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Potatoes that are typically classified as “waxy” such as fingerling, and red bliss and purple varieties, while excellent for a host of other applications, are not the ones to pick for mashing.
To make sweet potato casserole with purple sweet potatoes, you need about four to five medium-sized purple sweet potatoes, 1/4 cup coconut milk, 1/4 cup maple syrup, 1 teaspoon red or white miso ...
Quick and easy, this is the perfect way to make gravy if you aren't cooking a whole roast turkey or chicken. What you do need: butter, onion, garlic, and all the favorite Thanksgiving herbs.
Poi is a traditional staple food in the Polynesian diet, made from taro.Traditional poi is produced by mashing cooked taro on a wooden pounding board (papa kuʻi ʻai), with a carved pestle (pōhaku kuʻi ʻai) made from basalt, calcite, coral, or wood.
M*A*S*H television series cast members c. 1974. Back row: Larry Linville, Wayne Rogers, and Gary Burghoff. Front row: Loretta Swit, Alan Alda, and McLean Stevenson This is a list of characters from the M*A*S*H franchise created by Richard Hooker, covering the various fictional characters appearing in the novel MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors (1968) and its sequels M*A*S*H Goes to Maine ...
"Sometimes You Hear the Bullet" is the 17th episode of the first season of the TV series M*A*S*H, originally airing on January 28, 1973. This is the first episode in which the medical staff failed to save a wounded soldier, and one of the first episodes of the series showing a member of the hospital staff truly affected by death.
Purple skin with purple flesh Some varieties have deep roots in the South—North Carolina is the number one sweet potato-producing state in the U.S. and has been since 1971.
1969 Canadian paperback edition of the first book. The M*A*S*H book series includes the original novel that inspired the movie and then the TV series.The first, MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors, was co-authored by H. Richard Hornberger (himself a former military surgeon) and W. C. Heinz (a former World War II war correspondent); it was published in 1968 under the pen name Richard Hooker.