Swiss Steak Casserole
Dump Cakes That Are Too Good to Miss – BettyCrocker.com
Heirloom Recipes That Take You Back – BettyCrocker.com
This group is a combination of sweet recipes and not sweet recipes. Also do not want to miss an excellent list. (The Betty Crocker Pot Pie should prove tried and true, but honestly, I think the Chicken Pot Pie recipe from Eat Simple Food, farther down my page today, is much more sustaining.
Beef Bourguignon for Two
How to Bake with Cherries – BettyCrocker.com
You do not want to miss this: woohoo! The formula to money, power, devotion and love: cherries, chocolate and pasta frolla. Is there anything else that can do the same thing as these together? Nope!
Pakora recipes | 19 pakoda recipes & bajji recipes | Indian fritters recipes
Vegetable soup recipe | How to make vegetable soup – Swasthi’s Recipes
Garden Vegetable Soup
Texas Tornado Cake
Easy Chicken Pot Pie
Perfect Pan to Oven Strip Steak | Eat Simple Food
10 Ways You’ve Never Made Meatloaf (But Should!) – Pillsbury.com
This is another Pillsbury rerun for me in the overall posting locations I have, but I love everything on this list so much, I just have to post it again; and, this includes everything else that I said in the post below today.
I am attempting to teach myself German in the slowest of all possible ways, hoping to stick to it, despite my love of posting things and otherwise, spending time on what I have no choice but to call book-work, for lack of a better name — I’m studying, but also writing, but also reading, but also just doing book-work; I like to say it’s all writing, but that confuses the issue I suppose. Let me just say then, between writing and goofing off (which is posting things) and doing whatever people do for themselves during the days, everyday — shopping, web-surfing, whatever it is — adding “learning German by myself” is a big chunk of time to add. (I finally got that sentence out, which is why I leave these kinds of announcements and posts to my Facebook page, also because, I hate to think that total strangers are getting the story of my life, day to day, while I post recipes from websites all over the internet; this is my Facebook page; and I’m sure that it has to be a different sort of song hearing it from a recipe re-post blog.)
I don’t care to really change the way I present myself on my Facebook page, with greater formality or greater lacking formality at times, whatever the case holds, so I can’t seem to appear as someone I am and am not on a blog, so my rambling stories are the only song, story, I mean, to sing, to tell. And for that matter, I am trying to learn German.
The point of all this. My meager and small attempts, being myself alone, are taking up time I’m not used to giving up. I explained on my Facebook page, that after years of trying to get myself even oriented to learning Latin, I gave up, knowing (I am a native Italian, who never finished learning Italian fluently enough to survive on my own that way); knowing that, I would never make a plan I would stick to, because it’s cumbersome and attackative of all my failures in the Italian language to being fluent. And I can’t motivate myself to clean up that situation any better than I do from time to time reading Italian sites. Latin just isn’t going to happen soon, unless it gets easier some way in the vein of Indo-European languages from the European continent as a whole. So I have been studying how I might do that, since, the motivation is to become a better “book-work-er”, to become a better writer — I am allowing myself the luxury of calling myself that since, I feel that’s what I am. People would call what I do different things, but it all stems from just writing and nothing more really. (I am published at amazon and my love is for ancient literatures and histories, but my language problem is becoming an inordinate sized obstacle to a lot of health progress otherwise; so I’d at least like to learn Latin sometimes. There’s a big history of this story on my Facebook page, I will avoid telling.)
The other languages of greatest utility to me this way, besides Latin, would be Old Norse or Old English. Taking a few years recently to confirm all this to myself again and again and having tried several attemptive routes — restudy my high school French, try to pick up Spanish, try to look at books on other ancient languages; I decided that German was probably the quickest route to break down the barriers between Italian and English that make Latin an impossible venture to my imagination. I mean, I just have no hope to inspire myself to sit for the lessons I already am familiar with and won’t learn for whatever personal reasons obstruct the common sense of need; it has no time ethic in approach, given that, I will learn things and forget them and be upset that, Italian is incomplete in my history still.
Well, all this isn’t even about meatloaf.
But my daily schedule has been altered for all this meaning, so I just thought I would background my story a bit on my blog, the way I would on Facebook.
This let me say a few German phrases on occasion.
I learned Guten Tag! I mean I’ve heard that many times. So I have said it now because I have also learned it now.
This post serves as my disclaimer to any more German phrases cropping up on this blog at any time now or later.
I will refer to “the Meatloaf Pillsbury Post” as relevant of it.
(I am hoping that anyone receiving this in their emails will think that it is meant in the vain way that it is said. I am not the professional blogger people would otherwise hope to find in foodie blogs. I mean, I could be — not in so far as food — choose a topic and seem seemly about it, but that is also time I can’t account for.)
Thank you everyone and anyone for visiting my blog(s)!
10 Ways You’ve Never Made Meatloaf (But Should!) – Pillsbury.com
These Top-Rated Dinners Are Done in 30 Minutes – Pillsbury.com
This is a rerun post for me (from Pillsbury), overall to all the posting locations I have; but I love everything on this list so much, I had to re-run it. I will probably do it again before long … in another year or so, I would believe anyway.
These Top-Rated Dinners Are Done in 30 Minutes – Pillsbury.com
Peanut Butter Cup Cinnamon Rolls Recipe – Pillsbury.com
3-Ingredient Oreo™ Stuffed Cinnamon Rolls Recipe – Pillsbury.com
Italian Savory Zucchini Pie – An Italian in my Kitchen
Cheeseburger Bake | MrFood.com
Macaroni and Cheese Pie | MrFood.com
Weeknight Chicken Milanese | MrFood.com
Easy Moussaka | MrFood.com
Stuffed Peppers Casserole | MrFood.com
Easy Homemade Falafel Recipe – How to Make Best Falafel (by Delish)
The BEST Falafel Recipe! | Gimme Some Oven
Explore the neon world of nudibranchs (Photos) | MNN – Mother Nature Network
Sea Slugs. Yes and the cartoon would be called the same. Because they are all over the world’s underwater archipelagos and they are a good force for humanity, which is a terrifically wonderful thing to hear with all the other rotten things to be heard. Especially interesting, is that they can be found around Antarctica. There is so little to live in that region that, that is some hope for the continued species options out there, which is a problem to self-destruction because of a zero-genetic code possibility. Wow!
Explore the neon world of nudibranchs (Photos) | MNN – Mother Nature Network
Nudibranch Facts
Italian (Aeolid) Nudibranches are anti-parasitic. That’s very interesting. I just thought they were cute kind of models for future Asian cartoons.
Italian Islands and Archipelagos
Sicilian Cooking
Okay! At the last minute I found a Sicilian Cooking dictionary online to share!
Traditional Sicilian Recipes for Caponata, Zabaglione, Granita, Artichokes, Chicken and Veal Marsala
Rachael Ray Sicilian Recipes – Rachael Ray Every Day
(As you can see, this blog doesn’t ever feature celebrity chefs deliberately; I have another blog that does and I also haven’t visited it for over a year, so, I shouldn’t even talk about it. Honestly, I have forgotten it’s address; let’s forget I said that. (I have two other WordPress blogs but I am not referring to those and I also haven’t contributed to myself in a while there.)
These recipes were so nicely and professionally handled, of course, I had to include them today. (So in my book today Rachel Ray is an everyday important but ordinary chef!)
13 Authentic Sicilian Recipes You Need To Try
Fried Mozzarella Sandwich
(It’s not really a sandwich, to make a sandwich, you’d need to get light but sturdy white bread, tomato slices, maybe some thickly sliced boiled or smoked ham, sliced red or white onion or both, maybe a sprig of cilantro or parsley or oregano and a bit a red pepper flakes: then you’d have a sandwich. This is just fried mozzarella that resembles a sandwich.)
Sicilian Recipes | Food & Wine
Grilled Mackerel in Sicilian Caper-Tomato Sauce
(Well I will get a start on some Sicilian here and trickle it in over time.)
These Meatballs Are About to Become the Hero of Your Weeknight | Williams-Sonoma Taste
30 Delicious Baked Potato Recipes Worth Trying Tonight | Taste of Home
76 Dessert Bar Recipes for Summer Parties | Taste of Home
35 Potato Salad Recipes For Your Summer BBQ | Taste of Home
Sicilian Potato Salad
(I’m only sorry I don’t have time to hunt down some Sicilian Recipes for today’s lists. I will try to get the time together this week or maybe later today.)
Our Cheesiest Recipes from Wisconsin | Taste of Home
Loaded Mashed Potatoes
(Also a good partner for Cheese Sausage Strata.)
26 Casseroles Made in a 3-Quart Baking Dish | Taste of Home
Cheese Sausage Strata (Yummy!)
Serve in place of pizza with garlic bread and green salad or a green bean casserole side or else a navy bean cup of soup; or possibly a veggie sub or else, a roast at a fuller dinner…. possibilities resident.
24 Creamy, Cheesy Slow Cooker Dips | Taste of Home
Taco Joe Dip
(A thicker dip like this, I think they should just let everyone know is accountably also known as Salsa!)









































































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