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			We've made this a couple times for church events and parties last summer. It's been a big hit. It is a little time consuming, but it's fun when multiple people work on it together. The first time we did it, my mom, daughter and I all chipped in and we had an abundance of salsa! 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	1. Visit the farmer's market! Get locally grown, fresh picked, in season, organic produce... that's made the difference, and what you'll find may vary from time to time. ![]() This made a large batch - adjust quantity as needed! 6 ears of corn 6 tomatoes (depends on size) 2 bell peppers (we picked multicolors when they're available) 2 hot peppers (we found several variations) 2 onions (vidalia, and purple are great for this) bunch of cilantro 4 garlic cloves 2. Take the silk out of the corn, but leave the husk. Soak corn with attached husk in cold water for 10-20 min. Grill the corn. Cut corn from ear. Chop the remaining ingredients very small. Throw it all together and mix well. Add 1-2 tsp of lemon juice and salt to taste. Put it covered in the fridge overnight.  
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			I bought one of these when Pete took me to The Vermont Country Store. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	I haven't used it yet, but I can't wait to try it out!  
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		#3 | 
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		#4 | 
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			I have a pork roast in the fridge.  It started life as a New England Boiled Dinner, and it's morphed several times.  All the taters and sauerkraut are gone, and the last of the carrots got used up tonight.  The broth has made spaghetti a couple times and penne rigata once.  I've reboiled the roast a couple times and added significant amounts of water to the broth each time--it still gels, so I know there's still calcium coming out of the bones (yay for us!). 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	I topped the first two pastas with shredded cheese (4 cheese Mexican blend); tonight I topped it with homemade yogurt and discovered that yogurt is GREAT with pork! I dumped in the carrots, too, and tonight also dumped in a can of generic diced tomatoes w/jalapenos. The flavor of the meat and broth just keeps getting better. I never knew you could cook like this! The final destination of the broth (probably a couple batches) will be rice. The final destination of the meat--after I use some to make burritos or enchiladas or something--will be pulled pork, with honey mesquite barbeque sauce. I think the label on the pork said "shoulder arm picnic roast" or some variation on that, and it was a ten pounder on sale for $1.39 a pound. I'll be doing this again!  | 
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			I made delicious pasta tonight.  I cooked a pound of spagetti, al dente, and added one pint of cherry tomatoes, roasted with olive oil and pepper, one package of pre washed spinach, and garlic sauteed in olive oil.  I threw in a little jar of capers that I think I bought at Aldo's when I was there with drvnsnow and some shredded parmigian cheese.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#6 | |
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 I never really liked sweet potato until I tried it roasted with sour cream on top. That's the best way to have it, if you ask me! Anyway Chancie, your pasta sounds yum! Wow Cath, $1.39 a pound is a pretty amazing price. I don't think we'd ever find a special like that here in Australia. The best I've seen is about $4.00 a kilo (now the online converter says 1 kilogram = 2.20462262 pounds, but I don't want to think that hard so let's just say $2.00 a pound) but that's a very rare find. That was for a pork roast. Meat is getting more and more expensive. The cheapest meat here is turkey mince (something like $2.50 a pound). I imagine it's because turkey meat must be relatively cheap to produce, but I wonder why? Chicken mince and beef mince is more like $5.00 - $6.00 a pound, on average. It would be interesting to do a comparison. Oh, yeah... but that was Australian dollars... too many variables - I give up!  | 
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			Ursy - 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	When you say mince, is that comparable to what I'd call "ground"? When I read mince, I think something like paste. It can't be the same, I think. I've been striving to not by meats (as much), or to look for local sources rather than chain super markets. I do buy a lot of turkey (ground), and fish when able. I don't mind paying a little more for the right meats when I know I'm saving money elsewhere (produce). Quote: 
	
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		#9 | 
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			Btw, wanted to share that I've discovered there isn't really such a thing as low-acid tomatoes, only high sugar tomatoes.  That makes them like oranges, yanno?  So much sugar that you just don't taste the tartness--but the acid is still there. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Gryph is allergic to the high acid content, so I fugured out how to neutralize it--baking soda! One 14 or 15 ounce can of tomatoes + 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon baking soda = no acid reaction! It does make the tomatoes foam up (just like baking soda and vinegar), so make sure you have enough room in the pan if you try it--and of course, raw baking soda is not exactly delectable, so you want to do this only in dishes that will be cooked. It's really nice to be able to use tomatoes again! PS, thanks to PearlsNLace for doing the research about the low acid tomatoes!  | 
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