http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=236x87113Oh my.
The cooking and baking forum on Skins's island is, ominously, beginning to acquire cobwebs, at least in the corners.
And so as to goose traffic into that forum, this:
Monique1 (1000+ posts) Mon Apr-18-11 12:10 PM
Original message
What is your Easter menu?
I am not finished planning, so far a lamb goulash, cucumber. tomato onion salad with a yougurt dressing, mas potatoes, roasted carrots and asparagus, fruit tray, lettuce salad, bread (brochetta) and I don't know what else.
Denninmi (744 posts) Mon Apr-18-11 12:12 PM
THE WOLVERINE PRIMITIVE
Response to Original message
1. I always do the same thing.
A baked ham with a glaze, potato salad, au gratin potatoes, candied sweet potatoes, baked beans with bacon, asparagus with butter, sweet potato rolls from the Betty Crocker Breads cookbook, plenty of deviled eggs (from the dyed ones), and a baked cheesecake with strawberries on top for the dessert.
Please notice the use of "au gratin" is acceptable.
But "bleu" cheese dressing still looks stupid.
grasswire (1000+ posts) Mon Apr-18-11 12:32 PM
THE PIE-AND-JAM FARMERETTE PRIMITIVE IN WISCONSIN
Response to Original message
2. if I were making an ideal Easter dinner (which I'm not)
I think I might follow my great great grandmother's ideas for her Memorial Day tradition in Connecticut.
A whole baked salmon with egg sauce
New peas and new potatoes
Tomato aspic
Asparagus
Hot dinner rolls
Relish tray
Lots of pies -- she was famous for her pies.
Oh I think there must have been baked beans despite that being weird with salmon. Those people ALWAYS had New England baked beans.
Coyote_Bandit (1000+ posts) Mon Apr-18-11 01:33 PM
Response to Original message
3. Ummmm......
chocolate bunny.....
I live alone, have family in another state, have had my fill of organized religion, and find little reason to celebrate Easter.
But the menus I see posted sound very, very good.
Enjoy!
Phentex (1000+ posts) Mon Apr-18-11 02:52 PM
Response to Original message
4. I just found out we would be home for Easter!...
My mother-in-law has done the Easter meal for ages. Well, with Easter being late and Mother's Day around the corner, she decided she only wanted to host MD. We're on our own for Easter which I don't mind but I have absolutely nothing ready for an Easter feast. It won't be cold turkey and ham though - YAY!
grasswire (1000+ posts) Mon Apr-18-11 03:32 PM
THE PIE-AND-JAM FARMERETTE PRIMITIVE IN WISCONSIN
Response to Original message
5. okay if I were making my own menu and not my great-grandmother's..
..I might consider the following. (Depending on how many people were coming and how many might be vegetarian.)
Sliced roasted ham.
Braised leg of lamb with lavender sea salt and rosemary.
Emeril's spinach and artichoke bread pudding. Yahoo!
Polenta with three citrus butter and toasted pine nuts.
Baby greens salad with radish vinaigrette.
Sweet potato buttermilk biscuits and hot dinner rolls.
Rhubarb pie.
Martha Stewart's Lemon Mousse (ahhhhhh)
Something like that. Not this year, though.
When franksolich was a little lad, the family tradition was that a child got to select the menu for his birthday and one major holiday.
And so every March 6 and May 30, the family sat down to turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn and peas, wheat buns with real butter, and pumpkin pie.
As the older brothers and sisters left home, their holidays were given to we younger ones.
And so every July 4, the family again sat down to turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn and peas, wheat buns with real butter, and pumpkin pie.
By the time it was just down to my parents, my younger brother, and myself, the family every November 11 and January 1 sat down yet again to turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn and peas, wheat buns with real butter, and pumpkin pie.
franksolich already knows what he's having for Easter cuisine.