special occasions most notably New Year when it was handed out to first footers still hot and steaming (the pudding not the first footers!). -
The Pudding Club
FOOD & DRINK The Pudding Club It was while I was visiting my aunt and choice of seven puddings (hot and cold). the earliest recipe books: The English uncle in Gloucestershire that I first heard At the end of the evening, they then vote Huswife, Containing the Inward and of the Pudding Club. As we drove through for the best pudding of the night. Outward Virtues Which Ought to Be in a Mickleton, a small, picturesque Cotswold Puddings date back to medieval times in Complete Woman by Gervase Markham, village, my uncle pointed out the Three Britain. Steamed puddings, bread puddings which was first published in 1615. Back Ways House Hotel and told me that he’d and rice puddings are all listed in one of then, puddings often meant a dish in recently been there to take part in the which meat and or sweet ingredients, ‘Pudding Club’. Intrigued, I wanted to find often in liquid form, were encased and out more. then steamed or boiled to set the con- It turns out the Pudding Club was thought tents, these were often savoury dishes up in 1985 by the then-owners Keith and such as: black pudding, haggis, steamed Jean Turner, who felt that British puddings beef pudding or Yorkshire puddings; and it were disappearing and all that was offered has only been in the past century (around after a meal was cheesecake and black for- 1950) that it came to mean any sweet est gateau. They wanted to bring back tra- dish at the end of the meal. I imagine it ditional British puddings that were starting must be somewhat confusing for first time to fade in to history, puddings such as: visitors to the United Kingdom to look at spotted dick, treacle tart, summer pudding, a menu where they could be served a college pudding and many more. -
Product Information Baking Mixture
Product information Baking mixture - Instant pudding Article number: 301177 mix Powder – highly productive filling quantity: 1000 g Vanilla cream powder Blancmange without cooking! Description In powder for bakeable and freezeable dessert cream fillings. Instant blanc-mange is a soft basic cream for e. g. yeast cake, butter cream and blancmange desserts With our convenience products you buy professional high-quality products. The baking mixtures are produced of finest raw material in Germany. All products are easy to process, taste delicious and are always a success. In plastic can. With instructions and recipe suggestions. The item is excluded from the exchange. Manual Nutrition Facts Possible applications: For the production of a fast soft base cream for almond-coated Nutritional value per 100 g yeastcake, butter cream and blancmange desserts without cooking. For an angelcake cream physiological energy value 1666 kJ / filling mix whipped cream under the base cream. For a butter cream mix soft butter under the 371 kcal base cream. Blancmange recipes with cooked blancmange can be exchanged for this instant blancmange. fat 4.3 g hereof saturated fatty acids 2.5 g Basic recipe: For 500 ml water (milk, sour fruit juice or wine)weight out 175 g Instant carbohydrates 85.5 g blancmange. Stir the powder with the egg-whisk into the liquid strongly and let the blancmange hereof sugar 54.5 g rest for 5 minutes. Then process depending on recipe. Fibres 0.4 g For blancmange pretzel and Pastries with blancmange fillings: Mix 350 ml liquid with 150 g protein 3.3 g Instant Blancmange (yields 500 ml blancmange). -
Workshops for Mad for Marmalade 2017 1. Pudding… Pond… Sussex
Workshops for Mad for Marmalade 2017 1. Pudding… Pond… Sussex What do these three words have in common? Put the words another way and you have "Sussex Pond Pudding" – a delectable treat, a delight to the eye and delicious to taste. Served with custard, it makes a perfect ending to a winter meal. Melissa Beynon is a Museum Program Officer at Fort York National Historic Site with a passion for puddings. She has been teaching culinary history in various museums for almost 20 years. 2. Orange Biscuits Join Mya Sangster in the 1826 Officers' Kitchen, for a hands- on workshop to make two different recipes for Orange Biscuits. One receipt is taken from Whole Duty of a Woman (1740) and the second is from Robert Abbot's The Housekeepers Valuable Present (1790). Discover how the meaning of the word biscuit has changed over the centuries. Mya Sangster is a Volunteer Historic Cook at Fort York National Historic Site. 3. Orange Marmalade Mazurki Mazurkie or Mazurek is a fruit and nut stuffed cake. This specialty flat cake is made traditionally for Easter in Poland, Ukraine and Russia. What it lacks in height, it makes up for with its zingy flavours of ginger and orange, its chewy density, its keeping qualities, and, most important, the pleasure it gives. Elizabeth Baird is a marmalade enthusiast, a Volunteer Historic Cook at Fort York National Historic Site and a cookbook author. 4. Yesterday’s Candied Peel for the Modern Cook During the early years of Canada, seasonal oranges and lemons were shipped to Upper Canada (Ontario) as prized ingredients.