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echo: cooking
to: Mike Powell
from: Dave Drum
date: 2023-02-04 06:24:00
subject: Weller was:Monthly stats,

-=> Mike Powell wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-

 > We are on some e-mail list together and he is not especially active on
 > those. Probably busy staying warm. Yellowknife is in Canada's "deep-
 > freeze". Not to mention he has grandchildren and great-grandchildren to
 > make life interesting.

 MP> Yes.  Between its remoteness and interesting name, I have always been
 MP> curious about visiting there.  I am also one of the few people I know
 MP> who is more interested in visiting the Artic Ocean than the Atlantic or
 MP> Pacific, so there is that.  :D

Go for it. As long as you have no "fear of flying". It's an agonisingly 
long road trip. From whatr Jim has posted over the years Yelowknife
gets largish numbers of Asian touristers come to see the Aroura Borealis.

And it has a vibreant upscale dining scene.

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
 
      Title: Creton > Pierre Lambert
 Categories: Canadian, Pork, Heirloom, Spreads, Breakfast
      Yield: 1 Batch
 
      1 lb Ground Pork
      2 tb Bacon fat; divided
      1 md Onion
      1 cl Garlic
      1 pn Cinnamon
      1 pn Cloves
    1/2 ts Salt
    1/4 ts Pepper
      1 tb Beef stock or milk; or more
 
  Mince onion and garlic finely, then grind in a mortar and
  pestle until pureed.
  
  In a large skillet, add 1 tb bacon fat and gently fry the
  ground pork. Add the pureed onion and garlic together with
  the spices and continue to cook. Take off the fire.
  
  After mixture cools, press the mixture through a sieve to
  form a puree. Add the beef stock or milk so the mixture is
  spreadable.
  
  Put the mixture into jars and add a small layer of melted
  bacon fat over the top to seal and add extra flavour.
  Refrigerate until used.
  
  Serve on crackers as a snack or on toast for a hearty
  breakfast.
  
  This recipe is reconstructed by Roslind Minault from
  childhood memories of how her grandfather used to make it
  on the family farm in Rocky Lane, Alberta. The concept
  originated in Quebec and is distinctly French-Canadian.
  
  FROM: Jim Weller
 
MMMMM

... Death is a dull, dreary affair - my advice is to have nothing to do with
t.
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