• Richyssoise (Chilled, Creamy Potato-Onion Soup)

    From Ben Collver@1:124/5016 to All on Sun Apr 2 12:18:47 2023
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Richyssoise (Chilled, Creamy Potato-Onion Soup)
    Categories: Soups
    Yield: 4 Servings

    1 lg Onion
    1/2 c Butter
    4 md Potatoes; (scrubbed, sliced
    -thin)
    4 c Water
    2 c Milk
    1/2 pt Heavy cream
    1 ts Salt; up to 2
    Fresh pepper
    Scallions or chives; freshly
    -chopped

    Begin this soup at least 3-4 hours ahead of serving time.

    Brown onions lightly in butter.

    Combine onions, potatoes, and water in kettle. Boil until potatoes
    are very tender. Add salt.

    Puree. (Use all the water yo cooked the vegetables in.)

    Strain or sieve.

    Whisk in milk, 1/2 of the cream, and pepper.

    Heat just to boiling point. Don't boil!

    Chill until cold.

    Add remaining cream. Serve topped with scallions or chives. (optional
    topping: finely-diced fresh red, sweet pepper.)

    Recipe by Moosewood Cookbook

    MMMMM
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    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (1:124/5016)
  • From Dave Drum@1:3634/12 to Ben Collver on Mon Apr 3 07:19:00 2023
    Ben Collver wrote to All <=-

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Richyssoise (Chilled, Creamy Potato-Onion Soup)
    Categories: Soups
    Yield: 4 Servings

    Recipe by Moosewood Cookbook

    MMMMM

    Someone has take liberties with that recipe. I could not find it with
    that spelling anywhere in the Moosewood collection. But, here's one with
    the right spelling that I have in my collection (which you now have).
    Lucius Beebe was a gourmet and a gourmand who had enough of the necessary (money) to indulge most of his whims.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Leek & Baked Potato Vichyssoise w/Red Caviar
    Categories: Soups, Vegetables, Potatoes, Seafood
    Yield: 6 Servings

    2 lg Baking potatoes (russets)
    6 c Vegetable broth
    6 lg Leeks; 3 lb, white part only
    1/2 ts Fresh ground white pepper
    1 c Yogurt or evaporated milk
    1/4 c Red salmon roe caviar
    1/4 c Snipped fresh chives

    Set oven to 400ºF/205ºC.

    Bake potatoes on the floor of the oven, turning once,
    for 1 hour or until they are soft when pressed. Cut the
    cooked potatoes in half and scoop out the flesh.

    Cut leeks in half lengthwise, wash throughly to get
    out all sand and grit and chop coarsely.

    In a large saucepan, bring the broth to a boil over
    moderately high heat. Add the chopped leeks and white
    pepper, reduce heat and simmer the leeks, covered for
    30 minutes or until they are very tender.

    Add the potato flesh to the leeks and puree the
    mixture in batches in a food processor until very
    smooth. Transfer the puree to a mixing bowl, add salt
    if desired and chill covered for at least 2 hours or
    up to 24 hours.

    Whisk in the yogurt or milk and chill again for 30
    minutes if necessary.

    Ladle the soup into bowls and top each serving with
    1-1/2-2 ts of red caviar and sprinkle with chives.

    Serve in chilled bowls.

    Recipe by Lucius Beebe, railroad buff and bon vivant

    From: http://www.dandyism.net

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

    MMMMM

    ... My #1 essential oil is pizza grease.
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    * Origin: SouthEast Star Mail HUB - SESTAR (1:3634/12)
  • From Ben Collver@1:124/5016 to Dave Drum on Mon Apr 3 10:56:34 2023
    Re: Richyssoise (Chilled, Cre
    By: Dave Drum to Ben Collver on Mon Apr 03 2023 07:19:00

    Title: Richyssoise (Chilled, Creamy Potato-Onion Soup)

    Someone has take liberties with that recipe. I could not find it with
    that spelling anywhere in the Moosewood collection.

    Title: Leek & Baked Potato Vichyssoise w/Red Caviar

    Thanks for the correction. This cookbook was published in 1977 and it is entirely hand-written including the illustrations, table of contents, and
    index. Very aesthetically pleasing, but they wrote the V with curly ends
    and to my eye it looked a lot like a lower-case letter "r". My bad.

    The other day i went to the library to renew my card, and i found that
    they have a re-printed edition of the original Moosewood Cookbook. How
    cool is that!
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (1:124/5016)
  • From Dave Drum@1:18/200 to Ben Collver on Tue Apr 4 07:28:55 2023
    Ben Collver wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    Title: Richyssoise (Chilled, Creamy Potato-Onion Soup)

    Someone has take liberties with that recipe. I could not find it with
    that spelling anywhere in the Moosewood collection.

    Title: Leek & Baked Potato Vichyssoise w/Red Caviar

    Thanks for the correction. This cookbook was published in 1977 and it
    is entirely hand-written including the illustrations, table of
    contents, and index. Very aesthetically pleasing, but they wrote the V with curly ends and to my eye it looked a lot like a lower-case letter "r". My bad.

    More like a marketing gimmick. It may look authentic and like something
    handed down from previous generations. Sorry, but I prefer printed in
    an easy to read typeface (and with modern measurements if actual archaic measures were used). I had several hand-written recipe cards from the collection of my Grandmother - and when I was entering them into Meal
    Muncher format I had to go ask more than once "What's this mean?" And
    she wrote a very nice Spencerian script with her Esterbrook fountain
    pen.

    The other day i went to the library to renew my card, and i found that they have a re-printed edition of the original Moosewood Cookbook. How cool is that!

    Except for having to renew a library card - pretty cool. My library
    issues cards only to juveniles. My voter's ID serves as my library card.
    What's neat about my library is that they have many books available in electronic format. So in a lot of instances I can download a volume to
    my Kindle .... and not have to worry about hustling it back to the library before the due date. The only problem with that is if doing reference
    reading it's very hard to flip from page to distant page. Or to go back
    several chapters to check how something came about. So, I have an online account and download to my confuser and use my Kindle app and a search
    engine.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Library Punch
    Categories: Beverages, Booze, Dairy, Fruits, Herbs
    Yield: 12 Servings

    1 1/2 c Sugar
    8 Lemons; 6 zest peeled in
    - strips & juiced, 2 thin
    - sliced
    1 Pineapple; peeled, cored,
    - chopped
    3 c Simmering water
    4 c Brandy
    2 c Rum
    1 c Absinthe
    1/2 c Grenadine
    1 tb Whole cloves
    1 tb Coriander seeds
    2 ts Fresh grated nutmeg
    8 ds Bitters
    2 c Whole milk
    20 Sprigs mint

    Recipe courtesy of Nancy Fuller

    In a large pot or bowl, stir to combine the sugar, lemon
    zest, lemon juice and pineapple. Let stand for 30
    minutes.

    Add the hot water and stir to dissolve the sugar. Add the
    brandy, rum, absinthe, grenadine, cloves, coriander,
    nutmeg and bitters. Let stand, covered, for at least 1
    hour or up to overnight.

    In a medium saucepan, scald the milk, then add to the
    punch. The milk will curdle when mixed with the lemon
    juice and alcohol. Let stand for 1 hour.

    Strain the punch through a double-cheesecloth or a
    coffee-filter-lined strainer. Transfer to the
    refrigerator to chill.

    To serve, fill a large bowl with the punch and add the 2
    sliced lemons. Fill a small glass with ice, add a mint
    sprig, then fill with punch. Repeat for the remaining
    cocktails.

    COOK'S NOTE: The lemon, pineapple and sugar combines to
    make a mixture called Oleo-Saccharum which dates back to
    the 19th century, when it was the go-to ingredient for
    cocktails. It is a great sweetener and base for other
    beverages like iced teas or lemonade. This mixture can be
    made 2 to 3 days ahead and kept refrigerated.

    Yield: 12 servings

    RECIPE FROM: http://www.foodnetwork.com

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

    MMMMM

    ... Take pride in your pain. You are stronger than those who have none.
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    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200)
  • From Ben Collver@1:124/5016 to Dave Drum on Wed Apr 5 11:50:52 2023
    Re: Re: Richyssoise (Chilled, Cre
    By: Dave Drum to Ben Collver on Tue Apr 04 2023 07:28:55

    Except for having to renew a library card - pretty cool. My library
    issues cards only to juveniles. My voter's ID serves as my library card.

    Sweet! I find it interesting to hear about these regional differences.
    A friend in Scotland told me that if the police pull someone over for a
    traffic stop and they don't have their driver's license on them, that's
    not a problem. They get 10 days or so to come into the police station
    and show their driver's license. I like the sound of these systems
    that better lend themselves to de-escalation.

    My community voted to stop funding the local library and shut it down completely for a few years. I felt bitter about that decision for some
    time. We managed to re-open it with volunteers and generous donations.
    I am grateful that it still exists and has a thriving circulation of
    new books. It also has a surprisingly large collection of cookbooks.

    About half of the books i read are on paper and the other half are
    ebooks. I have little patience for ebook marketing, so most of my
    electronic reading is the free stuff in the public domain.
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (1:124/5016)