• Re-send 1

    From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to ALL on Sunday, April 10, 2022 22:16:00
    I wiped out a packet. Here it is again.


    From: Jim Weller
    To: Denis Mosko
    Subj: microwave oven? ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

    Quoting Denis Mosko to Jim Weller <=-

    //Hello JIM, //

    You can make a workable oven out of a cardboard box wrapped inside and
    out with tinfoil. It sits on a grate supported by four dry rock-filled
    pop or beer cans

    I was describing a lightweight, makeshift oven for when you are
    camping in the forest and want to bake something when you only have
    an open wood fire for heat.

    Another fish camp method:

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Wet'suwet'en Campfire Bbq Salmon
    Categories: Native, Canadian, Camping, Salmon, Smoked
    Yield: 10 Servings

    1 Whole salmon; 7-10 lbs,
    - head and tail on
    S&P
    1 Alder stick; 1/4 inch thick
    4 feet long, bark removed
    4 Willow sticks; 18 " long

    Fish woven with willow branches on an alder stick.

    The Wet'suwet'en use alder in the barbecue pit and the smoke house
    for its heat and flavour.

    Prepare smoke house using hot smoke. Hang salmon at least 4 hours
    or overnight, until skin is firm. Build a large campfire and let
    it burn down to hot coals. Remove head and cut around gills
    removing all the bones. Working inside the fish, without cutting
    the skin, cut along both sides of the backbone, removing the back
    bone and tail. Open the fish and lay flat.

    Weave the alder stick through the fish where the backbone was.
    Weave willow sticks from side to side through the fish to keep it
    open and flat. Season with S&P. Stab salmon stick into the ground
    about 1 ft. from the coals, skin side facing the fire and cook 20
    minutes. Turn salmon around and cook another 20 minutes.

    Serve with baked potatoes baked on the coals, boiled sweet corn
    and warm bannock.

    Source: Feast! Canadian Native Cuisine For All Seasons
    By: Andrew George Jr.
    From: Jim Weller

    MMMMM

    Wet'suwet'en are the Indigenous Aboriginal people from the Bulkley
    River valley, in northern interior British Columbia. The Bulkley
    River is a tributary of the Skeena River, the second biggest
    Canadian salmon run river.

    The main town is Smithers where some of my granddaughter Neekha's
    relatives live including her half brother who is a Wet'suwet'en and
    Dutch Canadian Metis on his father's side. I've been there once and
    had their salmon.

    Cheers

    Jim


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