Food Thread

With you living in an Amish area I’m sure you have so many great place to buy prime cuts and other stuff.
We love stopping in Amish communities they usually have top quality stuff
Oh yes, there’s probably fifty little butcher shops in the county, and the beef most of them carve up was walking around out back just last week. I do love living in farm country, the little stands at the end of every driveway always have good stuff out, nice and fresh.
 
With you living in an Amish area I’m sure you have so many great place to buy prime cuts and other stuff.
We love stopping in Amish communities they usually have top quality stuff
I have not ventured into Amish meats or produce. We do have a lot of girls doing house cleaning services; and TONS of Amish house construction crews. Two years ago 25 acres behind me were logged by an Amish father & son.
 
I have not ventured into Amish meats or produce. We do have a lot of girls doing house cleaning services; and TONS of Amish house construction crews. Two years ago 25 acres behind me were logged by an Amish father & son.
We have all that here too, most of the Amish around here have construction companies, some of them are good at what they do. There’s Amish tree services and loggers, only one locally is actually properly insured though, which annoys me to no end.

We even have a few Amish electricians and one Amish company company!
 
Oh yes, there’s probably fifty little butcher shops in the county, and the beef most of them carve up was walking around out back just last week. I do love living in farm country, the little stands at the end of every driveway always have good stuff out, nice and fresh.
In Ohio, I thinks there is some strange law were farms can't butcher there own meat & sell it retail.
It has to go thru a Meat-Locker / butcher ? ? ?
 
In Ohio, I thinks there is some strange law were farms can't butcher there own meat & sell it retail.
It has to go thru a Meat-Locker / butcher ? ? ?
There are rules about that too, my understanding is that the farm can sell you the cow, and you can pay their shop to carve it up for you. They have to be a USDA registered/licensed shop to sell retail, but I can buy a whole (or sometimes half or quarter) cow from the farm. My parents usually buy a cow a year and we kids all split it with them, each paying for the percentage we want.
 
In Ohio, I thinks there is some strange law were farms can't butcher there own meat & sell it retail.
It has to go thru a Meat-Locker / butcher ? ? ?
My brother use to live I Mansfield Ohio and yes the some of the Amish farms had stores and the meats , cheeses , and so much more top quality for sure

Might be worth the drive or if you were passing through
 
The neat thing about the pizza is that the crust sort of takes on the flavor of a fried dough, that you might get at a fair, yet it eats like a deep dish, despite being rolled out thin. I'm digging it so far.
Interesting. That sounds really good. I bought my mother an Ooni wood pellet pizza oven for Christmas the other year and it makes a real good pizza, but not a “fried dough” type pizza. That’s different, but I like the sound of it. Maybe I’ll try it some time.
 
Open Face Ruben using Butter Croissants
Rev: 230207 1145

Croissants – cut in half length-wise (left-overs)
Havarti cheese – melted base
Thousand Island dressing
Corned Beef – see previous post for left-over beef
Sauerkraut – hand squeezed dry
Swiss cheese – topping

Microwave to heat & melt cheese.

Zesty Dill Pickle Spears – Vlasic brand
French Fries – homemade – fried in peanut oil 350°F for 20 min.

Creamy Horseradish sauce
Chinese Chili Crisp sauce

230207 Ruben - open face w croissant - Prep -IMG_1017.JPG
230207 Ruben - open face w croissant - IMG_1018.JPG
 
Corned Beef Hash – homemade
Rev: 230207 1725

Onion, red – ¼” dice
Potato – ¼” dice; par cooked (steamed 5 min.)
Corned Beef – ¼” dice; pre-cooked (Sous vide 152°F for 72)
Butter

Add seasonings:
Thyme
Black pepper
Salt
Accent (MSG)

Form into a thin hash “disc in middle of fry pan” & cook –
Every 10 min, push the edges of the cooking hash very, very gently to form smaller & smaller circles.

230207 Hash - prep -IMG_1019.JPG
230207 Hash - cooking -IMG_1020.JPG
230207 Hash - done -IMG_1021.JPG
 
What is your favorite breakfast “pastry” ?

Waffle
French toast
Pancake
Biscuits / Toasted ?
Bagels
Bialys
Muffins
Toast w/ butter & cinnamon-sugar
Croissant
Butter w/ “Anything” !
Doughnut – (cake doughnuts are my favorite regular doughnut)
Cruller (by far, my favorite of any doughnut ! )
Crepe
Toast – regular, homemade – butter, jam, peanut butter, etc

Other ? ?
 
What is your favorite breakfast “pastry” ?

Waffle
French toast
Pancake
Biscuits / Toasted ?
Bagels
Bialys
Muffins
Toast w/ butter & cinnamon-sugar
Croissant
Butter w/ “Anything” !
Doughnut – (cake doughnuts are my favorite regular doughnut)
Cruller (by far, my favorite of any doughnut ! )
Crepe
Toast – regular, homemade – butter, jam, peanut butter, etc

Other ? ?
I have a 1 pint container of maple syrup that my father made in 1982 in New Hampshire !
Wondering what to finally do w/ it.
 
Waffle for me, thin ones like I used to get from this Czech breakfast place in town are my favorite. I also like liege, stroop and Belgian waffles too. Those Czech ladies also made these delicious little pastries called kolache, highly recommend. Crepes and doughnuts honorable mention.:love:
 
Waffle for me, thin ones like I used to get from this Czech breakfast place in town are my favorite. I also like liege, stroop and Belgian waffles too. Those Czech ladies also made these delicious little pastries called kolache, highly recommend. Crepes and doughnuts honorable mention.:love:
Cake doughnuts cut in half, then grilled are pretty darn good w/ butter & syrup.
 

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