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Welcome to the Betty Crocker community! Tell us what you’re cooking, baking and talking about in your kitchen.

Former Thread: Welcome New Members - Please introduce yourself here!

Welcome to the Betty Crocker website!! Please take a moment to introduce yourself to the rest of our community!

7/16/2008 9:58 AM
698 Replies to Former Thread: Welcome New Members - Please introduce yourself here!

Jessica, We really needed a "new Tread" for new comers to post on, the old one was getting LongSmile. Now if you could just get them to realise that they'd get a quicker answer to questions if they'll post them under there heading!Smile

May you always have Christ in your Life,Family Close, Love to Share, Health to Spare, Food to eat,Family and Friends that Care! "IN GOD WE TRUST"
7/17/2008 6:53 AM
Hi! I am new to the boards and just wanted to introduce myself. My name is Marie and I just posted in Kitchen Conversations for recipes on pablano peppers. I am looking forward to being a part of this community and getting a lot of great ideas. I have already tried quite a few recipes and they are fantastic! Hope to try many more! By the way, how do we get a picture in the box near our username? I don't see anywhere to be able to do that. Take care.
7/17/2008 9:34 AM

WELCOME pixiechick and countrycooker, you'll really enjoy the site, there are lots of Great people, recipes and ideals. Try posting the recipe requist under a recipe post and you'll get a quicker reply.Smile. Lots of luck.

May you always have Christ in your Life,Family Close, Love to Share, Health to Spare, Food to eat,Family and Friends that Care! "IN GOD WE TRUST"
7/18/2008 9:33 AM

I'm new here,name is Surette. I was wondering. I used to have a cook book that came with a box of bisquik and it was a cookbook for kids. There was a recipe that my kids want to make for thier kids because it was the first that they cooked when they were kids. It's called Cheeseburger Pie. If anyone has that recipe,could you pass it on so I can send it to my kids. We lost the cookbook sometime when we moved. Also, would like to make it for my grandkids


Surette


Would appreciate your help

9/14/2008 6:32 PM

Hi Rette1, welcome to the site!  I remember my mom making that for us kids when we were little! (Has it been that long?)  Unfortunately, I don't have the recipe.  May I refer you to page #9 in this section, I'm sure you'll find it helpful.  It'll help you figure out how to post in either kitchen conversations or bake life sweeter.  You'll get a much faster answer to your question.  Again, welcome to the net and have fun!


chicagosinger 

"If you don't try, you'll never know."
9/14/2008 7:18 PM

Hi everyone. I'm new and I enjoy baking and cooking.

10/8/2008 6:11 PM

Hi everyone. I'm new and I enjoy baking and cooking. My name is Linda

10/8/2008 6:12 PM


Rette1, hope this is what you are looking for!

Impossibly Easy Cheeseburger Pie

1 lb ground beef
1 cup chopped onion
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup (4 oz) shredded cheddar cheese
1/2 cup Bisquick
1 cup milk
2 eggs

1 . Heat oven to 400°F. Spray 9-inch glass pie plate with cooking spray.
2 . In 10-inch skillet, cook beef and onion over medium heat 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until beef is brown; drain. Stir in salt. Spread in pie plate. Sprinkle with cheese.
3 . In small bowl, stir remaining ingredients with fork or wire whisk until blended. Pour into pie plate.
4 . Bake about 25 minutes or until knife inserted in center comes out clean.



 



 


9/15/2008 12:12 PM

Hi, I'm Tanya and I like to give Gourmet Cooking Parties and If you want to some new recipes e-mails me at *******************.

11/13/2008 3:43 PM

Hi - My name is Geri.  I work for the DOC.  Love to cook and bake.  Italian especially.  Quilting and NASCAR are my passions.  I have 5 children and 11 grandchildren.  Live alone and love it.  Love to have stay-overs with grandkids.


Hope to get to talk with a lot of you.

11/20/2008 1:13 PM

I am working with the PTA and someone turned in a big bag of Betty Cocker points.  What can I do with those?  Can I turn them in for the school?  Can someone tell me?

9/7/2008 9:51 PM

Hello SuzyGorme,   Welcome to the site.  Could you please read the posting right above yours?  I'm sure you'll get a huge laugh once you read it all.  And yes, it really is true!  Have fun!


chicagosinger

"If you don't try, you'll never know."
9/7/2008 11:56 PM

hello im new here. ive been looking for a chili rellenos recipie with white sauce.. can anyone help? thanksSmile

9/30/2008 3:49 PM

You can also use canned whole green chilies. Just drain and scrape the seeds.
Chili Rellenos



6 fresh poblano peppers or whole green chilies
8 oz Monterey Jack cheese
3 eggs, separated
1/4 C. flour
Salt and pepper, to taste
Oil for deep-frying

Rub peppers lightly with oil then place on baking sheet and bake at 450 degrees for a few minutes until blackened. Scrape off the peel, slit and remove seeds. Stuff each pepper with cheese and roll up tight. Beat egg whites until stiff, then fold into beaten egg yolks. Add salt, pepper and flour, mixing until batter is smooth. Dip peppers in batter, then deep-fry in oil at 365 degrees until golden brown.





This can be ladled over the peppers or used as a dip. I buy Land O' Lakes brand white American cheese at the deli counter at WalMart. I use this on lots of Mexican dishes and refried beans. I usually double the recipe and use it as a dip with chips, too. It's so good!
Mexican White Cheese

1/2 lb White American cheese, sliced, cubed or shredded
1 (4 oz) can diced green chilies
1/2 to 3/4 cup heavy whipping cream

Put cheese, chilies with juice and cream in a saucepan. Heat very slowly, stirring until cheese has melted and mixture is smooth. Cheese will thicken as it cools.


 


This is great, too! You can also use a large can of whole green chilies. Just drain and scrape the seeds. I have added a layer of cooked ground beef on top of the peppers, too.



Chili Relleno Casserole



6-8 poblano peppers
2 cups Monterey Jack cheese
2 cups cheddar cheese
1 1/4 cups milk
1/4 cup flour
5 eggs, lightly beaten
Salt, pepper and paprika, to taste

Rub peppers lightly with oil then place on baking sheet and bake at 450 degrees for a few minutes until blackened. Scrape off the peel, slit and remove seeds. Place in lightly sprayed 9x13 baking dish. Cover with cheeses. Whisk milk and flour, then stir in eggs and spices. Pour into baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 45-55 minutes until center is set.

10/1/2008 4:39 AM

Hi, My name is Elsie and I look to bake. I try different things all the time. I have been cooking for toooo long but am always looking for something new to serve when I have get to gathers.


i have 3 grown children and 4 grandchildren of young and adult ages. I live in central Florida. We love to get together and food is always involved. They love my cooking/baking.


I love making cheesecakes but am looking for new toppings to put on them that lasdt more than a day or two. Any ideas??

10/5/2008 4:43 PM

I have looked at almost every store around saginaw for cinnamon swirl cake mix. this cake is so good. but the store don't have any. if any one knows where I can find one please let me know


                                                                                            THANK YOU !


                                                                                                    GLENDA

10/27/2008 12:21 AM

Hello Folks, I live in Georgia, not far from Savannah. I was raised in Texas, and moved out here in 1971. I've lived around this area for over 37 years and I still get picked on by friends, my husband, and my kids (sometimes!), for the remnants of my Texas accent and some of the words I use. Where I lived in in Texas, I should have been exposed to some of the Southern-style cooking that we do down here, but I wasn't. Things like cheese grits, collard greens, sweet tea, and Brunswick stew, were completely foreign to me! But I brought with me some Texas-style cooking of my own. For instance, biscuits do not come in tins out of the dairy section in the grocery store, they are made by hand. True chili does not have beans in it. True barbeque is not smothered in some sweet concoction that comes in a bottle, it has a dry rub or is marinated in a sauce overnight in the fridge, and then it is slow cooked over nice hot hickory, apple, mesquite, or crabapple coals, or a combination of any of them. My Mama would kill a chicken on Saturday morning, I had to sit on the back porch with a pillowcase and pluck the feathers off of it and put the feathers in the pillowcase. Then she would gut it, take out the parts  she would cook such as the heart, liver, gizzard, and lungs, or the 'lights' as mama called them, cut the chicken up and double-dip and double-bread all the pieces, then fry it in hot lard. Everything that we ate on Sunday was cooked on Saturday, even breakfast. She made the best soda biscuits and yeast biscuits (she called them holiday biscuits) I have ever tasted! Her biscuits had only one size - big! She called them 'cat-head' biscuits. I guess that she called them that because they were the size of a large cat's head! I know that you could use them as hamburger buns. Chili was made with slow cooked (on the back of the stove, not in a modern slow cooker or crock pot!) round steak or the neck meat of the steer that was killed that year. Sometimes, it was made with the deer meat from the deer that dad had killed that season. It goes without saying that chili was a cold weather meal. Dad and his friends would dig a pit in the ground about 6 feet deep, fill it with logs and branches of whatever wood they wanted to barbeque meat with, then set it on fire. When it got low, they would throw in some more wood and let it burn down until they had a good 3 to 4 foot deep bed of coals going. Then they would lay on the grill that someone had made, and then the ribs, steaks, and at least one backstrap and roast would go on. They would 'tent' it over with wet burlap. The kids, including me, had the job of watching the burlap and as it dried, we had to sprinkle on water (or beer) with a garden sprinkler. All this was done early in the morning, and the meat would cook all day. Just at dark, it would be ready, literally falling off the bones, at dusk. We would set up tables on the screen porch and have supper. Some of us kids would have been drafted into turning the handles on 3 or 4 ice cream churns, and mama and the other ladies would be cooking up the beans (pinto) with homemade sweet sauce, real mashed potatoes, red - eyed gravy, biscuit gravy, all types and forms of veggies, including fried okra, eggplant, squash, and pickles. Yup, pickles! Those were my mama's speciality. She would make 2 types; One with her bread & butter pickles and one with her (award - winning!) dill and fennel pickles. They also made dipping sauces for the barbeque, horseradish, sweet, hot, mild, mustard, applesauce & banana pepper, mincemeat & garlic, and sweet garlic. Sweet-bacon (bacon smoked with brown sugar or molasses) baked beans, and cheese & bacon baked potatoes. Oh, man, it was a wonder that all of us didn't die of heart attacks from the cholesterol, or be 100 lbs. heavier after we ate! No one went home, the grown-ups slept inside, along with the babies under 2, while the rest of us kids made bed rolls and slept out on the screen porch. Inside, there was an old-fashioned drip fan (these were what used to be called air conditioners), while us kids out on the porch had fans. It was grand! My husband raised our kids here in this area on a farm and we did a lot of the same things, including the summer barbeque. We had even built a screened porch to sit out on in the evenings. A few differences were made. Inside we had what everyone thinks of as a/c's, while we set up an old-fashioned drip fan out on the porch for the kids. That was a long time ago, and our kids are now grown with kids of their own. We now have mini-versions of these barbeques where the meat is now bought in the store and it is slow-cooked on grills with wood coals and in homemade smokers. The grandkids still sleep out on the screen porch, but one or two of us ladies sleep out there with them. It's a sign of the times that we do not leave our kids and grandkids alone outside, even on a locked screen porch! We still have ghost stories, and silly "Am I Lying" games, sings, and Post Office. It's a shame that a lot of these old traditions are going by the wayside as our new way of life is causing our younger generation to believe that milk, eggs, meats, and bread come from the store. How they got there, no one seems to even question. On holidays I bake cookies, cakes, and homemade breads. I create Cookies-in-a-Jar and Cakes-in-a-Jar, along with different 'secret recipe' items and semi-rare jellies and jams, are made for gifts. I will also make homemade ornaments to be given with my baked goods, especially at Christmas. I also started a new tradition for Christmas. I will set up a few days for the grandkids that live close by and put all the ingredients and items ready to make cookies and ornaments. Then I call up mom and dad and tell them to pick out a day when they're going Christmas shopping or will be wrapping presents for the kids. Then I keep the grandkids that day and we have a rowdy good time making cookies, Cookies-in-a-Jar, bread, and ornaments for them to give out as presents. They love this as most of them aren't old enough to get allowances, yet. But even the older kids love doing this as well. Especially as I tell them stories of the 'good old days' when I was growing up, or stories about their mom or dad. The 'under 2' grandkids, Papa gets to take care of! But we have only 2 of those, so he isn't overwhelmed, not by the 'special delivery' diapers, but by keeping the lil rascals busy! He has been horsy to over a dozen grandchildren so far, and I'm pretty sure 'horsy' is pretty tired. But, so far, he can throw on a tape or DVD of their favorite cartoons and the kids will be mesmerized until they either get hungry, thirsty, sleepy, or mom or dad comes after them. This gives the parents time to shop, have a nice dinner alone, and some needed "us" time without the kids. This is a holiday gift that I try to give them before Christmas. It is well-apreciated, let me tell you! Well, I've run on with this thing, but I figured that you would get a sense of my husband and me by telling you what we try to do, instead of dry statements that just tell you where we live, how old we are, etc. Oh, we also make goodies for the animals, as well. Doggie treats, Kitty treats, and wild bird treats. This is who we are. And I hope that we can add to some of the tidbits of wisdom that I'm sure all of us can use, young and old!

11/17/2008 11:52 PM

Could you please tell me Where the "new thread" is that you are referring to for new members to post under the "Welcome new Members" heading? I'm sorry but I can't seem to locate it? I actually tried twice under the heading right above where this one is, where it actually sais "welcome new members introduce yourself here" and I got a little box to write in just like this, yet every single time i sent it to post, it would not appear, however in red it would state that the last post was made by me and at the time I made it? What am I doing wrong?

11/18/2008 5:54 PM

Good Morning Big Smile I am new here and am looking for ideas for thanksgiving dinner. i found some wonderful recipes but was also intrested in what am i alble to prepare ahead and the best way to reheat it so it will not be too dried out. i will be doing the brined turkey, the no crust pumpkin pie, honey almond green beans. I also will be making mashed candy yams, baked mac and cheese, and of course biscuits and cranberry sauce. but dont want to be going crazy that day. would appriciate any ideas want to spread out the work but dont want the food to taste like leftovers or be dried out.


Thank you and have a blessed day

11/25/2008 7:30 AM

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