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Famous Winnipeg style rye bread which uses cracked rye and white flour instead of rye flour. This makes a light colored, richly flavored bread. Adapted for the bread machine.
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Highly flavorful beef bouillon soup made from beef oxtails.
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Some flour, vegetable shortening, water and a pinch of salt is all that 's needed to make this very flaky crust that will make your favorite pie even better than usual.
Ingredients: flour, salt, shortening, water
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Sugar, flour, vinegar, eggs, and water are cooked until thick, and then butter and lemon extract are stirred in. This velvety filling is poured into a baked crust and chilled before serving. Top with whipped cream if desired.
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Making Homemade Corn Tortillas from scratch is EASY! They taste better than anything you can buy at the store.
Ingredients: masa harina, water
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My parents used to make this easy 3-ingredient snack for football parties. They are great to munch on and everyone loves them.
Ingredients: sugar, water, peanuts
cooking.nytimes.com
Muddled tomatoes and herbs are mixed with gin then topped with a bracing fizz of tonic water It's the cocktail as salad, or vice versa.
cooking.nytimes.com
What sort of rum and tonic you might like depends heavily on the kind of rum you prefer And the world of rum is so wide and various, there are many directions you can go The light-bodied Bacardi makes for an easy choice, and an easy, if simple, drink
Ingredients: rum, tonic water
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Oatmeal made in the rice cooker is simple to prepare and is ready in about 20 minutes!
Ingredients: oats, water, milk, honey, sugar, vanilla, salt
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Moist chocolate cupcakes are topped with a marshmallow and broiled into tasty, toasted marshmallow cupcakes.
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Forget to soak your beans, but still want to have burritos? Simply grind them in your wheat grinder and boil some water. In about 15 minutes, it's time to eat.
cooking.nytimes.com
The difference between a good soup and a great soup is the stock, and if you've never made your own, you're really missing out This recipe from the legendary Jacques Pépin takes a few hours, but very little effort, and you'll never go back to those cardboard cartons of over-salted stock again It also freezes beautifully.