I'm coming to your house for Easter!We do usually do a Polish/Slovakian style Easter dinner as that is my wife's heritage.
We start with white borscht, farmer's cheese (twarog) and rye bread, then have a roast ham, potato salad, coleslaw, steamed asparagus, sautéed string beans, grated beets and horseradish, and a casserole of sauerkraut, potatoes, and kielbasa.
Sounds good. Now what time is dinner?Easter dinners in Georgia are set in stone. Baked ham (with brown sugar and pineapple on top), potato salad (with mustard), fresh scallions, baked beans and rolls. And that's why we only eat salad the rest of the week![]()
No and here kids are usually barbecued.I've managed to source some kid. I've never cooked it before but I am thinking of following a Hugh-Fearnley Whittingstall recipe for goat tagine:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2012/sep/28/goat-kid-recipes-fearnley-whittingstall
Has anyone cooked kid before? Any advice would be appreciated.
No and here kids are usually barbecued.
I'm coming to your house for Easter!
~Stormy
We don't do Easter.
I thought easter was about resurrection not cannibalism.Has anyone cooked kid before?
I do hope it was a free-range one. but its a bit stingy 1 egg each.... half a dozen would have been a bit more useful. At least you could have made an omelette that way!We don't bother either, we get an egg each from work but that is it.
I thought easter was about resurrection not cannibalism.
I do hope it was a free-range one. but its a bit stingy 1 egg each.... half a dozen would have been a bit more useful. At least you could have made an omelette that way!