• Outer Banks Eats

    From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to RUTH HAFFLY on Thu Aug 26 20:50:00 2021

    Quoting Ruth Haffly to Jim Weller <=-

    Sam and Omie's

    It has an interesting history and a good looking menu. Definitely a
    Southern one compared to menus at places I've been to in B.C. and
    the Maritimes.

    The seafood market/restaurant is McNeal's

    Would that be O'Neal's Sea Harvest in Wanchese? It sounds like the
    best of the bunch.

    high price (white tablecloth) place [...] Owen's.

    It looks wonderful in the pictures but I wasn't able to open the
    website's menu.

    I'd be happy at any one of them for sure.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Crabmeat Remick
    Categories: Seafood, Crab, Chilies, Bacon
    Yield: 6 Servings

    1 lb Lump crabmeat
    6 sm Pieces cooked bacon
    REMICK SAUCE:
    1/2 ts Dry mustard
    1/2 ts Paprika
    1/2 ts Celery salt
    1/2 ts Tabasco
    1/2 c Chili sauce
    1/2 c Mayonnaise
    1 ts Tarragon vinegar

    Divide the crabmeat into 6 portions; pile into individual ramekins.
    Heat in oven. While waiting for crabmeat to heat, proceed with making
    sauce. Blend together all dry ingredients and Tabasco sauce. Add
    chili sauce and vinegar; mix well. Then blend in mayonnaise. When
    crabmeat is very hot, place a piece of crisp bacon in the middle of
    each ramekin and on top spread Remick Sauce, just enough to cover.
    Return ramekins to oven just for a few seconds and serve immediately.

    The Remick Sauce will separate if dish is left inside oven too
    long.

    Ponchartrain Hotel, Garden District, New Orleans, LA

    From A Taste of Louisiana


    MMMMM

    Cheers

    Jim


    ... Money may not buy happiness but poverty doesn't buy anything at all

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  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to JIM WELLER on Sat Aug 28 15:34:11 2021
    Hi Jim,


    Sam and Omie's

    It has an interesting history and a good looking menu. Definitely a Southern one compared to menus at places I've been to in B.C. and
    the Maritimes.

    Did it mention that it was open or closed? It looked like it had closed
    up for good when we pulled into the parking lot.


    The seafood market/restaurant is McNeal's

    Would that be O'Neal's Sea Harvest in Wanchese? It sounds like the
    best of the bunch.

    You're right, it was O'Neal's. Mental glitch there. The food was good
    there but it was definatly a touristy place. Prices were more than what
    we were expecting but we're used to Swansboro/Emerald Isle seafood
    places.

    Wegman's got in a huge shipment of Hatch chilis this week; they're
    roasting them outdoors yesterday, today and tomorrow. We went into the
    store and got some off the produce area display, roasted them ourselves
    today. We also roasted an assortment of peppers we'd picked up at the
    farmer's market. Right now I have 4 platters of skinned and seedless
    peppers in the freezer, firming up. Once they're good and frozen, they
    will be transferred to sealer bags and pulled out of the freezer from
    time to time this winter when it's cold and we want something hot. (G)

    (Owen's)
    It looks wonderful in the pictures but I wasn't able to open the
    website's menu.

    I'd be happy at any one of them for sure.

    Just depends on what you want, how fancy you want to go. We were dressed
    rather casually (jeans, tee shirts) but if we were to go back to Owen's,
    we'd probably dress up a bit--and make a reservation. Touristy casual
    worked well for O'Neals and probably would have been ok for Sam and
    Omie's as well, had they been open.

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


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  • From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to RUTH HAFFLY on Sun Aug 29 21:13:00 2021

    Sam and Omie's

    Did it mention that it was open or closed?

    If the website is current; they're open. You can easily check with a
    quick phone call.

    https://www.samandomies.net/contact-us

    I've read that Calabash style deep fried seafood has a light, crispy
    coating. One of my sources suggested dipping food in buttermilk,
    then self-rising cornmeal, another one says to use egg wash and white
    flour. What's your take?

    ---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Calabash Style Fried Shrimp
    Categories: Southern, Shrimp
    Yield: 6 Servings

    2 lb Medium to large shrimp,
    Cleaned, deveined and tails
    Removed
    1 c Milk
    2 Eggs
    2 c All purpose flour
    3 tb Cornstarch
    Canola oil for frying
    Salt to taste

    The town of Calabash is on the Atlantic coast of North Carolina
    right on the border with South Carolina not far from Myrtle Beach.

    Stir together flour and cornstarch in a shallow baking dish until
    well combined. In a separate dish, mix eggs and 1 cup of milk
    together.

    Place a heavy cast iron skillet over medium heat. Pour oil to a
    depth of 2 inches or so, into the skillet. Heat oil over
    medium-medium high heat.

    When oil reaches roughly 375 degrees, dip shrimp in egg mixture and
    dredge in flour, then place shrimp in hot oil, being careful not to
    crowd the skillet. Turn shrimp as needed.

    Line serving dish with paper towels near skillet. Cook shrimp for
    about 2 to 3 minutes or just until golden and crispy. Remove to
    paper towels. Salt to taste before serving.

    By Amy Herald

    From: Justapinch.Com

    -----



    Cheers

    Jim


    ... It's okay to eat fish because they don't have any feelings.

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  • From Dave Drum@1:229/452 to JIM WELLER on Tue Aug 31 09:31:10 2021
    JIM WELLER wrote to RUTH HAFFLY <=-

    Sam and Omie's

    Did it mention that it was open or closed?

    If the website is current; they're open. You can easily check with a
    quick phone call.

    https://www.samandomies.net/contact-us

    I've read that Calabash style deep fried seafood has a light, crispy coating. One of my sources suggested dipping food in buttermilk,
    then self-rising cornmeal, another one says to use egg wash and white flour. What's your take?

    Keeping in mind that Steve is allergic to corn. Bv)=

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Salt-Fried Shrimp
    Categories: Emeril, Seafood, Oriental
    Yield: 2 Servings

    1/2 c Oil; for frying
    1/2 c Soy sauce
    1/4 c Rice wine vinegar
    1 ts Finely-minced ginger
    1/2 ts Chilli oil
    2 tb Thinly-shaved scallions,
    - plus extra for garnish
    1 c Flour
    2 tb Cornstarch
    6 Egg whites
    1 c Kosher salt
    1/2 c Coarse-cracked black pepper
    1 lb Large shrimp; shell-on,
    - split down back and
    - deveined

    Recipe courtesy Emeril Lagasse

    Slowly heat oil in a wok or large skillet. In a small
    bowl combine next 5 ingredients for sauce. In 3 bowls,
    combine flour and cornstarch in first; beat egg whites
    with a fork until loose in the second; mix salt and
    pepper in third bowl.

    Dip shrimp first in flour mixture, shaking off excess;
    dip in egg whites, allowing excess to drip off. Lightly
    roll in salt mixture and add immediately to hot oil.
    Fry on all sides, remove and drain on paper towels.

    Serve with sauce, garnished with extra scallions.

    Yield: 12 to 15 shrimp

    SOURCE: Essence of Emeril Cooking Show #EE0086

    MM Format by Dave Drum - 30 December 1999

    Uncle Dirty Dave's Kitchen

    MMMMM

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  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to JIM WELLER on Tue Aug 31 19:43:12 2021
    Hi Jim,

    Sam and Omie's

    Did it mention that it was open or closed?

    If the website is current; they're open. You can easily check with a
    quick phone call.

    https://www.samandomies.net/contact-us

    We don't plan on heading that way again until probably next summer so
    I'll keep this in mind for then. We'd hoped to see "The Lost Colony"
    pageant (outdoor drama) on Virginia Dare's birthday but covid hit the
    cast and they ended the season the night before. But, we had some good
    meals, a nice get away from home for a few days and saw a part of the
    state we weren't too familiar with.


    I've read that Calabash style deep fried seafood has a light, crispy coating. One of my sources suggested dipping food in buttermilk,
    then self-rising cornmeal, another one says to use egg wash and white flour. What's your take?

    I'd go with the egg and flour but personally use whole wheat flour,
    maybe pastry flour. I've never asked what liquid they use for dipping
    but I've used the egg for doing other things so..............OTOH,
    buttermilk sounds like an interesting option but not the corn meal. It
    is a much lighter coating than the dipped in (whatever) and corn meal;
    that tends to be heavier and you lose more of the seafood taste.


    Title: Calabash Style Fried Shrimp
    Categories: Southern, Shrimp
    Yield: 6 Servings

    2 lb Medium to large shrimp,
    Cleaned, deveined and tails
    Removed

    A lot of places I've seen leave the tails on. At home I take them off
    but I guess the restaurants prefer to leave them on. Easier, if you're
    eating the shirmp as finger food--got a handle there. (G)

    1 c Milk
    2 Eggs
    2 c All purpose flour
    3 tb Cornstarch
    Canola oil for frying
    Salt to taste

    The town of Calabash is on the Atlantic coast of North Carolina
    right on the border with South Carolina not far from Myrtle Beach.

    Stir together flour and cornstarch in a shallow baking dish until
    well combined. In a separate dish, mix eggs and 1 cup of milk
    together.

    Place a heavy cast iron skillet over medium heat. Pour oil to a
    depth of 2 inches or so, into the skillet. Heat oil over
    medium-medium high heat.

    When oil reaches roughly 375 degrees, dip shrimp in egg mixture and
    dredge in flour, then place shrimp in hot oil, being careful not to
    crowd the skillet. Turn shrimp as needed.


    Get the shrimp ready before the oil reaches temperature so you can just
    slip them in when it's hot.

    Line serving dish with paper towels near skillet. Cook shrimp for
    about 2 to 3 minutes or just until golden and crispy. Remove to
    paper towels. Salt to taste before serving.

    Or leave them unsalted and let everybody salt to taste. Serve with a
    wedge of lemon, and, if you must, tartar & cocktail sauces. Personally,
    I like to salt mine, then squeeze a couple of wedges of lemon (big
    serving) over it all. Sides of cole slaw and mustard potato salad go
    good with it, banana pudding for dessert.

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


    ... Some are so educated they can bore you on almost any subject

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  • From Dale Shipp@1:261/1466 to Ruth Haffly on Wed Sep 1 23:38:00 2021
    On 08-31-21 19:43, Ruth Haffly <=-
    spoke to Jim Weller about Outer Banks Eats <=-

    2 lb Medium to large shrimp,
    Cleaned, deveined and tails
    Removed

    A lot of places I've seen leave the tails on. At home I take them off
    but I guess the restaurants prefer to leave them on. Easier, if you're eating the shirmp as finger food--got a handle there. (G)

    I prefer that the tails are left on. They make a nice crunch when I eat
    them. They provide good things for my joints also.

    There seem to be a lot of good lentil soups. We had one for dinner last
    night.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.05

    Title: Faki (Hellenic Lentil Soup)
    Categories: Soup, Greek, Diabetic, Vegan
    Yield: 8 servings

    1 c Lentils
    1 md Onion; chopped
    2 Garlic cloves; up to 3
    -chopped
    1 Celery stalk; chopped
    3 Plum tomatoes, fresh; and
    -juices -OR-
    5 -Italian type plum tomatoes
    1 Bay leaf
    4 Parsley sprigs
    Mint, fresh; basil or other
    -favorite herb
    1/4 c Olive oil
    1 pn -Salt
    1 pn -Pepper
    3 tb Vinegar
    Oregano, dried; for garnish

    "This recipe also appeared in my cookbook, The Food of Greece".

    Wash lentils in a soup pot. Cover with 8 cups of cold water, and
    bring to a boil. Cover the pot, turn off the heat, and let stand for
    an hour. Bring to a boil, and stir in the onion, garlic and celery.
    Cover and simmer for 30 minutes.

    Add the tomatoes. bay leaf, parsley, your favorite herb and half the
    oil. Simmer for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add enough water
    to make 8 cups. Remove the bay leaf.

    Season the soup, and add the remaining oil. Taste, and adjust the
    seasonings.

    Serve hot with the vinegar and garnished with oregano, rubbed between
    your palms.

    SERVES:8

    Nutrients for 3/4 cup
    Calories: 129
    Exchanges: 1 starch/bread; 1 fat
    g mg
    carbohydrate: 13 potassium: 282.5
    protein: 5 sodium: 21
    fat: 7 cholesterol: 0
    fiber: 2.5

    SOURCE: _Diabetic Cooking From Around the World_ by Vilma Liacouras
    Chantiles
    posted by Anne MacLellan
    From: Anne Maclellan
    ~--

    MMMMM



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  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to Dale Shipp on Thu Sep 2 16:05:09 2021
    Hi Dale,

    2 lb Medium to large shrimp,
    Cleaned, deveined and tails
    Removed

    A lot of places I've seen leave the tails on. At home I take them off
    but I guess the restaurants prefer to leave them on. Easier, if you're eating the shirmp as finger food--got a handle there. (G)

    I prefer that the tails are left on. They make a nice crunch when I
    eat them. They provide good things for my joints also.

    I don't eat them but do use them as a handle. (G) I tried glucosimine
    (the good thing in shrimp shells) some years ago but it didn't do
    anything for my aches and pains so I dropped it. Why spend the money for something that doesn't work?

    We're leaving out in the next 24 hours--right now I've got to get the
    food and my clothes into the camper. Steve will take care of his clothes
    and he has a voice in deciding what foods to take--probably overpacking
    for the length of the trip but wanting clothes for cooler, as well as
    warmer temps.

    There seem to be a lot of good lentil soups. We had one for dinner
    last night.

    I'm going to wait until it cools down a bit more before making any.
    Right now we're in the mid 80s, nice change from all the 90s we had the
    10 days or so before this. BTW, we only got some wind gusts and sporadic
    light rain from Ida.

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


    ... Mind... Mind... Let's see, I had one of those around here someplace.

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  • From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to RUTH HAFFLY on Fri Sep 3 22:41:00 2021

    Quoting Ruth Haffly to Jim Weller <=-

    Title: Calabash Style Fried Shrimp

    banana pudding for dessert.

    Along with collards, okra and chicken fried steak, another Southern
    thing that rarely gets served at Canadian tables.

    Some truly northern dishes we have had here recently. Because the
    grandkids were home for a visit we searched out:

    local Saskatoonberry jelly (from the Farmer's Market)

    wild raspberries (from our own front yard)

    low bush cranberries (lingonberries), (from our back yard)

    Dene style dryfish (whitefish jerky) from a friend in nearby
    N'Dilo. The fish are split, cleaned and the two boneless fillets
    left joined together by the back skin. The flesh is scored into
    small squares or diamonds, cutting carefully right to but not through
    the skin. The split fish are then sun dried by hanging over green
    wood poles and lightly smoked with willow wood. Willow is fairly
    astringent and an acquired taste but there are no fruit or nut tree
    hardwoods this far north. Our only deciduous trees are: poplar,
    birch, alder, aspen and willow, none of which make good smoking
    wood.

    Beluga Maktaq from Aklavik (from Raine's ex-husband here in
    Yellowknife who gets it from his family there.) This batch had been
    frozen fresh, thawed, diced and served raw with the pieces dipped in
    HP sauce.



    Cheers

    Jim


    ... I'm bored with small fish; the time has come to harpoon a whale.

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  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to JIM WELLER on Mon Sep 6 10:41:11 2021
    Hi Jim,


    Title: Calabash Style Fried Shrimp

    banana pudding for dessert.

    Along with collards, okra and chicken fried steak, another Southern
    thing that rarely gets served at Canadian tables.

    No, but a nice treat. There are as many recipies for it as are cooks,
    but the main ingredients are bananas, vanilla pudding and 'Nilla Wafer
    cookies.


    Some truly northern dishes we have had here recently. Because the grandkids were home for a visit we searched out:

    local Saskatoonberry jelly (from the Farmer's Market)

    And you probably know who made it.


    wild raspberries (from our own front yard)

    low bush cranberries (lingonberries), (from our back yard)

    I grew up with raspberry and blackberry bushes in the lot next to our
    house. There weren't that many raspberries so Mom would put them on our
    cereal but she would make blackberry pies with all that we picked. Never
    jam or jelly, probably because they're so seedy, but I think I would, if
    given some. We could eat as many berries as we wanted as there were so
    many; our old dog would go with us and eat her share as we picked. (G)

    Dene style dryfish (whitefish jerky) from a friend in nearby
    N'Dilo. The fish are split, cleaned and the two boneless fillets
    left joined together by the back skin. The flesh is scored into
    small squares or diamonds, cutting carefully right to but not through
    the skin. The split fish are then sun dried by hanging over green
    wood poles and lightly smoked with willow wood. Willow is fairly astringent and an acquired taste but there are no fruit or nut tree hardwoods this far north. Our only deciduous trees are: poplar,
    birch, alder, aspen and willow, none of which make good smoking
    wood.

    Interesting, we've never tried making fish jerky. Steve made some beef
    jerky a few weeks ago but used the dehydrator.

    Beluga Maktaq from Aklavik (from Raine's ex-husband here in
    Yellowknife who gets it from his family there.) This batch had been
    frozen fresh, thawed, diced and served raw with the pieces dipped in
    HP sauce.

    Something else I've not tried, probably an acquired taste. (G) I'm sure
    all the grandkids enjoyed the treats. We're up in NYS for a week so my
    time on Fido may be a bit spotty. I'm hoping, while we're here, to get
    over to our favorite Italian grocery store and also over to the sushi
    place Nancy introduced us to several years ago.

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


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