-black : -black pepper
2 : tb Butter
1 : /2 c Milk
3 : lg Eggs
3/4 : c All Purpose Flour
1/2 : c Whole Wheat Flour
1/2 : c Rye Flour
1/4 : c Stone Ground Cornmeal
1 : /2 tb Sugar
1 : tb Baking Powder
1 : ts Salt
1/4 : ts Baking Soda
1 : c Maple Syrup; Warmed
2 : c All-purpose flour
1 : ts Baking powder
2 : c Whole wheat or rye flour
1/4 : c Butter or margarine
4 : c Oat or wheat bran
1 : Egg; beaten
1/4 : c Packed brown sugar
1 : 3/4 c Buttermilk
1 : ts Caraway seeds (optional)
1/2 : ts Salt
1 : ts Baking soda
3 : tb Red wine vinegar
1 : Clove garlic; minced
1/2 : ts Dijon-style mustard
3/4 : c Olive oil
1/2 : ts Oregano
1/4 : ts Marjoram
1/4 : ts Thyme
Salt : Salt and pepper; to taste
2 : Garlic cloves, coarsely
-chopped : -chopped
1 : c Firmly packed fresh basil
-leaves : -leaves
1 : c Firmly packed fresh italian
-parsley : -parsley leaves
1 : c Firmly packed fresh mint
-leaves : -leaves
1/2 : c Toasted pine nuts, cooled
1/2 : c Freshly grated parmesan
Salt : Salt and freshly ground
3/4 : c Olive oil
(19.8. : (19.8. oz)pkg fudge brownie
Mix : Mix
1/2 : c Kahlua or coffee-flavored
Liquer : Liquer
3 : x (.9 oz) pkgs. chocolate
Instant : Instant pudding mix
12 : oz Container Cool Whip
6 : x (1.4 o) Heath Bars, crushed
3 : different types of
-lettuce; : -lettuce; Iceberg; Bibb,
-Romaine, : -Romaine, etc.
2 : Avacados
2 : Bell peppers
2 : Small/medium tomatoes
2 : Jars (small) artichoke
-hearts : -hearts
1 : cn (small) chopped ripe olives
1 : Bottle capers
1 : ts Salt
sm : sm Amount of olive oil
sm : sm Amount of red wine
-vinegar : -vinegar
1 : Bunch green onions or
-shallots : -shallots
1 : /2 ts Garlic salt
Oregano : Oregano to taste
3/4 : c Flour
1 : ts Baking powder
1/2 : c Plus 2 tablespoons sugar
1 : pn Salt
3 : Eggs large
1/2 : c Milk
1 : ts Vanilla
0: ================== Information file ================== I thought you might like to see this recipe reprinted from Domestic Cookery from 1864
1: It was an English book
2: "To make bread let flour be kept four to five weeks before it is begun to be used to bake with
3: Put half a bushel of good flour into a trough or kneading tub; mix with it between four and five quarts of warm water and a pint and a half of good hop yeast
4: Stir well with your hands until it becomes tough
5: Let it rise about an hour and a half or less if it rises fast; then, before it falls, add four more quarts of warm water and half pound of salt
6: Work it well and cover with a cloth
7: Put the fire then into the oven and by the time it is warm enough the dough will be ready
8: Make the loaves about five pounds each; sweep out the oven very clean and quick, and put in the bread; shut it up close and two and one half hours will bake it
9: In summer the water should be milk warm, in winter a little more and in frosty weather as hot as you can well bear your hands in but not scalding else the whole will be ruined
10: If baked in tins the crust will be very nice
11: The oven should be round, not long; the roof twenty to twenty-four inches high, the mouth small and the door of iron to shut close
12: This construction will save firing and time and bake better than long and high-roofed ovens
13: " From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www
14: synapse
15: com/~gemini