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Topic Summary
Posted by Don Cuevas on Aug 19, 2010, 9:16am
Homemade buttermilk biscuits with spicy country sausage gravy; two days in a row now!
Posted by mickthecactus on Aug 19, 2010, 10:23am

Aug 19, 2010, 9:16am, Don Cuevas wrote:
Homemade buttermilk biscuits with spicy country sausage gravy; two days in a row now!


Gosh, that does sound delicious......... ;D
Posted by Don Cuevas on Aug 22, 2010, 7:16am

Aug 19, 2010, 10:23am, mickthecactus wrote:

Aug 19, 2010, 9:16am, Don Cuevas wrote:
Homemade buttermilk biscuits with spicy country sausage gravy; two days in a row now!


Gosh, that does sound delicious......... ;D


More on that here, Mick.

http://mexkitchen.blogspot.com/2009/11/southern-comfort-biscuits-and-gravy.html
And http://mexkitchen.blogspot.com/2009/11/southern-comfort-angel-biscuits.html
And more: http://mexkitchen.blogspot.com/2009/11/s....sage-gravy.html
Posted by mickthecactus on Aug 23, 2010, 1:17pm
Thanks Don ;D
Posted by kerouac2 on Aug 24, 2010, 5:42pm
I hate the fact that I rarely eat breakfast. I love breakfast. Hmmm... especially in southeast Asia. Maybe I am just in the wrong place.
Posted by Don Cuevas on Aug 25, 2010, 10:33am
August 25, 2010: Thick sliced home made challah, a couple of Spanish sardines in olive oil; thinly sliced onion; a few strips of mild pickled challahpeños. Dessert: more challah, spread with apricot jam.
Posted by bixaorellana on Aug 25, 2010, 3:20pm
challahpeños

Oy vey, ¿es Don Cuevas el cocinero mas gracioso, o que?
Posted by hwinpp on Aug 28, 2010, 5:22am
Si, el mas gracioso! Muchacho! Hasta la vista, pequenita!

;D ;D ;D
Posted by Don Cuevas on Aug 30, 2010, 10:45am
Today, August 30, 2010: 2 huevos estrellados (sunny side up), some frijoles charros, a small piece of grilled longaniza (mildly spicy sausage), and a couple of freshly baked tortillas de harina. (Flour tortillas)
Posted by kerouac2 on Aug 31, 2010, 8:40am
This morning I fried some bananas in butter, a sinful pleasure.
Posted by Don Cuevas on Aug 31, 2010, 3:54pm
The electricity was off most of the night and the morning, so I didn't want to open the fridge any more than necesary. So we had freshly made caraway rye bread, cream cheese and sardines with onions. I drank a V-8 Juice, as the instant coffee was so awful. I just now got a mug of good brewed coffee.
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 3, 2010, 9:04am
I'm suffering from a cold or an allergy or both. So I felt that a big bowl of spaghetti, covered with extra spicy chili was the thing.

It helped.
Posted by mickthecactus on Sept 3, 2010, 10:11am

Sept 3, 2010, 9:04am, Don Cuevas wrote:
I'm suffering from a cold or an allergy or both. So I felt that a big bowl of spaghetti, covered with extra spicy chili was the thing.

It helped.


For breakfast?

I love it but not for breakfast.............
Posted by kerouac2 on Sept 3, 2010, 10:59am
The time of day has no control over our amazing Don Cuevas. 8-)
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 3, 2010, 1:13pm
After years of working the early morning bakery shift, I learned that food is food, no matter what the hour.

But actually, this habit may go back to my childhood, for once, when staying with my grandparents, my uncle asked me what I wanted for breakfast, I said "spaghetti", and he cooked it. It wasn't out of can, either.

What would happen if I ate fried eggs for supper????
Posted by mickthecactus on Sept 3, 2010, 1:27pm
Fried eggs for supper is OK. ;D

My breakfast is so dull - more or less the same every day. I need to think differently.

Cream cheese and sardines and onions would certainly test me though.....
Posted by bixaorellana on Sept 3, 2010, 3:49pm
I thought everyone occasionally had fried eggs for supper.

Mick, your answer to Don Cuevas about spaghetti & chili for breakfast sounds like the remark of a man who never had a hangover. ;)

What's acceptable for breakfast probably depends on whether or not it's a meal you consume as soon as you get up, or one eaten somewhat later, when actually hungry.

I'd be fat as a pig if I followed the classic Mexican meal regime every day, although it might make sense for someone performing physical labor. Desayuno -- literally, "break fast" is usually a variety of sweetish breads with coffee or chocolate. Almuerzo, eaten somewhat later, consists of foods most of us would view as a substantial dinner -- meat, vegetable, & starch, or a hefty stew or soup, followed by a small dessert. This meal is available in every market in Mexico, and a basket of sweet bread is automatically put on the table with the beverage.
Posted by mickthecactus on Sept 3, 2010, 4:13pm
Plenty of hangovers Bixa but with age they aren't much fun so pretty rare now...

In those circumstances an English breakfast usually does the trick for me.
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 4, 2010, 8:48am
"Cream cheese and sardines and onions would certainly test me though....."

I tend to think of "appropriate" (although there is really no international law regarding this) by extrapolation.


Think of Scottish Kippers and onions, with scrambled eggs alongside. Think of Scandinavian cold pickled and cured herrings and brown bread for breakfast. Now, it's not too great a leap from there to sardines, cream cheese on bread.

Imagine this for breakfast. It's menudo, a popular Mexican soup of tripes, etc, in a spicy chile broth, said to be beneficial for la cruda. (hangover). For a bit of extra dinero, they'll put a foot in it (pata), wich is good nibbling, if you are not in a hurry.

It's served with tortillas or well-toasted tortillas and always, an extensive selection of very piquant condiments. I've regained a taste for it after a considerable hiatus. Now I eat it about once a week, for breakfast.

This photo is of plain, basic menudo, wthout any doo-dads.

[image]

In northern Mexico, menudo is made with hominy corn and is often "blanco" or white. The soup is served relatively unseasoned and the condiments are added at the table by the diner.
Posted by kerouac2 on Sept 4, 2010, 9:30pm
Looks like good breakfast fare to me, but I have been around. I do know that such things take some getting used to, when you have grown up on coffee and a donut or some such. :)
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 11, 2010, 1:29pm
Cornbread and frijoles charros.
Posted by casimira on Sept 12, 2010, 6:13pm
More brunch than breakfast,steak tartarre,at my favorite French restaurant here in Bridgehampton,served with pomme frites and a small salad.
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 13, 2010, 12:41pm
Brunch yesterday, at El Gorjeo de Las Aves En Las Mañanas de Abril, an idyllic restaurant in Ziracuarétiro, Michoacán.

I had Enmoladas and Sra. Cuevas Enchiladas Verdes.

[image]
Enmoladas

[image]
Enchiladas Verdes

We had various beverages, also. http://mexkitchen.blogspot.com/2010/09/birdsongs-in-morning-encore.html
Posted by bixaorellana on Sept 13, 2010, 2:11pm
What a nice presentation! Is that typical of Michoacán, to serve the enchiladas folded in half? Oaxacan enchiladas/enmoladas/enfrijoladas are folded in quarters.
Posted by hwinpp on Sept 14, 2010, 9:09am
Pancakes ^^?
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 14, 2010, 10:01am

Sept 13, 2010, 2:11pm, bixaorellana wrote:
What a nice presentation! Is that typical of Michoacán, to serve the enchiladas folded in half? Oaxacan enchiladas/enmoladas/enfrijoladas are folded in quarters.


I don't know if it's characteristic of Michoacán enchiladas or just Chef Blanca's own preferred presentation. I have very little experience of eating enchiladas, as they are not at the top of my favorites list. But those were very good.

The menu also offered Enfrijoladas Patrias, (tortillas dipped in pureed beans, probably with a filling, presented with a garnish in the colors of the Mexican flag—I'd guess,) which I did not investigate.
Posted by bixaorellana on Sept 14, 2010, 4:03pm

Sept 14, 2010, 9:09am, hwinpp wrote:
Pancakes ^^?

Tortillas!

Oaxacan enchiladas aren't rolled, they're folded. Large tortillas are used. The tortilla is dipped in hot fat for just a second, then dipped in the sauce*. It's laid on the plate, folded over, a little more sauce is ladled on, then it's folded again and more sauce is added. It's then garnished and often served with a piece of meat on the side.

As Don Cuevas' pictures show, folding in half can be an option, too.

*The sauce is what makes it an enchilada (with chile sauce), enmolada (with mole), entomatada (tomato sauce), or enfrijolada (with thinned refried beans).
Posted by Don Cuevas on Sept 15, 2010, 2:10pm
I awoke today with an hankering for something really different from our usual breakfast fare.

Pancakes!! :D

So, I made them. They're really good!! I hit upon the idea of pouring warmed "maple" syrup over them, andm get this: siding some crisply fried bacon.

Mmm-mmmmmmmmm!!
I suggest y'all try this luscious combo.
Posted by cristina on Sept 15, 2010, 3:15pm
^^^ Yum on those pancakes! Especially if you let the syrup run into the bacon... :D
Posted by kerouac2 on Sept 15, 2010, 5:17pm
:-X

Two different plates for me, please.

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