Do Finns usually make the Christmas casseroles themselves?
- Hank W.
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Should I go here with the "newlyweds and the porridge just as mom made it"?mrshourula wrote:My husband said they tasted just like his old Finnish aunt used to make and then asked me to marry him (again) so I guess that's a fine recommendation of those recipes.

Cheers, Hank W.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
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Not if your husband is my husband and eats far too much of them and then falls asleep with an overfull belly.mrshourula wrote:Are these recipes really some ancient love potions?

I have tried both shredded carrot and mashed boiled carrot recipes with the rice and neither ever seemed to work well for me (never holds together, no matter what rice I use). So I tried a much different recipe this year from the Pirkka food magazine (it called for mannasuurimo, a.k.a cream of wheat, instead of rice), but alas Citymarket ran out of the organic porkkanasose needed for the recipe. So, I just bought some organic carrots then sliced 6 of them up and microwaved them with one or two tablespoons of butter until tender (about 10 minutes), then put all the ingredients in the blender. I think it had much more flavor than boiled carrots and the texture was so light and fluffy. It's definitely my favorite now! I will throw out all of those rice recipes and only use this one.

Now that's the Christmas spirit!!enk wrote:I was trying to find the picture of the guy on IRC galleria when heraumagal wrote:I saw one use for those "foul green balls" in kotivinkki...they stuck them on a styrofoam type craft thing and made them into a Christmas tree.
had stuck them to his bald head,
-enk

- Hank W.
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OK, lets fine-tune it...mrshourula wrote:Well, given that we've been married for 29 years, no newlywed stories are in order.
A couple had been married for 29 years. Every Christmas the wife made traditional casseroles. Every year the husband sighed and said "its just not quite as momma made it". The wife tried different recipes, adding spices... but all the time she would hear her husband sigh and say "its just not quite as momma made it". So one Christmas the wife was tired and stressed and forgot the casseroles in the oven, so they burnt almost inedible. She slammed them on the table thinking "it doesn't really matter." The husband bit into the casserole and his eyes started sparkling... "My dear wife - I don't know how you accomplished it, but this is just as my momma made it!!!"



(the newlyweds version has morning porridge and it takes a week for her to "get it just like momma makes it")
Last edited by Hank W. on Wed Dec 26, 2007 1:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Cheers, Hank W.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
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- Posts: 344
- Joined: Mon Sep 05, 2005 3:21 am
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Hank W. wrote:So one Christmas the wife was tired and stressed and forgot the casseroles in the oven, so they burnt almost inedible. She slammed them on the table thinking "it doesn't really matter." The husband bit into the casserole and his eyes started sparkling... "My dear wife - I don't know how you accomplished it, but this is just as my momma made it!!!"[/i]
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(the newlyweds version has morning porridge and it takes a week for her to "get it just like momma makes it")
That's the story -- only reversed. I think for years we've been eating it the way my sister-in-law makes it and, possibly, she's been making it "just like momma!"
The recipe I used produced a light, very flavorful almost souffle-like casserole. I must have done something wrong because it sure didn't taste like the dishes everyone has been describing

My kids were such little sh*ts today while the MIL was watchingkaren wrote:enk, are you kids at home tomorrow to accept the gift?
them that they'll be lucky to get candy before they graduate
from high school.

But you can come over and chuck them at them, play a good
game of dodgekuula with them

-enk
karen wrote:The tree is held together with toothpicks. We don't have to tell them that
before they bite into them if you don't want. Kidding!
Ds has a play date in the morning but later in the afternoon we could swing by and chuck it at them.

pieces of paper say

-enk