Mom’s Sloppy Joes

by 👩‍🍳 Cooking With a Southern Vibe in Music City USA 👩‍🍳, October 30, 2009

sloppy-joes

I’ve made this recipe for Sloppy Joes for thirty+ years now.  It’s just the BEST! It’s our Halloween favorite, and an annual tradition with our family; Sloppy Joes and potato chips every Halloween evening.  It’s one of the classic recipes that you just don’t mess with.  It’s perfect just the way it is…

~ jan

1 lb. ground beef
1 onion, chopped
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon white vinegar
2 heaping Tablespoons brown sugar
1 Cup Heinz Ketchup
1/4 cup water (if you double the recipe, don't double the water, just use 1/4 cup, it's perfect)
Cayenne Pepper to taste

Brown meat and onion, season with salt, pepper and cayenne pepper.

Drain, add remaining ingredients and simmer uncovered for 30 minutes.  If mixture gets too thick, add a bit more water. 

Note:  I usually double this recipe.  When the boys were little, they loved Velveeta Cheese melted on the top of the sloppy joes.  I would put the joes on the bun, top with the cheese, leave the top bun off, and nuke it until the cheese melted.  Velveeta is so “not cool” these days, but for some things it will always be the best!

Gourmet Magazine closing it’s doors, it’s a sad day in publishing….

by 👩‍🍳 Cooking With a Southern Vibe in Music City USA 👩‍🍳, October 05, 2009

When John Durkin, chef-owner of Trattoria Diane in Roslyn, was in his 20s and the idea of owning a fine restaurant was decades in the future, Gourmet magazine offered a window into another world. "I thought it was such an elegant magazine," he said, "with all those places in France and Italy - and the recipes always worked."

Durkin still gets Gourmet, but November's issue will be his last. A memo issued Monday by Condé Nast chief executive Chuck Townsend stated that Gourmet, which began publishing in 1940, will cease monthly publication.

According to Townsend, Condé Nast remains committed to the Gourmet brand, "retaining Gourmet's book publishing and television programming, and Gourmet recipes on Epicurious.com." Just last month, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt published "Gourmet Today: More than 1000 All-New Recipes for the Contemporary Kitchen," a cookbook edited by the magazine's editor, Ruth Reichl - perhaps the most prominent food editor in the country.

In addition to Gourmet, wrote Townsend, Cookie (launched in 2007 and self-described as "a lifestyle magazine for the modern mother"), Modern Bride and Elegant Bride will cease publication. However, Brides will increase its frequency from bimonthly to monthly.

Gourmet's sales of ad pages had been steadily declining. The September figures, announced in July, were down 52 percent from a year ago. Bon Appétit, Condé Nast's other heavy-hitting food magazine, will continue to be published. Its September figures were reported to be down only 40 percent. Bon Appétit also has a higher circulation (1.4 million as compared to Gourmet's 978,000, according to Condé Nast's September 2009 media kit), higher household income ($83,563 as compared to $81,179) and lower median age (49 as opposed to 50.3).

© Jan CAN Cook · THEME BY WATDESIGNEXPRESS