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top o' the mornin'®
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 6:14 am
by earendel
Freaky weather this week - warm (68) today and even warmer (74) tomorrow, then no higher than the 40s for Thanksgiving day.
On Thanksgiving morning I'll be helping to prepare breakfast for 250 people - our church has a morning worship service of thanksgiving, followed by a breakfast prepared by church members. For the eleventh year in a row I'll be "the egg man" (cook of the scrambled eggs), assisted by five other people who will work on the other elements of the meal - biscuits, garlic cheese grits, bacon, and sausage gravy.
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 7:43 am
by minimetoo26
It's amazing how something simple like scrambled eggs turns into something difficult when cooking for a group! You get those people who evidently want to eat them with a straw, and others who apparently want something hard enough to resurface their driveway...
I would put sausage gravy on just about anything but Jello. Yummmm...
Re: top o' the mornin'®
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 7:46 am
by christie1111
earendel wrote:biscuits, garlic cheese grits, bacon, and sausage gravy.
Skip the turkey!
Yummy breakfast!
Re: top o' the mornin'®
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 8:36 am
by Appa23
earendel wrote:Freaky weather this week - warm (68) today and even warmer (74) tomorrow, then no higher than the 40s for Thanksgiving day.
On Thanksgiving morning I'll be helping to prepare breakfast for 250 people - our church has a morning worship service of thanksgiving, followed by a breakfast prepared by church members. For the eleventh year in a row I'll be "the egg man" (cook of the scrambled eggs), assisted by five other people who will work on the other elements of the meal - biscuits, garlic cheese grits, bacon, and sausage gravy.
Wow! Your church does a much better breakfast than mine.
We had a breakfast last Sunday to kick off the second part of our capital campaign. We had a sausage & egg dish, fresh fruit, and rolls (cinnamon and pecan).
Like I do at my father-in-law's family Christmas dinner, I would avoid the cheese grits, but the rest sounds delicious.
Re: top o' the mornin'®
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 8:55 am
by earendel
Appa23 wrote:Like I do at my father-in-law's family Christmas dinner, I would avoid the cheese grits, but the rest sounds delicious.
I'm not particularly a fan of grits, but these are particularly good.
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 8:57 am
by kayrharris
I just can't handle garlic of any kind in the morning. Leave it out and I'll eat the cheese grits. I do applaud those of you doing for others on Thanksgiving.
We do the sausage/egg casserole at our house for Christmas morning, mainly because it can be assembled the night before and bakes in the oven so you don't have to do anything but set the timer.
Posted: Tue Nov 20, 2007 9:06 am
by Appa23
I won't have the chance to avoid the grits this year.
My wife's uncle passed away earlier this year (a few weeks before our daughter was born). Her aunt suffered a stroke and is in a long-term care facility.
The two daughters are fighting over the parent's money. There is no way that there is going to be a gathering of thet side of the family.
