• Kitchens was: End of the

    From Dave Drum@1:320/219 to Ruth Haffly on Wed Aug 20 11:11:00 2025
    Ruth Haffly wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    If your church has a group that does food for events you could send
    the bulk of the common stuff to them and the "specials" to the girls.

    We don't have the storage capability at the church for long term stuff. When we do an event (like back to school breakfast tomorrow), it's pot luck; I made fig/oatmeal muffins. Anytime we have something brought in, it's simple, like bagels or pizza. Our girls would have to fly in and couldn't take much back (or ship); we'd probably tell them anything useable, give to the local food bank.

    After my friend John passed Les and I were helping his daughter clean out
    hia kitchen. St. Martin de Porres food pantry took all of the sealed jars
    and containers. Les and I divided the open chilli stuff and the rest went
    to one of the neighbours for her kitchen.

    Different churches have different set-ups. From doing chilli supper
    fund raisers I know that St. Paul's (Anglican), St. Peter's (Roman), Westminster Presbyterian, Central Baptist, Trinity Lutheran and Temple B'rith Sholom all have kitchens that would do a restaurant proud.

    We have basically a home kitchen set up. One fridge (we donated a
    bigger one than what was there originally), a small microwave, 2
    stoves, both donated--one newish (around 2010 model), one older (shows
    the coils) and a standard double sink. New folks, when they took over, cleaned out a lot of odds and ends (but still usable) stuff, did keep
    the set of pots we'd donated about 10 years ago.

    All of those I named have equipment that came from a restaurant supplier
    and large commercial ice boxes/freezersas well as walk-in coolers. The
    temple also has two complete sets of cooking vessels - one of which never
    see any dairy or dairy products.

    Title: Potluck Taco Casserole
    Categories: Beef, Herbs, Dairy, Vegetables, Cheese
    Yield: 8 servings

    Looks good. I try to get an idea of allergies, etc if I'm cooking for a group so would have to check for dairy issues with this one. We had a family in church at one time who had a child extremely allergic to milk and milk products so I had to be careful when cooking, knowing he would
    be eating whatever was being served. Made his day when he was 3 and had never eaten ice cream--we made a mango sorbet that he devoured. The
    look of sheer delight on his face--an ice cream that he could eat--was priceless!

    I have a grand nephew who had that problem. Couldn't do any milk except his mother's. I told my niece to check with the pediatritian for a usable form
    of Lact Aid - which proved to be a workable deal.

    Myhouse mate is mildly lactose intolerant - and he didn't know about Lact Aid until after he came to live here. I went down the Walgreens and bought him a supply and also turned him on to live culture yoghurt.

    I often thank my lucky stars that I don't have and food allergies except the banana thinf - which I'm not a fan of anyway. I can do allthe dairy and nuts MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Rhubarb Custard Pie
    Categories: Pies, Pastry, Fruits, Citrus, Dairy
    Yield: 6 Servings

    1 (9") pie crust

    MMMMM--------------------------FILLING-------------------------------
    3 1/4 c Rhubarb (1 lb); in 1/2" pcs
    3 tb All-purpose flour
    3/4 c Sugar *
    Zest from 1 large orange **
    1/4 ts Ground cinnamon
    1/4 ts Ground nutmeg
    1/4 ts Salt
    2 lg Eggs; room temp
    1/3 c Heavy whipping cream ***
    1 ts Vanilla extract

    When ready to assemble pie: Set oven @ 375°F/190°C.

    Roll out your pastry: Roll your pie crust into a 12"
    circle. Drape it over a 9" pie plate. Tuck the edges
    under and crimp it, so it looks pretty. Return it to
    the fridge.

    PREPARE FILLING: Whisk flour, sugar, orange zest,
    cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt in a large bowl. Whisk eggs,
    heavy cream, and vanilla in another medium bowl. Add the
    wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and whisk to
    combine. Add the rhubarb and fold together with a
    spatula.

    ASSEMBLE THE PIE: Pour the filling into the crust.
    Smooth the top with a spatula.

    BAKE THE PIE: Put the pie on a cookie sheet to protect
    your oven from spillovers. Fold aluminum foil in half
    and create a cover just around the edges of the pie
    crust, leaving the filling exposed.

    Place the pie in the oven. Remove the foil halfway
    through the baking time. Bake until the custard is fully
    set, without a jiggle, and the crust is golden brown,
    about 45 minutes.

    COOL: Let cool on a wire rack to room temperature, about
    45-50 min.

    SERVE: Serve this pie slightly warm, cold, or at room
    temperature. Dust with powdered sugar just before
    serving. Store leftovers covered and in the refrigerator
    for up to 3 days.

    * Use 1/2 cup sugar if you like it more tart (like me)
    or increase to a full cup for the sugar freaks. The
    3/4 cup call out is a compromise - UDD

    ** As long as you're zesting a fresh orange why not
    use the juice for part of the water in the crust?
    It's a neat trick - UDD

    *** I have made this with 2% and got an OK result. But
    you should use at least Half & Half or ideally 40% BF
    whipping cream. - UDD

    Original recipe by: Summer Miller

    RECIPE FROM: https://www.simplyrecipes.com

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen

    MMMMM



    ... Frozen yoghurt is the celery of desserts; be ice cream or be nothing.
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: Phoenix BBS * phoenix.bnbbbs.net (1:320/219)
  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to Dave Drum on Wed Aug 20 13:01:38 2025
    Hi Dave,


    We don't have the storage capability at the church for long term stuff. When we do an event (like back to school breakfast tomorrow), it's pot luck; I made fig/oatmeal muffins. Anytime we have something brought in, it's simple, like bagels or pizza. Our girls would have to fly in and couldn't take much back (or ship); we'd probably tell them anything useable, give to the local food bank.

    After my friend John passed Les and I were helping his daughter clean
    out hia kitchen. St. Martin de Porres food pantry took all of the
    sealed jars and containers. Les and I divided the open chilli stuff
    and the rest went to one of the neighbours for her kitchen.

    Sounds like good choices all the way around.


    Different churches have different set-ups. From doing chilli supper
    fund raisers I know that St. Paul's (Anglican), St. Peter's (Roman), Westminster Presbyterian, Central Baptist, Trinity Lutheran and Temple B'rith Sholom all have kitchens that would do a restaurant proud.

    We have basically a home kitchen set up. One fridge (we donated a
    bigger one than what was there originally), a small microwave, 2
    stoves, both donated--one newish (around 2010 model), one older (shows
    the coils) and a standard double sink. New folks, when they took over, cleaned out a lot of odds and ends (but still usable) stuff, did keep
    the set of pots we'd donated about 10 years ago.

    All of those I named have equipment that came from a restaurant
    supplier and large commercial ice boxes/freezersas well as walk-in coolers. The

    We've been members off churchs with kitchens like that. Our Legion Post
    has a commercial kitchen also.


    temple also has two complete sets of cooking vessels - one of which
    never see any dairy or dairy products.

    As well as a set that doesn't see any meat or meat products. (G)


    Title: Potluck Taco Casserole
    Categories: Beef, Herbs, Dairy, Vegetables, Cheese
    Yield: 8 servings

    Looks good. I try to get an idea of allergies, etc if I'm cooking for a group so would have to check for dairy issues with this one. We had a family in church at one time who had a child extremely allergic to milk and milk products so I had to be careful when cooking, knowing he would
    be eating whatever was being served. Made his day when he was 3 and had never eaten ice cream--we made a mango sorbet that he devoured. The
    look of sheer delight on his face--an ice cream that he could eat--was priceless!

    I have a grand nephew who had that problem. Couldn't do any milk
    except his mother's. I told my niece to check with the pediatritian
    for a usable form of Lact Aid - which proved to be a workable deal.

    We used to go thru a lot of that. Steve has to watch his dairy intake
    but can have some now, without Lact Aid. When he was younger, he needed
    it with any dairy product. Our younger daughter had a milder intolerance
    until a rough bout of mono as an early teen messed up her system. Don't
    know how she's doing now. We still keep Lact Aid or a generic on hand,
    grabbing it whenever we have baked (or otherwise) beans.

    Myhouse mate is mildly lactose intolerant - and he didn't know
    about DD> Lact Aid until after he came to live here. I went down the
    Walgreens DD> and bought him a supply and also turned him on to live
    culture DD> yoghurt.

    We (and it's mostly me) go thru a lot of yogurt. It's one of my
    breakfast staples.


    I often thank my lucky stars that I don't have and food allergies
    except the banana thinf - which I'm not a fan of anyway. I can do
    allthe dairy and nuts.

    I don't have any food allergies, just some strong dislikes.

    ---
    Catch you later,
    Ruth
    rchaffly{at}earthlink{dot}net FIDO 1:396/45.28


    ... Multitask: make twice the mistakes in 1/2 the time.

    --- PPoint 3.01
    * Origin: Sew! That's My Point (1:396/45.28)