Nozomi, a revisit.

mmm-yoso!!! is just a place where you can vicariously experience food which is eaten by others.  Today, it's a meal Cathy experienced. Because Kirk is on vacation and ed(from Yuma) is in Yuma, working.  Apparently Cathy is doing neither.

Hi again.  I blogged about Nozomi  quite a while ago, have eaten there many times since, but never bothered to blog about it again.  The other day I brought my camera.

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Yes, they have an All You can Eat Sushi special, with many asterisks. {2 hours max, no to go, extra charge for leftover rice…}

The menu is a mix of Japanese and Korean and the decor is clean and simple. 

 It isn't large but also not too small inside. 

There is a regular meal menu and a separate, large menu of just rolls and sushi. Those photos on the front window are of a few of the rolls offered.

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002  We ordered and very soon some generic Miso Soup (made from paste) and a complimentary plate of edamame, freshly boiled and salted, was brought out.

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We decided to try the $3 chalkboard special of tuna nigiri.

Two very fresh pieces of tender tuna were brought out, topped with a dot of wasabi on top of some excellent warm rice. 

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The tempura fish appetizer ($5.95) was all halibut- solid, sweet white fish, fried perfectly- lightly crispy.

Quite a large serving.  I could have made this a meal if I could have eaten it all by myself.

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The Mister ordered the Hiyashi Juka (cold noodle) plate.  ($12.95)

A good portion of cooked then quick chilled yakisoba with mix ins of cucumber, carrot, cabbage, eggs, seaweed, red pepper, radish sprouts and mushrooms along with a few pieces of shrimp and a vinegar based sauce.

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I ordered my usual, the 'famous chirashi salad' ($13.95)

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A very large bowl with rice on the bottom, lots of lettuces, cucumber and radish sprouts dressed lightly with a sesame oil based dressing and topped with shrimp, octopus and three other chopped raw fish (salmon, halibut and tuna) and topped with masago and a light sesame oil based dressing.

Always fresh, tasty and plentiful.

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A refreshing sliced 1/2 orange for dessert.009

Total bill: $38.99

Always fresh and good.  A nice dinner out.

Nozomi (#1) 4637 Convoy #104 San Diego 92111 (858)569-7773

Nozomi (#2) 4159 Regents Park Row #190 La Jolla 92037 (858)452-7778

Camel’s Breath Inn- Nothing fancy. Good food.

mmm-yoso!!! is a food blog, written by Kirk, ed(from Yuma), Cathy and a few others.  Today, Cathy is writing, since Kirk and His Missus are on another exciting vacation, and ed(from Yuma) is…well..apparently having a life.  

Hi.  Quick Saturday post. I hope your weekend is not too busy.  I'm just writing about places and food and various things I eat.  Nothing fancy. 

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Back when the Padres played at Jack Murphy Qualcomm Stadium in Mission Valley, the Camel's Breath Inn was hopping before, during and after games, since basically it is walking distance to the stadium. It's in the same mall with the Stuart Anderson's, just East.

There are many televisions inside.  When the Chargers play, Camels Breath is very busy with the televisions and patrons partaking in adult beverages.  beer.

If you come here on Friday or Saturday nights, there is a cover charge and an..um.. interesting crowd who partake in karaoke, darts, pool, and dancing along with various beverages.

OK.  It's a dive.

With food. 014 

Decorated with Camels, stained glass, bar paraphernalia.

If you drop by during daylight hours, there is a lunch menu and a chalkboard, next to the large fiberglass camel inside.  There is also a small breakfast menu on weekends.

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Since I include a photo of the table condiments in just about every post, here is the Camel's Breath array.  There was also mustard available.

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The hot wings ($6) served with a ranch dressing.  A good ranch dressing. 

Lightly crispy and not too spicy. Good flavor. Nine pieces.

 

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The flat iron steak, cooked medium rare.  Served with salad and fries, $7.95.  I got the salad with Thousand Island dressing and it was house made; eggy. 

The steak was cooked and seasoned perfectly, juicy and tender.  Just enough.

The fries were properly cooked, but were just average.  The salad was plentiful, had some cucumber and carrot as well as grape tomatoes in it and Romaine lettuce.

If you are in the area during the day, do stop by.  If it is an evening, you are on your own.

Camel's Breath Inn  10330 Friars Road, # 106  San Diego 92120 (619)281-1722

Sonic. A chain *finally* comes back to San Diego.

mmm-yoso!!! is a blog about food. A few of us merely write about what we eat.  Today, while Kirk and His Missus are on vacation, Cathy is writing.  ed (from Yuma) is still in Yuma.

Hi again.  Sonic, a drive in, park, order out your window and have food delivered to your vehicle, then eat in your car restaurant, reminiscent of the drive in restaurants popular in the 1950's and 1960's is a chain which used to have a store in Chula Vista about 20 years ago.  We enjoyed driving up, having our food brought out to the car by a person on roller skates, and then eating our meal inside the car.  A kind of throwback to an easier time.  It must not have had much business, closed and the only time we got any kind of Sonic food was when we drove back East for Thanksgiving.

A few locations were still in California (there are over 3500 nationwide locations) and when I have had a craving for that food, The Mister and I could drive to El Centro, or Hemet for that Sonic "fix".   In fact, we did that this past November. 

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All the locations pretty much look like this. 

and the menu pretty much looks like this.

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The food is delivered to you in cardboard containers and paper bags. 

The cherry limeade is a popular favorite.

As is the chili-cheese dog and the burger on Texas Toast.

The Mister and I don't have to take that long drive any more!  The first of six San Diego Sonic locations opened a few weeks ago, in Santee.  There have been lines of cars daily.  To the point where after 10 a.m., vehicles are directed to a "staging area" and guided to drive in and park and order in an organized way.  Last Sunday, there were 60 vehicles waiting at 2 p.m..

However, Sonic opens at 5:30 in the morning.  I know this.

The menu is served all day, and there is a "Happy Hour" from 2-4 daily, with all beverages 1/2 price.001

The Mister and I merely get breakfast in the morning.  Odd, I know.

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Three mini biscuits with sausage and gravy.

 

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I get what I always crave: A cheese/egg/bacon toaster with lettuce and tomato (no extra charge) …so it is kind of a BLT with egg and cheese, on the wonderful Texas Toast.

The combo comes with a beverage and either fries or "tots", a Sonic Standard.

Once the other locations open, I hope the crowds will lighten up in Santee.  It's just food… good food. With wonderfull beverages.

Sonic,  locations nationwide. Website link

Too hot to cook, almost too hot to eat. A quick meal at Palomino’s.

mmm-yoso!!! is a blog.  About food.  Kirk, ed (from Yuma), Cathy and a few others just write about what we eat. Today, Cathy is is writing.  Primarily because Kirk is on his way to Guatemala and ed (from Yuma) is…well, in Yuma.

Hi.  It really hit 100 degrees in the East County on Monday.  Dry, dry heat.  It was exhausting to be outside, dangerous to touch anything inside the car and kind of miserable.

I didn't want to cook and was not that hungry.

OK.  I lie.  I am pretty much always hungry.  But, well, not as much as usual.  I needed something refreshing.  As soon as it kind of sort of started too cool down, I headed West, toward the 15 and then one exit South, to Clairmont Mesa, took a left at the second light, Ruffin Road,  by the Registrar of Voters and a right into the parking lot.   Palominos #2.    I've posted about this place before (when it was cold out, and I wanted something to warm me).  It is a great taco shop. Satisfies many cravings as well as weather related meals…

I ordered, grabbed stuff from the "salad bar" area…which is really a salsa bar area, (but there are neon signs above it with "salad" above it) 001.

Then waited for our meals to be ready.

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The Mister got a shrimp salad ($6.35).

Lots of lettuce, tomato and cucumber, 12 fresh cooked, fresh chilled, sweet, large shrimp, a whole avocado, some shredded cheese.  Served with the white dressing and sauces shown.  I always need to mix the sauces and some of the "Palomino" salsa from the bar to get the flavor I want.  Everything tastes good on its own, though. 

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I ordered the campechana coctele ($10.50). More than 16 whole, fresh cooked and chilled shrimp, a good portion of fresh cooked and chilled, tender octopus and at least one, maybe two chopped avocados in a wonderful tomato based sauce with cucumber.  I tasted all the ingredients individually and only added hot sauce (and salsa) to the last half of the large, pretty solidly filled coctele bowl.  Just for a variation.

This was a very refreshing meal.  Hope you are getting through this heat wave.

Palomino's #2 9353 Clairmont Mesa Blvd., Suite I, 91911 (858)292-8470

So Wrong, part one

mmm-yoso!! is a blog about food, written by a few friends.  Today, ed (from Yuma) and Kirk are busy, so Cathy is stepping in with a short post.

Hi.  I haven't posted in a while.  Life has been kind of busy and both The Mister and myself had that fever/cough/crud/spitting thing going on, so, even though we were eating, nothing seemed interesting enough to write about.  But I took some photos anyhow.   I decided to share some oddities.  This is the first episode.

It was Lent.  40 days of some sort of sacrifice before Easter.  Usually people give up some sort of food as their sacrifice.  Sometimes it is just not eating meat.  Every fast food restaurant had some sort of fish sandwich/deal going on.

Wendy's Fish sandwich008, which was really good.

Jack in the Box had a great deal.013

My ever favorite McDonald's Filet O Fish Fridays011

Then, I saw this at Der Weinerschnitzel.

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You know I had to stop and try it.

Because it looked ..so wrong… So very, very wrong.

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Basically a fish stick on a hot dog bun, with lettuce and tartar sauce.  Less than $2. 

It did taste pretty good, quite a heavy/large fish stick which was fried properly and served on a steamed bun with iceberg lettuce and a vinegary tartar sauce.

Conclusion: don't judge by looks.

Secondary conclusion: There may be a Food Stylist job open soon.

It's almost the weekend.  Hope everyone has been having a good week, even though Tax Day was in the middle.

It’s Valentine’s Day. A little game. About food and making a meal.

mmm-yoso!!! is the food blog, written by a few friends who like to eat.  Continue reading.

Hi.  Cathy here.  It is Friday and I usually show you a meal for two for $5…but tomorrow is Valentine's Day and maybe you want to spend a little more and maybe have dessert.  I am here to accommodate.

The Mister and I are strange.  It does not take much to amuse either of us.  We used to have this game we played…(continue reading, it is not dirty and is food related: I am focused).."pretend there was an earthquake".  We still play it, actually.

The rules are simple: We each would have to run into the house, pull at most three cans out of a cupboard and maybe something from the fridge and run back out and make a meal.016  Something that can be cooked on a stovetop or gas grill(all that might be available if we really did have an earthquake).

So anyhow, that is how these two recipes came about-I have made both of these "recipes", so I know they are good.

I do tend to buy stuff if I kow I like it and it is on sale.  rarely do I have to go out and pay ful price for something because I don't have it in the house. So, this meal still is not expensive overall.

Part One: The ingredients are fresh mushrooms, a can of artichoke hearts and a can of garbanzo beans.  The fish (cod) is on sale at Henry's this week for $5.99/lb.  You should not need half a pound of fish per person. 

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Put olive oil into a HOT pan, then put a pat of salted butter into the oil.

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Quarter the mushrooms and cook them in the olive oil/butter hot pan.

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Add the drained, quartered artichoke hearts to heat through,

029  as well as the drained chickpeas. 

Since there is salt added to the water, and I use oil and salted butter, I do not add any more seasonings.  This all is a medley of textures.

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Now, salt and pepper both sides of the cod.034   A whole pound is a lot of fish.

Place into hot olive oil and resist the urge to flip the fillet.

Let it cook until kind of crispy brown on one side (about 4 long minutes- you can see the bottom part start to turn brown.

The flip, cook for about 2 minutes more (until the other side is crispy.

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Serve the fillets on top of the vegetable mix.

Time to get three more ingredients!

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Part Two:  Jasmine green tea, crystallized ginger and pears.

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Make a pot of strong tea.

I use about 3 Cups of water and 5 teabags.  I let it brew and cool with the bags in the pot.   Then I reheat, with some pieces of the ginger in the tea.  There is sugar on the ginger and that is enough sweetness for me. 038 

Halve the pears, core and peel-or don't peel-  and slowly submerge the pear halves into the lightly boiling tea until the pears are very soft when you pierce with a knife.042 

Let cool a bit and serve, drained, with plain (butter) cookies. If you leave the pears in the tea longer, the flavor is deeper. The skins  absorb most of the tannins and I like that flavor more. That is why I leave the skins on for my serving.

I cool the jasmine green tea with the ginger in it and drink it iced.

I hope everyone is feeling healthy and has a nice three day weekend. Thanks for reading this little bit of my life and recipe 'secrets'. I hope you have/had a nice Valentine's Day.

DZ Akins – for breakfast…and other meals…and snacks

Welcome to mmm-yoso!!! The food blog.  Written by some friends who just like to talk about what, when, why, where and sometimes how they ate a meal.  Enjoy yourself.

I am apologizing ahead of time for the appearance of this post. 

Hi.  I hope everyone is feeling OK.  There seems to be some sort of virus going around and a lot of people I know are coughing.  If you are, please stay away from me.  I don't have time for that.  

The other day, The Mister was home from work.  We had just acquired a little money by participating in a game of chance and decided to go out for breakfast. IMG_0379  

DZ Akins is an East County San Diego tradition. It is as close to a good Jewish Deli as we can get.       The menu is 6 LARGE pages, listing every possible combination of meats and cheese for hot and cold sandwiches, salads, appetizers, soups and traditional meals as well desserts and beverages.  

Of course, we got coffee and bagels  with our breakfast.  That was the easy part (The Mister got poppy seed and I got rye)  (But we shared).

The Mister got the house made corned beef hash (you know, made with left over corned beef) with two poached eggs and home fried potatoes.

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I got the chicken liver and onion omelette ($9.95) with tomatoes instead of home fries.   I was being good. DSC03090

Then I went back tonight, got a corned beef reuben with potato salad on the side ($12.95 and enough for two people)

 

 

 

 

 

 

and a cream puff ($4.50).  My hands are small, I know.  But still…012

D.Z.Akins restaurant, delicatessen, bakery and fountain 6930 Alvarado Road San Diego 92120

(619) 265-0218

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The San Diego Chicken Pie Shop- a revisit…pretty much the same.

mmm-yoso!!! is the food blog.  Cathy is writing today, because Kirk and ed (from Yuma) aren't.

Hello again.  Everyone seems to be feeling under the weather lately.  The 'rain' (we measure in 1/100ths of an inch out here) and 'cold' (there was frost on my car windows this morning, but is 71 now) seems to have wrecked havoc with everyone.

The other day, The Mister was starting to come down with (what now is) a massive head cold and cough and He wanted some comfort food.   I did not want to cook.

So we went down El Cajon Boulevard. 015 In front of one of the colorfully decorated utility boxes, was the old standby, 016 

The San Diego Chicken Pie Shop.

It has been in various locations since 1938, with this location unchanged since 1986 or so…

I did blog about this place  in 2006, and we do eat here fairly regularly (Tuesdays and Saturdays if I can manage it, because the Pie of the Day is coconut cream…) and I figured I could take my camera and do an update.  So here goes…

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The cole slaw is the same, as always.  Finely chopped cabbage and carrot in a light sauce that needs salt and pepper.

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The dinner rolls are the same, as always.  Fresh baked in store,  hearty white bread.  Soft crust.  Fluffy insides. Served with real butter.

006  The Mister's meal came with a cup of soup.  He chose the pea soup.  Fresh made, with carrots, kind of lumpy.  Very thick and chicken broth based.

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The Mister got the chicken liver dinner (it includes the soup, rolls and dessert as well as the vegetable and whipped potato).

This meal takes the longest to prepare when you order it.  The livers are lightly breaded in a flour and spice mix and then pan fried.  Lots of  juicy livers. Wonderful, fresh, tasty.  As always.

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 A slice of fresh made pie comes with each of our meals.  I got the coconut cream and The Mister got rhubarb.  His had two crusts, mine had whipped cream.  The crusts are different than the chicken pie crust.  Flakier. 

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The interior is the same, the food is consistently the same (they sell between 2000 and 3000 pies a day- you can buy cooked or frozen to go. 

 

There is one difference.  Back in 1984, the Pie dinner was $3.10.  Now it is $6.50.    The liver dinner is now $7.00. Otherwise, nothing has changed.

Apparently time has moved on.  Two years later, our orders, including dessert choices were the same as in my original post.  Comfort food. 

 

San Diego Chicken Pie Shop  2633 El Cajon Boulevard 92104 (619)295-0156 Open 7 days 10 a.m.-8 p.m.012 

In case there was any doubt, I got the pie dinner.  Same as always- chicken, turkey and gravy inside the freshly made pie crust.

Stuffed cabbage-A Polish casser-roll

mmm-yoso!!! is the food blog.  Kirk and ed (from Yuma) and Cathy take turns writing about what, where, how and sometimes why and when they eat.  That's just what we do.   

Hi.  It's Friday and I'm hungry.  Cabbage is 35 cents a pound at Henry's and 15% lean ground beef was on sale for  $3.49/pound.  Add some cooked rice, onion, a bit of bacon and some sort of sauce and you have a dish that is made around the world and be able to feed two people for about $5.DSC03050
 
Yes, many different cultures stuff cabbage leaves with a mixture of meat, eggs, onion and a starch. It is yet another type of peasant cuisine, simply made.  The rolls are baked, simmered or steamed- on top of the stove, in a crockpot or in the oven, basically cooking with the steam created by the rolls and then served with cuisine-specific sauces.
 
In Norwegian countries, the rolls are usually baked and topped with a sweet sauce, lingonberry based, or simply honey.  In Europe, the rolls are coked on a stove top (or nowadays, in a crock pot) and the sauce is tomato based and in Lebanon, the same basic rolls are steamed and served with yogurt.
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The rolls are called golabki (ga-whump-key)(there is a thingy underneath the "L" that makes the pronunciation different) in Polish (the word  means "little pigeons").
 
Making a savory filling is essential.
 
Cook two slices of chopped bacon in a small pan.  Don't drain.
 
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In the bacon grease, cook 1/2 of a chopped onion.
 
 
 
 
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Meanwhile, put a cored head of cabbage into a pot of boiling water with vinegar added to it (I put in about 1/4 cup)  This gives a sort of saurkraut flavor.
 
If the water does not cover the head, rotate the cabbage in the water as it gets back to boiling.  You want to soften the cabbage leaves.
 
Remove from the water and drain.  Let cool.
 
 
 
 
 
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Lightly mix about 1 cup cooked rice, the cooked bacon pieces, the cooked onion, two raw eggs (did you see? I got a double yolked one!) and about 3/4 pound of meat. (Some people use a mix of ground pork and ground beef).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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I put about 3 Tablespoonfuls into the larger outer leaf halves (cut away that tough center rib of each leaf).
 
Roll so that the meat is tucked in and place seam side down into a casserole dish.  Stack until you use up all the meat.  I line the bottom of the dish with cabbage leaves. If I have extra cabbage, I layer it on top.  You never can have too much cabbage…
 
 
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Top with undiluted canned, tomato soup.
 
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Cover with foil and bake at 350 for one hour.
 
 
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Golabki (Polish cabbage rolls)
Parboil one head of cored cabbage in boiling water that has had vinegar added.  Drain and let cool.
 
Cook 2 slices chopped bacon until crisp, remove bacon and cook 1/2 small onion.  
 
Mix one Cup cooked rice, the cooked onion and cooked bacon with 3/4 lb raw meat and two raw eggs.
Peel cabbage leaves, remove tough spine of leaves.  Fill each leaf sparing ly with meat mixture, roll and stack the small filled leaves.
 
Cover rolls with tomato soup (can add some catsup if you need just a little more liquid or flavor) and cover tightly with foil.  Bake at 350 for 60 minutes.
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Serve with mashed potatoes.

A white bean and sausage Cassoulet-ish meal

mmm-yoso!!!  is a blog about food we (Kirk, ed (from Yuma) and Cathy) eat.  We like to talk about it.  You apparently like to read about it. Welcome back.

Hi.  Cathy here, making a meal for two for less than or equal to $5 out of stuff I found on sale this week. 

Casseroles are communal meals- one dish meant to be shared.  Cassoulet, a French casserole meal, is based with white beans, meat and herbs.  Essentially, it is a peasant dish said to date back to the 14th century siege of Castlenaudary during the Hundred Years' War, fed to the soldiers to keep them strong and send the invaders away.  If you win at Trivial pursuit by knowing this little fact, you owe me.   

The French can make cassoulet kind of  very fancy, using duck confit or smoked duck as a protein, but you can use chicken, or sausage, smoked pork,  pork rind, pig knuckles or a combination of meats.  White beans are the key ingredient.004 

It so happened that Vons had the smoked sausage marked down to $1.99 and the one pound of beans was 49 cents at Food 4 Less, so this was going to be an extremely inexpensive couple of meals.

I'll mention some optional add ins as I go along.

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Rinse and clean one pound of white beans and put into a pot with 8 Cups of water. 

Let boil for 2 minutes, then remove from heat, cover and let stand one hour.007 

Next, put in one whole small onion, one whole carrot and the center of a celery stalk (you know-the feathered part that you usually toss out).  I also put in a couple of sprigs of thyme and two bay leaves.

Let simmer until the rest of the water is absorbed and the beans are mostly tender and fully almost cooked, about an hour.

(You want all of these ingredients whole, because you will be removing them).

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While the beans are cooking, chop up the onion, carrot and celery and put into a hot pan with olive oil.  Let the ingredients sweat on low heat for about 20 minutes.  Until the onions are translucent (not burned).

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Add the sliced sausage and some Herbes de Provence and saute until warmed through, about 5 minutes. 012

Now add some liquid (beef or chicken broth or stock, and-or some red wine, or just water-but add some more seasoning if you only add water) and simmer for another five minutes-to get that flavor infused in the meat and vegetables.

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Remove the whole vegetables from the cooked beans, which should have very little (if any)water in it and add the vegetable sausage mix.  Cover and simmer for about 15 minutes until the liquid is also absorbed into the beans. 

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You could serve with a salad or piece of crusty bread.  The flavors get deeper overnight.

Cathy's Cassoulet

1 lb white beans, 2 small onions, celery and carrots, smoked pork sausage, broth or red wine, Herbes de Provence.

Optional: smoked ham, pork, pork rind, chicken or duck.  Brown the chicken or duck if you are using it.

 

Quick soak the beans. (add 8 C water, boil for 2 minutes, cover, remove from heat and let soak for one hour.

To the beans, add one whole carrot, one whole small onion, a few celery stalks to the water and simmer until the rest of liquid is absorbed, about 50 minutes.  (optional: add fresh thyme and 2-3 bay leaves) Remove those whole vegetables (and herbs).

In another pan, with about 2 Tbs olive oil, on low heat, sweat a chopped onion, celery and carrot until the onion is translucent-about 20 minutes.  Add the sliced sausage and some Herbes de Provence and stir, heating through the meat (about 5 minutes).

Add liquid (broth and wine or water and some Herbes de Provence) to cover the vegetable/meat mix, bring to a boil then simmer for 5 minutes.

Add the vegetable/meat/liquid mix to the cooked flavored beans.  Mix well and return to a low heat, covered, until the liquid is absorbed into the beans (about 15 minutes).