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 Post subject: Doug deals with Vegemite
PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 04:02:14 am 
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Today, at a garage sale, there was a little jar of Vegemite
for 25 cents. :shock:

But it did not have an expiration date. :?

It looked like tar-with-chunks. :roll:

But it could have been 10 years old, so I passed. I really
DID want to try some. However, I don't want anybody to
post that "the older it gets, the better it gets." :lol:

End of this story. Next story:

I bought a deluxe birdcage for $2., thinking I could get $20
on CraigsList; I'll keep you advised. A lady asked me, (pay
close attention)
, "AM I GOING TO PUT A BIRD IN IT??"

I said, "No, I'm going to put my cat in it, and let my bird
fly around free."
She did not ask me any more questions.


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 07:23:01 am 
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doug2222usa wrote:

But it did not have an expiration date. :?

It looked like tar-with-chunks. :roll:



Tastes BETTER after 10 years!


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 07:52:30 am 
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GlenStephens wrote:
doug2222usa wrote:

But it did not have an expiration date. :?

It looked like tar-with-chunks. :roll:



Tastes BETTER after 10 years!


Couldn't taste WORSE :lol: :lol: :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 09:51:58 am 
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Doug, Vegemite should not have CHUNKS :shock: , it should be smooth, so you did well to pass on that bargain :wink: Have you ever tasted Marmite? It's similar to Vegemite only Marmite ,to me, has a slightly sweet tang to it.

Bird cage.....ummmm....bargain at $2 and will make a good cathouse :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 09:59:47 am 
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Marmite? Marmite! Sounds like an explosive made out
of marmalade. Oh well, a country that pours maple syrup
on cottage cheese dare not complain. :lol: :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 10:08:31 am 
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That's a good idea, maple syrup on cottage cheese...you have to do whatever you can to make that cheese taste of SOMETHING :roll:

Talking of maple syrup, I thought it was strange in Canada that they have a full english breakfast and then put pancakes and maple syrup on the same plate :shock: They sure love their maple syrup :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 10:38:28 am 
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Alas, most of our "maple syrup" is a solution of high fructose
corn syrup with ersatz maple-flavor drizzled-in at so many ppm. :?

By the way, GOOD cottage cheese (from rural Wisconsin) is made
a tubful at a time, not in 100,000 liter stainless steel vats.


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 10:56:34 am 
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doug2222usa wrote:
But it did not have an expiration date. :?



Doug, did you check the bottom of the jar? There should be a use by date (or a "best before") etched into the glass. And since it is my understanding that Vegemite is now a prohibited import in the USA (you poor bastards!) it could possibly be several years old.

I would not use it if it was over one year old, and I refridgerate mine.

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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 11:14:02 am 
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We scrutinized the jar to the Nth degree and found no date,
and, as indicated, I didn't buy it anyhow. Another delicacy
she had, with no date, was cherry chutney, which sounded
good to me. Didn't buy it either.

So why is it prohibited? Does it compete unfairly with No. 3
diesel? Does it cause undesirable emissions? :wink:


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 11:29:01 am 
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fromdownunder wrote:
doug2222usa wrote:
But it did not have an expiration date. :?



Doug, did you check the bottom of the jar? There should be a use by date (or a "best before") etched into the glass. And since it is my understanding that Vegemite is now a prohibited import in the USA (you poor bastards!) it could possibly be several years old.

I would not use it if it was over one year old, and I refridgerate mine.

Norm


The supposed ban on vegemite appears to be an urban myth:

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20 ... 02,00.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegemite

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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 13:10:22 pm 
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Thanks Paul. It's nice to know that the stuff I sucked on teething rusks 60 years ago is famous enough the hit Wiki and even Snopes.

Kraft, you've done it again.

Norm

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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 13:45:45 pm 
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Doug, Vegemite should be smooth to be spreadable. I love it and ghave had to send jars by mail to children in USa and Europe.
I have opened a jar more than ten years past the use by date, it was exactly the same.
But chunks, I dont know???
It may predate the introduction of use by dates here??? Kraft acquired Vegemite some years ago, so whether or not Krafty was part of the brand, and a little Yahooing should give a clue.
It is an ACQUIRED taste.
I also had old WW11 ration packs with it as part of contents during school cadet camps, over 20 years old and again perfect.
But my ex wife had only ever had pancakes with lemons and sugar or jam and cream , as an evening dessert, and thought that I was kidding when I mentioned it as a possible Sunday breakfast meal. Regards


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 13:46:02 pm 
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Doug, Vegemite should be smooth to be spreadable. I love it and ghave had to send jars by mail to children in USa and Europe.
I have opened a jar more than ten years past the use by date, it was exactly the same.
But chunks, I dont know???
It may predate the introduction of use by dates here??? Kraft acquired Vegemite some years ago, so whether or not Krafty was part of the brand, and a little Yahooing should give a clue.
It is an ACQUIRED taste.
I also had old WW11 ration packs with it as part of contents during school cadet camps, over 20 years old and again perfect.
But my ex wife had only ever had pancakes with lemons and sugar or jam and cream , as an evening dessert, and thought that I was kidding when I mentioned it as a possible Sunday breakfast meal. Regards


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 13:48:15 pm 
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Sorry about the double up. My computer said that another message had come in since i started to reply, did I want to still send my message. I said yes, no other message, but mine twice.????? strange


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 14:08:08 pm 
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Pancake-like things with sweet toppings and fillings are
called crepes in the U.S., and a related item (generally for
breakfast) is "French toast," or in the Midwest (as my Dad
called it), "fried bread."

Wikipedia says through the 19th Century, French toast was
known as German toast, but the name was changed when
anti-German sentiment prevailed during World War I. :?


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 15:31:44 pm 
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doug2222usa wrote:
Pancake-like things with sweet toppings and fillings are
called crepes in the U.S., and a related item (generally for
breakfast) is "French toast," or in the Midwest (as my Dad
called it), "fried bread."

Wikipedia says through the 19th Century, French toast was
known as German toast, but the name was changed when
anti-German sentiment prevailed during World War I. :?


Fried Bread (when I was a kid) used to be heating up a sh*tload of chicken fat, putting two slices of bread in the hot fat, until it was hot and crisp, then pulling it out and smearing tomato sauce salt and pepper over the top and eating.

The mind actually does boggle when I think that I survived (so far) that sort of weekly wonderful snack.

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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 16:14:45 pm 
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More cultural differences:

My first college roommates were all from Philadelphia and
Baltimore. The only card game they could play was pinochle.

A discussion of refreshments went like this:

Doug: Think I'll have a bottle of pop. [lolly water, to you]
Eastie: Pop's a little old man. You mean a soda.
Doug: A soda's made out of ice cream, flavored syrup, and
carbonated water.
Eastie: No, that's a frappe.
Doug: A frappe's the sound you make after drinking pop
too fast.
Eastie: No, that's
B-B-B-r-r-r-r-r-a-p-p-p.


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 16:34:33 pm 
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Norm, no need to fret or apologize. :wink:

It's just a chicken sandwich, hold the chicken, hold the
lettuce, substitute tomato sauce for mayonnaise,
incinerate
before you eat. I understand perfectly.


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 21:51:29 pm 
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Doug

You really need to locate some Vita Wheats to make the most of your 25c investment. Any aussie kids can tell you about the joys of Vegemite worms:



Image


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PostPosted: Sun Oct 04, 2009 23:45:01 pm 
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Oh YUMMY I forgot about Vita Wheat with worms :lol: Now that should turn them right off our Vegemite :D


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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 00:37:17 am 
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I don't know what the relationship between the two is, but now the Danes have banned Marmite also :lol:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/05/25/marmite_ban/


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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 01:10:42 am 
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Maybe they figured out that chemical companies are grinding up their toxic waste and selling it as vegemite or marmite. :shock:

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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 09:55:57 am 
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Marmite! I once worked on an archaeological dig in Mallorca with an almost all-Brit crew -- they absolutely LIVED on that ungodly stuff. No thesaurus has enough synonyms for "atrocious" to do it justice!

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In case any overseas "Master Chef's", are going to try Vegemite/Marmite/Promite (yes there's even more!)...

Please remember that it's not like peanut butter - you only use a little and smear it over your toast, don't lather it on!

Also, an excellent flavour enhancer for stews, soups etc.

(and I've never seen "lumpy" vegemite :shock: )

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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 12:52:05 pm 
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Allanswood wrote:
In case any overseas "Master Chef's", are going to try Vegemite/Marmite/Promite (yes there's even more!)...

Please remember that it's not like peanut butter
- you only use a little and smear it over your toast, don't lather it on!Also, an excellent flavour enhancer for stews, soups etc.

(and I've never seen "lumpy" vegemite :shock:
)

For heavens sake :!:

I buy the BIG jars and use an old inch rule to make sure it is applied thick enough.

There has never been a jar in our house with an expired use-by-date but if there was I would simply repair the potholes in our cul-de-sac.

smear? wash out his mouth with soap mutter mutter :twisted:

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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 13:12:29 pm 
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Kevin, you have to build the appreciation!

How do you get used to and enjoy the taste of a chilli? Bung the hotest you can find whole in you mouth and chew? I doubt it. Same with vegemite and its acquired taste.

I watched as some silly daytime "show" in the US got everyone to try Vegemite and they handed out bits of toast that looked like they had been tarred with black peanut butter! No one could stomach the "hit" except all the Guiness drinkers! :mrgreen:

(Plus I would assume that you've reached a certain age where your taste buds no longer function properly? :P )


I've grown up on Vegemite and love the stuff. My Mum used to make a Vegemite "tea" as a hot drink! (Yes her taste buds were shot to).

I didn't know that Vegemite came with a use by date, as from memory, is it's use by is longer than 2 years, then they don't need to put it on the jar.

I'm going to go and wash my mouth out with some nice maple syrup - to balance out the salty with the sweet! :lol:

I love my Vegemite! Tried Marmite once at school (we called it pommy vegemite) but it was too sweet for me.

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PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 15:56:57 pm 
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As far as I'm concerned, marmite and vegemite is pretty mucht the same thing, and I like both. Love those worms! :lol:

Anyone remember this skit from the Red Faces segment of Hey Hey It's Saturday? And he won too, good on him! (Kev - do you buy your vegemite in bucket-size?)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcBNpbZjmPw

...Where the heck did Russel get his baguette from? Love it how he just randomly comes up, slaps it on, and takes a bite! :lol: :lol: :lol:

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Marmite is fantastic like so...

Smear one piece of toast with the Marmite, another with Peanut butter.

Press together and cut into little triangles.

Marvelous! They complement each other so well.

My brother adds another piece of toast and a couple of slices of ham, but thats just insane.

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 03, 2012 18:15:18 pm 
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There is always Vegemite Cheese Twisties. Smear a small amount of Vegemite on each Twistie and bake in an oven until hot, and the Vegemite has melted into each Twistie, or all over the Oven. Devour with Fava Beans and a nice Chianti. Or alternatively watch Mr Bean's New Year's Eve party, and try out a similar recipe (Marmite?, I can't remember) with tree twigs.

Not recommended for those (like me) on salt free diets.

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Allanswood wrote:
I've grown up on Vegemite and love the stuff. My Mum used to make a Vegemite "tea" as a hot drink! (Yes her taste buds were shot too).
An' hers ain't the only ones - when the white coats and stethoscopes say you've gotta starve for 48 hours so's they can do nasty things to your body; the only thing that keeps me going is Vegemite tea!

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Vegemite? I'm an Australian but it's foul to taste and it stinks. My wife finally went off eating it once I could tell her when the jar was open or closed from the other room.


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Jack wrote:
Vegemite? I'm an Australian but it's foul to taste and it stinks. My wife finally went off eating it once I could tell her when the jar was open or closed from the other room.


Jack have to agree with you there, Vegemite has to be the worst thing invented in Australia, I mean it's just diabolically bad :!:

I've tried the Pommy invented Marmite and at least that's derived from meat and not vegetables as Vegemite is (though it's not much better).

Surely Australia has something more gastronomically pleasing than that Vegemite cr*p, after all we invented the pavlova so we can't be that bad :idea:

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I'm first generation American. I love vegemite. I dole it out in very small quantities for special occasions and have managed to milk a small jar of it for a few years but I'm now scraping the edges. Its not to be found anywhere here in the US. :(

I especially like it with a ham sandwich and it's quite good when you add cukes to it as well.

Who knows where or when I'll find more. Haven't been to Europe in over 10 years.

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 04, 2012 03:19:30 am 
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I keep reading the heading as 'Drug deals with Vegemite'...


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 04, 2012 04:01:16 am 
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:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: it is addicting

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PostPosted: Sat Feb 04, 2012 18:32:42 pm 
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I like Vegemite & by the way you Aussies, we Kiwi's invented the pavlova.....


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 04, 2012 20:59:41 pm 
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I can remember growing up in Canada and having pancakes with maple syrup... :cry: I loved them.

I can also remember moving to Australia in '69 and my brothers and sister and I making our Mom (who was from originally from Melbourne Aust.) go out and buy us a jar of vegemite! Our first ever try!!! Mom had always talked about Vegemite when we were growing up and how much she missed it.

It was the most revolting thing any of us had ever eaten!!!!!! :shock: Mind you, we did spread it like we spread peanut butter! I don't think even thinly spread would have helped though!

To this day, none of us will touch the stuff! But we all married Aussies who do love it and all of our kids eat it and all their kids eat it too! I have relented in that I will use it in casseroles...it does add a nice flavour ??? can't work that out though. How can something that smells so revolting add a nice flavour?

MMMM....French toast....another favorite with maple syrup.

I always made our kids pancakes for brekkie on Sundays! To my horror, they don't like maple syrup on pancakes :( ....they'll only have Golden Syrup...or "Cocky's Joy" I believe it was called in earlier days here.

And suprisingly enough, it took an Australian to show me how REALLY nice...American bacon (the really thinly cut bacon...nearly impossible to get around here now!) crisply fried (read: melt in your mouth) drizzled with real Canadian maple syrup is! It is to die for. I had never heard of it and was astounded by the taste sensation!

Timbres? Would you like me to find out if I can (legally?) post you some more Vegemite? I'd hate for you to be deprived!!! :lol: I actually thought they did sell it over there but with big stars and stripes all over the packaging! I know there was a big push for it a few years ago...or was it more? Time does get away!

Final comment: Sukhotai. you CAN NOT put peanut butter and marmite (not that I've tried it as I think it's as bad as vegemite!) together!...you should be tarred and feathered!!! :shock: :shock: :shock: The only thing that goes with peanut butter (and MUST be on fresh bread) is bananas...and if you're having a sweet tooth day...some honey or jam!

Anne

PS, I don't care who invented the pavlova...just as long as they did!!! Yummmy.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 03:22:16 am 
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Lakatoi 4 wrote:
Jack wrote:
Vegemite? I'm an Australian but it's foul to taste and it stinks. My wife finally went off eating it once I could tell her when the jar was open or closed from the other room.


Jack have to agree with you there, Vegemite has to be the worst thing invented in Australia, I mean it's just diabolically bad :!:

I've tried the Pommy invented Marmite and at least that's derived from meat and not vegetables as Vegemite is (though it's not much better).

Surely Australia has something more gastronomically pleasing than that Vegemite cr*p, after all we invented the pavlova so we can't be that bad :idea:



Hi there Lakatoi 4

Marmite is a by-product of brewing, once the malt is taken off the sticky mess left in the bottom of the vat is marmite.

The only beer I know of that has meat in it was Cockerall Ale brewed around the time of the civil war for the puritan side. They added a cleaned bird to the vat in a sack in order to add body to the drink.

Regards

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 04:11:06 am 
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Thanks Ann...Wonder what the post would set me back?

As for adding vegemite to peanut butter, I can't see it either, but one thing I do love is a big piece of crispy Italian bread lathered with PB and nutella!! To die for!

Tim

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 04:27:35 am 
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Timbres wrote:

.....and it's quite good when you add cukes to it as well.



I shudder to even think what a cuke is. :lol:

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 07:40:24 am 
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That would be a cucumber...I'm surprised such a shortened word has not been absconded by the Aussies who love such shortened words.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 10:05:51 am 
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Hi

doug2222usa wrote:
Alas, most of our "maple syrup" is a solution of high fructose
corn syrup with ersatz maple-flavor drizzled-in at so many ppm. :?

By the way, GOOD cottage cheese (from rural Wisconsin) is made
a tubful at a time, not in 100,000 liter stainless steel vats.

As far as I am concerned there is no such thing as GOOD cottage cheese.

Now to maple syrup. I am from the state of Maine and Vermont maple syrup and Maine syrup is great. In our house we use it for cough syrup, pancakes and cooking. Maple butter is great on hot toast. Best use is in the winter. Hot maple syrup on a bowl of clean snow (do not eat the yellow snow). Here in the South it is molasses and Mrs. Butterworth's (whatever that is).

Jerry B


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 10:14:31 am 
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jbcev80 wrote:
Hi

Here in the South it is molasses and Mrs. Butterworth's (whatever that is).

Jerry B


Drizzled over the boiled peanuts? :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 10:29:42 am 
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 12:01:17 pm 
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I don't know what it is called- but some of the real sugar shacks here would serve a soup made from maple syrup :D

Sort of like a Chinese egg drop soup but the broth is maple syrup.

If you had sensitive teeth, you would be screaming in pain :shock:


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PostPosted: Tue Feb 07, 2012 23:22:03 pm 
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Timbres, that would be an early Xmas present to you! my pleasure! Let me know! And as for Peanut butter on crunchy Italian bread??? is there a drooley smiliey?

Fromdownunder, how could you even condone that sort of advertising! Vegemite is something that needs to be introduced to babies before they develope taste buds. All 5 of my girls eat Vegemite (see? I'm not totally against a healthy? food! full of vitamin B, I believe!) and all their kids eat it too! Just forget about the new adult aged range of customers. You've got two chances...which I believe was paraphrased as "Buckleys and Nun" :lol: :lol:

I must admit even I had a shudder over what cucks was and can tell you, I was very relieved to find out it was just a common cucumber! I do love a ham, cheese, tomAto and cucumber sandwich on a hot day! (as opposed to a tomAHto sandwich)
I still get picked up on some words that just won't leave me... and guess what!? they are just going to stay....they are ME!

Cheers everyone..enjoy your maple syrup!

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 18, 2012 15:15:45 pm 
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To revive a popular old thread, with a story from today's BBC,

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-19908368

Quote:
The slow spread of Vegemite
By Duncan Kennedy BBC News, Sydney

Vegemite started as a wartime substitute for Marmite, but it's now as symbolic of Australia as Sydney Harbour Bridge and the koala. How did this salty spread become so popular?

What's the link between German U-boats, the beer industry, processed cheese and the Men At Work's 1983 hit, Down Under?

The answer is, they all played a part in turning Vegemite from a humble yeast spread into an Australian icon. Stop any Aussie on any street, anywhere in the world, and they will have a view on Vegemite - for, or against.

Now, on the eve of its 90th birthday, the first official history has just been published. The Man Who Invented Vegemite is written by Jamie Callister, grandson of the man who created it.

"My grandfather Cyril created something that all Australians associate with their childhood. It never leaves you," he says.

The story really begins in the late 19th Century, when an edible by-product was first extracted from the yeast used by brewers to make beer. In 1902, Britain's Marmite Extract Food Company came into being, taking its name from the French word "marmite", for large pot.

Marmite was sent around the world, including to Australia. But during World War I, those exports were badly interrupted by German U-boats attacking merchant ships.

"Supplies of Marmite all but dried up, leaving Australians desperate for the spread that many had come to love," says Callister. "They needed to find an alternative."

That's where Cyril Callister comes in.

Born in 1893 in rural Victoria, he was a clever child who went to college and became a chemist. He lived an exciting, unorthodox, life, travelling the world and ending up as a scientist at a munitions factory in Scotland.

After an explosion at the factory, Callister returned to Australia, where he met an entrepreneur called Fred Walker, who was trying to develop a Marmite substitute.

Walker had already seen one local brewer try to come up with its own version of Marmite, called Cubex. But this thick, bitter sludge was a culinary and financial disaster.

Walker put Callister on the case in 1923, and by the end of the year, the pair were confident they had a finished product. Walker decided to launch a competition so the public could name it and claim a £50 prize. Hundreds entered and it was Walker's daughter Sheila who pulled the word Vegemite out of a hat.

Like the product itself, the name stuck. But sales were sluggish.

Walker had heard about an ingenious Canadian called James Kraft, who had perfected what came to be known as processed cheese. It was a sensation, as it allowed people who couldn't afford fridges to store cheese for much longer periods.

In 1924, Walker met Kraft in Chicago. The two men got on well and Walker persuaded Kraft to grant him rights to sell his cheeses in Australia.

In a stroke of marketing genius, he offered Vegemite alongside the cheese. By the mid 1930s, Vegemite was, if not quite a runaway success, certainly a moderately well-established family staple. But it took a professor of human physiology to transform its fortunes.

Cedric Stanton Hicks worked at the University of Adelaide and he was commissioned by the Australian government to ensure troops marched on full stomachs.

After extensive research, Hicks concluded that Vegemite, a rich source of vitamin B, should become the basis of soldiers' ration packs along with blackcurrant concentrate and margarine.

"Hicks sent Vegemite to war and that transformed its status," says Jamie Callister.

As World War II unfolded, Vegemite became associated with the national interest. Posters put up in Australia had pictures of it with the slogan, "Vegemite: Keeping fighting men fighting fit."

For Vegemite, the war was a turning point, marking its entry deep into the hearts and consciousness of the Australian public.

In 1949, Cyril Callister died. A sign of his and Vegemite's importance came when Robert Menzies, a past and future prime minister, turned up to his funeral.

By the 1950s, advertising executives sealed the product's place in Australian minds with their radio jingle, Happy little Vegemites, a tune so catchy many adults can still hum it with nostalgic ease.

And if that were not enough, in 1982, a reference to Vegemite appeared in Men At Work's worldwide hit, Down Under.

No Aussie forgets the words of what many consider to be Australia's unofficial national anthem: "I said 'Do you speak-a my language?' He just smiled and gave me a Vegemite sandwich."

But it hasn't all gone Vegemite's way.

In 2011, on a visit to Washington, the Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard discussed Vegemite with President Obama, who concluded it was "horrible".

And some nutritionists have long been concerned by its relatively high salt content, even though Vegemite has experimented with lower sodium varieties.

Vegemite is certainly not unique. It still has a British counterpart in Marmite and you can buy German, Swiss and New Zealand versions of yeast-extract spreads.

But for Australians, it is special. Each year, 22m jars are sold, one for every man, woman and child in Australia.

And while most Aussies would struggle to name the name the man who created it, Cyril Callister's legacy continues to define Australia, with Vegemite remaining an essential ingredient in the cultural glue that binds Australians.

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 18, 2012 16:27:56 pm 
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Who remembers the Great Vegemite Crisis of 1979?
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PostPosted: Thu Oct 18, 2012 20:38:58 pm 
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Oh God, the Australian Army has run out of their number 1 strategic chemical weapon.....Vegemite :shock:

All eyes to the East, those K1W1's will be across the pond to invade as soon as they hear about it :!:


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 19, 2012 01:23:04 am 
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Love the stuff!

I was introduced to it in the works canteen in Melbourne almost 40 years ago. Two other newly arrived Americans went in for breakfast and ordered coffee and toast. The lady asked "Do you want mnmnite on that" and we all said yes. She only put a thin layer on and it was delicious. My two companions had a different reaction :mrgreen:

And, yes, you can buy it in the USA:

http://www.simplyoz.com/products/austra ... 4Aod3VIAvw

http://www.amazon.com/Kraft-Vegemite-40 ... B002O10K6C

http://www.about-australia-shop.com/vegemite.htm


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