This Is The Place For You If You Enjoy Being Last...

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What is Smart & Final?

Like mini Costco for restaurants without a membership card.

Sadly now it won't be the Salisbury steak either, we are just leaving Home Depot with a ton of potting soil, tomatoes, Zucchini, cucumbers, and assorted herbs. We hope to have time to garden this year now that the apartments are rented.
 

Well, I'm last!

Not sure what we want to know what it was and how it was! :confused3
 
:wave: Hi, Alison!

I've been okay. Went to hang out with the ex today and we had pizza and watched V For Vendetta and had running commentary comparing the movie to the graphic novel. We've discovered that we're much MUCH better suited as friends than we were as a couple, but we're both glad that we dated since it gave us an opportunity to get to know each other on a different level.

How've you guys been?
 
Honey I'm Home! Was the Last one at work, now let the vacation begin! Too tired to even think about what I need to do tomorrow.

Queenie & PIO stay high and dry.:umbrella:

Hi Brandi and Kimberly:flower3:

Skiboy - it should've been a beautiful day skiing even if the snow wasn't packed enough. I'm sure your DS thought skiing was better than school.:laughing:

Now I'm LAST
 
:wave: Hi, Alison!

I've been okay. Went to hang out with the ex today and we had pizza and watched V For Vendetta and had running commentary comparing the movie to the graphic novel. We've discovered that we're much MUCH better suited as friends than we were as a couple, but we're both glad that we dated since it gave us an opportunity to get to know each other on a different level.

How've you guys been?

I seem to have a stitch in my side that hasn't gone away all day. It's beginning to bug me now. :mad:



Honey I'm Home! Was the Last one at work, now let the vacation begin! Too tired to even think about what I need to do tomorrow.

Queenie & PIO stay high and dry.:umbrella:

Hi Brandi and Kimberly:flower3:

Skiboy - it should've been a beautiful day skiing even if the snow wasn't packed enough. I'm sure your DS thought skiing was better than school.:laughing:

Now I'm LAST

Hooray for being home and officially on holiday! :banana:

Have a great trip. Are you planning on doing a TR when you get back? :rolleyes1
 
So PIO, here is more than you wanted to know about Salisbury Steak.

This is what we WOULD have had for dinner

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But instead I'm having this

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Fran picked up a Nuclear meal at the grocery store that she thinks is palatable for her.

Salisbury steak From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A "TV dinner" of Salisbury steak and macaroni and cheeseSalisbury steak is a dish made from a blend of minced beef and other ingredients, which is shaped to resemble a steak, and is usually served with gravy / brown sauce.

Hamburger steak is a similar product, but differs in ingredients. Salisbury steak was invented by an American physician, Dr. J. H. Salisbury (1823–1905), an early proponent of a low-carbohydrate diet for weight loss; the term "Salisbury steak" has been in use in the United States since 1897. The dish is popular in the United States, where it is traditionally served with gravy and mashed potatoes or noodles.

Standards of identity (for packaged product)The USDA standards for processed, packaged "Salisbury steak" require a minimum content of 65% meat, of which up to 25% can be pork, except if defatted beef or pork is used, the limit is 12% combined. No more than 30% may be fat. Meat byproducts are not permitted; however, beef heart meat is allowed. Extender (bread crumbs, flour, oat flakes, etc.) content is limited to 12%, except isolated soy protein at 6.8% is considered equivalent to 12% of the others. The remainder consists of seasonings, vegetables (onion, bell pepper, mushroom or the like), binders (can include egg) and liquids (such as water, milk, cream, skim milk, etc.). The product must be fully cooked, or else labelled "Patties for Salisbury Steak".

The standards for hamburger limit the meat to beef only, and of skeletal origin only. Salt, seasonings and vegetables in condimental proportions can be used, but liquids, binders and/or extenders preclude the use of the term "hamburger" or "burger". With these added, the product is considered "beef patties".

Products not made in USDA-inspected establishments are not bound by these standards.

Salisbury steak around the world
Hanbagu steakHamburg (?????, hanbagu?, Hamburg steak) is a popular Salisbury steak dish in Japan. It is made from ground meat with finely chopped onion, egg and breadcrumbs flavored with various spices, and made into a flat, circular shape about a centimeter thick and 10 to 15 cm in diameter. Many restaurants specialize in various styles of hamburger steak. Some variations include hanbagu topped with cheese (????????, or chizuhanbagu), hanbagu with Japanese curry, and Italian hanbagu (with tomato sauce rather than gravy).

Hamburger steak became popular during the 1960s as a more affordable way to serve otherwise costly meat. Magazines regularly printed the recipe during that decade, elevating it to a staple dish in Japanese culture. In Japan, the dish dates back to the Meiji period and is believed to have been first served in Yokohama, which was one of the first ports opened to foreigners. Since the 1980s, vacuum packed hamburgers were sold with sauce already added, and these are widely used in box lunches (bento). Frozen hamburgers are popular as well, often served in fast food style restaurants because they have a richer taste and firmer texture than vacuum-packed hamburger.

In Hawaii, hamburger steak is very similar to the Japanese hanbagu. It consists of burger patty with brown gravy. It is usually served with macaroni salad and rice in a plate lunch. There is also a variety which includes an egg, which is called loco moco. The dish is also common in South Korea, where the recipe and name (??? ???? | hambeogeu sut'eik'u) were adopted from Japan.

Minced cutlet (??????? ?????????, kotleta rublennaya), or since the 1980s, simply "cutlet", is a staple of Russian cuisine. It is essentially a Salisbury steak, with the main difference being pure beef is rarely employed -- usually pork or a beef-pork mixture is used. The meat is seasoned with salt and pepper, mixed with finely chopped onion (optionally fried), garlic, and a binder (eggs and breadcrumbs soaked in milk), divided into oval-shaped patties, lightly breaded and shallow-fried in a half-inch of vegetable oil. The similarly named Japanese dish, menchi katsu, is always deep-fried and heavily breaded, being essentially a mincemeat croquette, while the Russian version is always shallow-fried.

In popular cultureSalisbury steak is an item of food found in the Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas games. It can be used as an energy source, is usually found in abandoned shops and homes and contains a small amount of radiation.

The character Chef on South Park is often seen serving Salisbury steak to the children in the school cafeteria. That Salisbury steak was served almost every day is a running gag during the first few seasons of the show.

See also Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Hamburg steaks

Hamburger
Meatloaf
Swiss steak
Rissole
Frikadelle
 
Thanks! We would be calling that pattie a hamburger here. I'm almost pretty sure that we don't have anything like that here. I don't normally buy a lot of stuff from the frozen section of the supermarkets. Might need to go check next time I'm in a major store.
 
Oh I used to eat those when I was younger, now I cant stand them.

Stitch in your side, do you mean a pain?

Yea, you are now on vacation, relax and enjoy the evening, and let time drag slowly.:thumbsup2
 
I have been craving hot cocoa every night for relaxing.

I thought most people would have tried salisbury steak, but then again I learned something about scottland and UGH, I shudder at the thought. I wont mention it in the tr.
 
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