PrincessInOz
Thanks for my avatar, Mary Jo!
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2010
- Messages
- 108,011
2 days in the salt mines coming up.
Alison - how did the sales go with the thrift shop?
Alison - how did the sales go with the thrift shop?
Hoping to hear from the store sometime this week...![]()
I used to make popcorn in a soup pan on the stove top. Just put in some oil a layer of popcorn corn kernels, heat on high and shake when it starts to pop.
I have a friend who recieved a gift or a popcorn popping pan. It's pretty cool. It is a big pan and has a crank at the top which drive a sweeping bar around the bottom. So you just do the same, oil, line the bottom with corn kernels, heat but then crank as it pops. Works well and is bigger than a single handled pot.
The key is the popping quality of the kernels. In mirowave bags and jiffy pop and of course at the movies and DL, they pop bigger and fluffier.
I always figured they fed the cows on some other thing like corn, I think ours are grass fed.
I was taught that when you heat the oil, put a corn kernel in. When that kernel starts to spin, that's when the oil is ready. Once the oil is ready, put the kernels in. You can turn the heat down a touch and shake.
I've never really worked out how to then coat the popcorn properly with oil/butter. We just salt the popcorn these days.
Maybe it wasn't beef in NZ but sheep?
In the US, it a general misconception that cows are fed corn. Chickens live there whole life on corn.
Cattle are raised on the ranches eating grass. But then sent to a feedlot and finished on corn. On the ranch they go from 100 to 1,000-1200 pounds. On the feedlot they quickly put on about 100-200 more pounds eating corn or another grain. But so far corn is cheap so the feedlots usually use it. So most of the weight is put on by grass. But that last bunch of weight goes on faster. On the ranch about a year in the feedlots about a month.
A lot does varie depending on breed and sex. I've only worked with Herefords and Angus.
Also a lot of US beef comes from Dairy Farms, and the few of them I know of are in Idaho and use grass but I wonder if dairy farms in a corn state use corn.
Lots of US corn goes to China too, because they eat more chicken in thier diet and of course have more people, but not nearly as much corn. And thier chickens eat corn too.
Hmm, I've never done it that way. But of course I was taught the way I described.
Her lights are off...but I think she might know the difference between a moo and a baa.
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I just make popcorn with a hot air popper![]()