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, though there are many sources, I like very much Penzy's

spices. I use them quite a bit, being a spice collector. They have

great blended formulas. I believe thay er at penzys.com

SCott

>

> I have been using the spice mixes (ex: taco seasoning, stew

seasoning, etc) that come in a package, but would like to stop

because I'm sure there is msg in them. Do any of you know where I

can get info about making my own mixes? Thanks,

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I went to check the site out and it wasn't there so I googled it and got

http://www.penzeys.com/

-Lana

On 3/25/06, docscotte <docscotte@...> wrote:

>

> , though there are many sources, I like very much Penzy's

> spices. I use them quite a bit, being a spice collector. They have

> great blended formulas. I believe thay er at penzys.com

> SCott

>

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thanks

Re: Re: mixes

I went to check the site out and it wasn't there so I googled it and got

http://www.penzeys.com/

-Lana

On 3/25/06, docscotte <docscotte@...> wrote:

>

> , though there are many sources, I like very much Penzy's

> spices. I use them quite a bit, being a spice collector. They have

> great blended formulas. I believe thay er at penzys.com

> SCott

>

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On 3/25/06, CHRISTINE TAYLOR <trays.family@...> wrote:

> I have been using the spice mixes (ex: taco seasoning, stew seasoning, etc)

> that come in a package, but would like to stop because I'm sure there is msg

> in them. Do any of you know where I can get info about making my own mixes?

> Thanks,

hi christine,

for taco seasoning, here's one version:

1 onion

3 garlic cloves, minced or pressed

2 Tbsp chili powder

1 tsp ground cumin

1 tsp ground coriander

1/2 tsp dried oregano (or mexican oregano)

1/4 tsp cayenne (or to taste)

1lb ground meat

1 cup liquid (half tomato sauce, half broth, or any other combination

you like) *

sautee the onion in some lard, ghee, whatever, until soft and maybe a

little brown. add garlic, spices, and salt, maybe 1/2 tsp or so.

cook until fragrant etc. add meat and cook until kind of brownish.

add liquid, then simmer until thickened, maybe 10 minutes. eat.

powdered childhood for me is old el paso taco seasoning, but i like

this a lot better. maybe it'll be a good starting point. i like it

with mushrooms sometimes, various meats (bison was good), maybe green

chili and cilantro, any variety of toppings, etc. sometimes i add

sambal oelek (sp? that vietnamese-ish chili vinegar paste) instead of

cayenne for that vinegary chili flavor.

eric

* i usually just keep a container of either tomato sauce or paste in

my freezer and scoop out of it as needed for these annoying recipes

that call for piddly amounts of such things. you can make a halfway

decent liquid for this recipe from a cup of stock, a Tbsp of tomato

paste and maybe a touch of vinegar for acidity. some leftover canned

diced tomatoes could work too. whatever you have around.

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This sounds very good. I'll try it. I really should just use regular spices

rather than mixes anyway. It's a bad habit: looking for convenience. I am a

mother of 7 boys and the youngest is 3 months old, but convenience is usually

bad for us. Thanks,

Re: mixes

On 3/25/06, CHRISTINE TAYLOR <trays.family@...> wrote:

> I have been using the spice mixes (ex: taco seasoning, stew seasoning, etc)

> that come in a package, but would like to stop because I'm sure there is msg

> in them. Do any of you know where I can get info about making my own mixes?

> Thanks,

hi christine,

for taco seasoning, here's one version:

1 onion

3 garlic cloves, minced or pressed

2 Tbsp chili powder

1 tsp ground cumin

1 tsp ground coriander

1/2 tsp dried oregano (or mexican oregano)

1/4 tsp cayenne (or to taste)

1lb ground meat

1 cup liquid (half tomato sauce, half broth, or any other combination

you like) *

sautee the onion in some lard, ghee, whatever, until soft and maybe a

little brown. add garlic, spices, and salt, maybe 1/2 tsp or so.

cook until fragrant etc. add meat and cook until kind of brownish.

add liquid, then simmer until thickened, maybe 10 minutes. eat.

powdered childhood for me is old el paso taco seasoning, but i like

this a lot better. maybe it'll be a good starting point. i like it

with mushrooms sometimes, various meats (bison was good), maybe green

chili and cilantro, any variety of toppings, etc. sometimes i add

sambal oelek (sp? that vietnamese-ish chili vinegar paste) instead of

cayenne for that vinegary chili flavor.

eric

* i usually just keep a container of either tomato sauce or paste in

my freezer and scoop out of it as needed for these annoying recipes

that call for piddly amounts of such things. you can make a halfway

decent liquid for this recipe from a cup of stock, a Tbsp of tomato

paste and maybe a touch of vinegar for acidity. some leftover canned

diced tomatoes could work too. whatever you have around.

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You could also pre-mix the dry spices together in a jar in the right

proportion and use right around three tbsp per pound of ground meat.

That would make it barely take more time than using the packets.

On 3/26/06, CHRISTINE TAYLOR <trays.family@...> wrote:

> This sounds very good. I'll try it. I really should just use regular spices

rather than mixes anyway. It's a bad habit: looking for convenience. I am a

mother of 7 boys and the youngest is 3 months old, but convenience is usually

bad for us. Thanks,

> Re: mixes

>

>

> On 3/25/06, CHRISTINE TAYLOR <trays.family@...> wrote:

> > I have been using the spice mixes (ex: taco seasoning, stew seasoning,

etc)

> > that come in a package, but would like to stop because I'm sure there is

msg

> > in them. Do any of you know where I can get info about making my own

mixes?

> > Thanks,

<snip>

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--- In , " docscotte " <docscotte@...>

wrote:

>

> , though there are many sources, I like very much Penzy's

> spices. I use them quite a bit, being a spice collector. They have

> great blended formulas. I believe thay er at penzys.com

SCott,

lucky me: I just read a Penzey's store newly opened up the street.

Haven't yet gone and checked it out.

B.

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