Anonymous wrote:Butter is horrible for your health.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two pieces of buttered toast with my two egg omelette every morning, only I add Wild Chokecherry jelly (from Red Lake Nation Foods) on top for a sweet and salt thing.
Yum and cool where you get the jam - can you buy it someplace locally in DMV, or do you have it shipped?
You can ship it! They have a bunch of different kinds, though they do go out of stock (as you can imagine with a wild grown food).
I thought Chokecherries were poisonous?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two pieces of buttered toast with my two egg omelette every morning, only I add Wild Chokecherry jelly (from Red Lake Nation Foods) on top for a sweet and salt thing.
Yum and cool where you get the jam - can you buy it someplace locally in DMV, or do you have it shipped?
You can ship it! They have a bunch of different kinds, though they do go out of stock (as you can imagine with a wild grown food).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Butter both sides..
How did this never cross my mind? This is one of the most genius - obvious but I didn't think of it things I've seen in a long time.
My whole life, how many thousands of toast sides did I waste?
(slinks away feeling grateful this forum is anonymous)
My husband's grilled cheese sandwiches are so good for this reason--he butters both sides of the bread!
I am a proud member of Team Buttered Toast, but I’m here to say that if you spread mayo on the pan side of your grilled cheese bread and cook as usual, it will rock your world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two pieces of buttered toast with my two egg omelette every morning, only I add Wild Chokecherry jelly (from Red Lake Nation Foods) on top for a sweet and salt thing.
Yum and cool where you get the jam - can you buy it someplace locally in DMV, or do you have it shipped?
Anonymous wrote:I have two pieces of buttered toast with my two egg omelette every morning, only I add Wild Chokecherry jelly (from Red Lake Nation Foods) on top for a sweet and salt thing.
Anonymous wrote:Okay I have a buttered toast memory to share.
Growing up in an Indian city, I had grandparents who lived in the Indian countryside and had farmland. My grandmother's kitchen in the country had a giant old electric butter churn, and she would get the milk from buffaloes on the farm.
She would make homemade butter and homemade ghee, and ship it to my parents' house in the city.
This butter was pure white (buffalo butter tends to look like that, not yellowy) and very, very thick. Buffalo butter (and buffalo cream, and buffalo yogurt, and buffalo ghee...) is unbelievably delicious, and I would have it on toast in the morning before the school bus arrived.
When I had friends over for sleepovers, we would always end up in the kitchen at 3 AM, eating buttered toast. My friends literally died over my grandmother's butter.
I miss those days. I may try buying butter from a local farm in this area.
