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norgeway

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Joined
Apr 28, 2009
Messages
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Location
mocksville n c
This one from the Centenary United Methodist Cookbook, Winston Salem NC 1968..
Scalloped Tomatoes
1 1/2 cups stale bread broken in coarse pieces
1/4 cup melted butter
Place bread in casserole dish, pour over melted butter, stir to coat well.
Bring to a boil in a saucepan the following,
3 cups sliced fresh tomatoes."Canned works, but be sure to drain them"
1 tsp salt
6 TBSP brown sugar
dash of ground cloves
Pour boiling mixture over bread, stir to distribute bread evenly, bake at 425, 30 minutes or until browned on top.

norgeway++7-15-2012-15-52-17.jpg
 
Centenary Cookbook..

Centenary is a very large church in down town Winston Salem, as I work for the United Methodist retirement community in Winston, Arbor Acres, I know many of the people who have recipies in this book,there are some really good recipes in this one, I use it often.As it was written in 1968, many of the ladies are now gone, but a large number are still living.
 
Good grief, I hadnt even thought about scalloped tomatoes in years. We used to have them on the menu once a week in the restaurant I worked at till I was 20. Now I want some! lol
 
Hans we love the scalloped tomatoes good down home food.  I have theMethodist cookbooks  from the 40' forward from our home church and others where we have lived.  Good good recipes.  Some folks tell me that all you Methodist do is eat.  I say feed the body and then the sould.

 

Do you make macaroni and tomatoes.  I like it better than mac and cheese.
 
its a methodist thing

all of us methodist think of is food especially when u hear someone has died what can u fix to take to the family LOL
 
Macaroni and Tomatoes

Very popular in this area. My mother's side of the family always made it with a mixture of tomato juice and crushed tomatoes, and seasoned with salt and a lump of butter. My father's side of the family made it with just tomato juice, and seasoned it with sugar and a lump of butter. To my knowledge the sugar recipe is because my grandmother is from the mountains of eastern Kentucky, and many families there use that recipe. I actually prefer the type with the sugar.
 
I dont think it is just a Methodist thing dynaflow to bring food to a family in need. When my sister got very sick, many of her friends from all different denominations brought food for her family. I think it is good people who care, regardless of what religion they believe in. And those are the people that will be rewarded in the afterlife.
 
Mac and tomatoes!

I have a recipe called Cheesefront and Tomatoes...Odd name, but you make a cheese sauce and add tomatoes to it, then mix with macaroni and bake, I will look it up and post it.
 
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