View allAll Photos Tagged scrapple
9th September 2020:
She just looked so cute sitting on the printer this morning watching them birdies in the garden.
Today is : World Adoption Day - nationaldaycalendar.com/world-adoption-day-november-9/
And Izzy was adopted too. 😍
As for the Silly News it's : National Scrapple Day - nationaldaycalendar.com/national-scrapple-day-november-9/
That's a new one to me. 😟
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites.
Good and Plenty, pink and white coated licorice pastilles... created in Philadelphia in 1893....for sale at every candy counter.....
Philadelphia, just over the bridge from where I live, is also famous for inventing the cheese steak, Tastykakes, flavored sodas such as root beer and Frank's black cherry wishniak, and scrapple....otherwise known as the you're-not-going-to-eat-that! breakfast meat.....
8/52, Foodography, 52 Weeks in 2020
The very colorful inside of the Marlton Diner, our fifth of eight diners we are visiting this year. There was color everywhere, the table tops covered with doodles, a neon menu flashing the specials, an antique enamel oven, an old-fashioned penny candy counter....remember hot lips made of red wax??
I decided to be adventurous and try scrapple along with my eggs, and it was really awful! The waiter kindly removed it from my bill ^_^
Located downhill from the highway in the north central part of the state. A relic from the earliest settlers farmed the steep hillsides and had subsistence living at best.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
The water mill Sythen in Haltern-Sythen belonged earlier to the possession of the bishop of Münster. In 1331 Dülmener Burgmann Wessel von Lembeck with wife Elisabeth and their children Wessel, Adolf and Hillegund exchanged several courts for the house Sieten (today castle Sythen) together with mill. The family belongs to the nobility gender of the counts of Westerholt whose successors, Carl Otto (Carlo) are a count from and to Westerholt and Gysenberg, even today owner of the mill.
The waterwheel is fed by a pent-up arm of the Halterner mill brook and drives, in the meantime, a small hydroelectric power plant. With 1600 litres of water per hour it delivers 23 kW which are fed into the public stream net.
In the 1980s the town Haltern leased the former grain and oil mill. The home association Sythen and the local hinge association they developed with the help of the Sythener citizens and financial support through town and count to a meeting place.
Every Thursday afternoon it is opened by the mill women of the club devoted to the maintenance of local regional traditions as a café. Besides she serves by the Heidetag or German mill day programme and becomes the care of customs and traditions like Nicholas's move and Panhasessen (scrapple), as well as the Plattdeutsch language play at the theatre and as a test space of bands used.
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Il Grattacielo Pirelli
e la "Mela reintegrata" di Pistoletto
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Carolina Pines "Jr."
La Brea at Sunset
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Mailed from Los Angeles, California to Mrs. Dorothy Geiger of Reading, Pennsylvania on February 15, 1960:
Dear Dorothy, Do you happen to have a good receipe (sic) for Berks Co. scrapple? Carole's husband's father & grandfather tried making some but wasn't too good, so they're eager for a good receipe (sic).
Kenneth's the best baby ever - & such a doll. I'll hate to leave him - but miss Mike, too. He's been staying with Mary Jane these 3 weeks. I promise to write some & give you data on birthdates, etc. Love, Jeannie
Melinger Studio
13620-A
CAPA-000806
SEACUTERIE
Lake Perch Kamaboko
Rappahannock Blue Catfish Scrapple
Willow-smoked Nantucket Bay Scallop Pickles
Bluegill Bagoong
Smoked Trout Calatura
Sweet Pickled Dulse
Paired with Ferreira Dona Antonio White Porto Reserva
I am living up north now. and all the trees are changing colors and the golden hour is more golden than ever.
there are some things that are very different than the home town in which i was raised:
Wawa gas stations
Utz Potato Chips
Bypasses
Food Lion
Scrapple
Everyone has gas stove tops
Sunbeam afternoon gnats
9th November 2021 :
Went out to do a few odds and ends and ended up taking a short walk back home. It actually made my walk home a lot longer, but it was good to out.
Saw these chimney pots as I was almost home and liked how they looked through the bamboo shoots.
Will do my best to keep up, but I'm trying to be gentle on my eyes for awhile.
Today is : World Adoption Day - nationaldaycalendar.com/world-adoption-day-november-9/
And as for some Silly News it's : National Scrapple Day - nationaldaycalendar.com/national-scrapple-day-november-9/
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites.
I went to a living farm a couple weekends ago hoping to be inspired to take pictures of something other than cats in a basement. No such luck. I was in the dark, dirty barn thinking how creepy it was and then saw a notice that at the end of the month they were going to have a special tour of the "spectacular barn spiders"! And get this, next month's special event is how to make bacon, sausage and scrapple. No wonder I was the only person walking around.
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Wilmington is a small hard-scrapple town in will County Illinois, some 60 miles southwest of Chicago. Its most dominant feature is the Kankakee river, which floods low-lying areas once or twice a year.
It's a small town, where everybody knows everybody else, and the main drag - Water Street - is lined with antique shops and taverns.
If you had thought El Greco’s Sky was the product of his imagination, now you know that in 16th century, he actually visited Hublersberg, Pennsylvania… and, my wife, Karen said that while he was here , he had two eggs over easy with scrapple and hash browns
The stuff looks dangerous and doesn't taste much better. But my wife likes it, so I carry some home from the East Coast to her when I can.
From riches to (almost) rags ...
The Harris & Ewing photo from 1911 shows the famous horseowner Mr. Richard McGrann (left) and Mrs. McGrann entertaining their guests at the Washington D.C. Horse Show in 1911. (The man second from the left is the minister (ambassador) of Belgium, count de Buisseret, followed by Mrs. McGrann,
Mr. William E. Ellis and Sir Robert Hatfield.)
Only a year later (October 4, 1912) the Washington Post reported:
"Richard B. McGrann, who, just a few years ago, was hobnobbing with aristocracy and trading horses with kings, while New York´s gay Broadway glowed with the glittering stories of his achievements as a "spendthrift", has been reduced to - to sausages.
The man who married miss Amy Penn (descendant to the original William), and started out about a decade ago to live the life of a millionaire in the highest stratum of society, is now personal conductor of a plant in Lancaster, Pa., where they turn out scrapple and - and sausages. Last week all his horses and fancy livestock were sold to satisfy creditors.
According to his friends (and "Dick" McGrann has hosts of friends, because he played his game fairly andsquarely) his case is simply that of a man who tried to live too high and too fast on insufficient capital.
Pretty Mrs. McGrann is the loyal and devoted aid of her husband. There are none of the brilliant entertainments, which used to brighten their home in the days when his famous horses were the talk of the international society, but perhaps there is a closer and happier hearthside bond to replace the glitter of the spendthrift days."
My restoration and colorization of the original image in the Library of Congress archive (Harris & Ewing collection).
The most important meal of the day... or so I've heard.
Made from this pattern.
photos thanks to Chad VanPelt
The Scrapple waffle at the new Ivan Ramen on 25 Clinton street made with pork shoulder, chicken hearts & livers topped with pickled apples, roasted Napa cabbage topped with a maple kewpie sauce as well as bulldog sauce. This is a seriously awesome dish check it out if you're in NYC.
Final day had limited attendance with the heat and humidity. Goetta is little know outside of Cincinnati. The German population in Over the Rhine combined animal scapes with oats to make gotta. Usually pork scrapes but could include beef. Gliers uses pin oats and is very low in cholesterol. Sorta like scrapple. In Germany goetta is resembles grutzwurst. The Goettafest is so popular it's become a two weekend event.
My hubby likes scrapple. I don’t like scrapple, so I make pancakes for myself when I cook scrapple for him.
First shot of the new year. And, yes. Syrup. I'm not one of "those". You know. The ones who put ketchup on it. Weirdos.
Pork Scrapple
Fried egg, sage, brown butter. ($9)
Taste by niche
St. Louis, Missouri
(January 21, 2012)
the ulterior epicure | Twitter | Facebook | Bonjwing Photography
Hey guys! I just created a new craft Tutorial blog. I would just love it if you would check it out. Thanks and keep being crafty.
The address is quirksinspiration.com
Stopped at Bowman's Butcher Shop yesterday for steaks (which were delicious!) for our Valentine's Dinner last night, as we'll be out with friends all day today. Saw they had Scrapple too, so picked some up for breakfast. Really delicious!
The 1820's American Farm at the Frontier Culture Museum in Staunton, Virginia.
By the 1820s, the diverse peoples who settled the Valley of Virginia had lived together for several generations. Shaped by the common experiences of the American Revolution, the founding of the United States, and the market revolution, ethnic differences began to fade. Cultural persistence remained strongest among the Virginia Germans. Many Virginia Germans maintained their language and unique customs throughout the 1800s, but after 1820 they began moving toward the mainstream of American life.
By the early 1800s, middling farmers in the Valley of Virginia were able to provide a comfortable lifestyle for themselves and their families. Such households were furnished with tables and chairs, coarse earthenware, pewter and ceramic tableware, chests, books, and bed and table linens, though rarely with fashionable goods such as mahogany furniture or porcelain. Virginia Germans often added cast-iron heating stoves and clocks to their household furnishings.
Activities in and around Virginia German farmhouses were reminiscent of their Central European heritage. Wives and daughters worked as hard as the men, and were known to assist the men and boys with fieldwork. In the house, women did the spinning and weaving and made linen and wool cloth that could be traded for goods at local stores or made into coverlets or rag carpeting. Meals prepared by German housewives were distinctive, and included dishes such as sauerkraut, scrapple, and raisin pies.
Anglo-American influences entered the Virginia German lives slowly. By the 1820s, English furniture forms, such as the chest of drawers, began to appear in their houses, and they became tea and coffee drinkers, and began using imported English dinner plates and teacups.
Prep time: 15 minutes. Full blog post with scrapple info, fast squash recipe and detailed packing info is here.
This was not a set up picture. The apple was resting on top of the post as I passed along a cycle track on my bike. I didn't even notice the ladybird until after I'd taken the first shot as initially I had stopped some distance away so as to use my longer lens.
What to do on a #rainy #saturday ? #twinpeaks and #scrapple 🗻🗻🐷🐷
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2 Comments on Instagram:
mayhemmonkey: Yes!
faith2boys: Look like a good plan.