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Raw Paleo Diet Gallery => Display Your Culinary Creations => Topic started by: goodsamaritan on December 25, 2009, 06:50:33 am
Title: Merry Christmas: Your Pot Luck Contribution?
Post by: goodsamaritan on December 25, 2009, 06:50:33 am
This holiday was brought to us by the celebration of Christmas.
So my wife's family had a pot luck dinner (traditional noche buena) and we had to contribute something, we contributed raw fish sashimi totalling 3 kilos:
1 kilo of raw salmon (farmed)
1 kilo of raw tuna - grade A ocean wild (raw paleo)
1 kilo of raw blue marlin - ocean wild (raw paleo)
Plus for the japanese effect had grated radish. And I contributed chopsticks.
My mother in law roasted fatty prime rib (cooked paleo) -- I'm pulling her in little by little, she now recommends the fat because her chiropractor said fat was essential.
Title: Re: Merry Christmas: Your Pot Luck Contribution?
Post by: PaleoPhil on December 25, 2009, 10:04:51 am
Here's a cooked Christmas recipe from the 17th century to give you an idea of how much things have changed just in the last several centuries--a blink of an eye in biological terms. Chewit/chewette pies were the precursor to minced meat pies. Today, ironically, minced meat pies rarely include any minced meat. A delicate Chewit A New Booke of Cookerie 1615 Pies (Chewet) http://www.theoldecookerybook.com/~theopden/wiki/index.php/A_delicate_Chewit
Instructions Parboil a piece of a leg of veal, and being cold, mince it with beef suet, and marrow, and an apple or a couple of wardens: when you have minced it fine, add a few parboiled currants, six minced dates, a piece of a minced preserved orange peel and marrow cut in little square pieces. Season all this with pepper, salt, nutmeg, and a little sugar: then put it into your crusts, and bake it like that. Before you close your pie, sprinkle on a little rosewater, and when they are baked shave on a little sugar, and serve.
Title: Re: Merry Christmas: Your Pot Luck Contribution?
Post by: William on December 25, 2009, 05:58:44 pm
"series of books of now online to the general public. It's a collection of 600+ well-researched food history and food culture articles. Included also are a couple dozen biographies of notable food personalities.
It is the single-most comprehensive authority on food habits, trends, history, and production - There is something for everyone in there, and plenty more.
The set of books costs $420 in print, or you can access it online for free:
Alphabetical Index (searchable) http://www.enotes.com/food-encyclopedia
Unfortunately the color inserts, diagrams, and maps are not available online without a subscription. But your local public library may offer them as part of their online resources for patrons if they subscribe to the Gale Research and Learning services.
http://www.gale.cengage.com/
The main branch of my public library also has a hardcopy of the set for reading locally. The complete hardcopy of the book, including maps, prints, color plates is also available in PDF form as a torrent."