[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-02 Thread card

After man invented the extensive use of electricity etc. less than 200 years 
ago, or so, life has become much more entertaining. It's
understandable that before movies and all that, life was extremely
boring and dark so man had to come up with all kinds of stoopid stuff like 
Yogic Flying and Gods and stuff, just to entertain themselves?? :D



--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@... wrote:

 Excellent. That's *real*, and a celebration of the 
 little things in life that make life worth living. No
 one had to change the world, no one had to be all
 enlightened, and no one seemed in need of deeper
 meaning or importance. 
 
 Just as you say about a balsamic reduction, the Law
 Of Nature of a good life reduction seems to be to
 just simmer life slowly, without adding all that other
 crap like spirituality and self-importance.
 
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@ 
 wrote:
 
  Despite being the laziest person on the planet, overeating at Rory and 
  Rena's Easter potluck, sleeping like crap, and dragging my sorry carcass 
  out of bed at 7am, I actually had a very productive day. 
  
  First project: I decided to upgrade the iMac that serves up 
  http://alex.natel.net/ from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion. And rather than 
  simply running the downloaded upgrade app, I extracted the install data 
  from the download and used it to create a bootable USB flash drive. That 
  way, I always have bootable media from which to reinstall the OS, even if 
  the hard drive shits the bed.
  
  Second project: Putting together an EP-960 Teeter Hang Up inversion table. 
  The written instructions that come with it are worthless, and just as I was 
  about to call up the company and rip 'em a new one, I remembered the DVD 
  that came with it. So, I fired it up, and sure enough, the DVD has a 
  chapter that perfectly demonstrates proper assembly. Duh.
  
  Getting back to the potluck...
  
  Law of Nature: The positively absolutely unmistakably *BEST* way to cook 
  boneless skinless chicken breast is sous vide at 140 deg F for 3 hours.
  
  My favorite source of external validation is cooking outstanding food for 
  potlucks, and potlucks chez Rory and Rena are great because they are a 
  meat-friendly household. So, on Saturday morning, I cooked a couple organic 
  chicken breasts at 140 deg F for 3 hours and then popped the bag into the 
  fridge until Sunday morning. I then made some balsamic vinegar reduction, 
  using a recipe I found online that called for balsamic vinegar, soy sauce, 
  and brown sugar. Big mistake.
  
  Law of Nature: The *ONLY* ingredient in a balsamic vinegar reduction is 
  balsamic vinegar.
  
  The soy sauce and sugar ruined it, so I tossed it down the drain and made a 
  fresh batch in accord with Natural Law. 
  
  Rena was going to make roast lamb, and I suggested she buy some Crosse  
  Blackwell mint sauce, which is a vinegar based mint sauce, instead of that 
  godawful, radioactive green, jelly crap. She couldn't find any, so I made 
  my own version of it. I made a cider vinegar reduction, sweetened it with 
  jaggery, and infused mint leaves in the hot reduction. 
  
  I woke up Sunday morning and did my usual Sunday ritual: had my coffee, 
  turned on the far infrared sauna, and watched CBS Sunday Morning from 
  inside the sauna. After that, I hit the kitchen. First task: make 
  lime-ginger flash pickles. Inspired by this video:
  
  http://youtu.be/yuDFFJ2mazg
  
  I make a pickling liquid from either fresh squeezed lemons or limes and 
  then use a vacuum canister and the vacuum port on my foodvac to vacuum 
  infuse the liquid into the cucumber slices. This time, I used limes, and 
  for the first time, used the single-gear juicer to make fresh ginger juice 
  to add to the citrus. In the future, I won't add quite so much ginger, as 
  the pickles were a bit medicinally bitter. I almost didn't bring them to 
  the potluck, but I'm glad I did because people LOVED them. 
  
  Second task: make the chicken breast hors d'oeuvres. I cut the chicken 
  breast into neat little rectangles and topped them with fresh basil and/or 
  fresh tarragon and half a cherry tomato, with a toothpick holding them 
  together. Then I drizzled them with the balsamic vinegar reduction. I tried 
  one and was totally blown away... unbelievably delicious. What's great 
  about cooking chicken at 140 degrees is that very little liquid separates 
  out; it's fully cooked, and any microorganisms are destroyed, but the meat 
  is not subject to higher temperatures where the proteins contract and 
  express out all the moisture. At the potluck, the chicken breast was a HUGE 
  hit; people raved about it, and they polished off the entire platter.
 





[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-02 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@... wrote:

 Excellent. That's *real*, and a celebration of the 
 little things in life that make life worth living. No
 one had to change the world, no one had to be all
 enlightened, and no one seemed in need of deeper
 meaning or importance.

No one had to be in Paris, either. ;-)
 

 
 Just as you say about a balsamic reduction, the Law
 Of Nature of a good life reduction seems to be to
 just simmer life slowly, without adding all that other
 crap like spirituality and self-importance.
 
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@ 
 wrote:
 
  Despite being the laziest person on the planet, overeating at Rory and 
  Rena's Easter potluck, sleeping like crap, and dragging my sorry carcass 
  out of bed at 7am, I actually had a very productive day. 
  
  First project: I decided to upgrade the iMac that serves up 
  http://alex.natel.net/ from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion. And rather than 
  simply running the downloaded upgrade app, I extracted the install data 
  from the download and used it to create a bootable USB flash drive. That 
  way, I always have bootable media from which to reinstall the OS, even if 
  the hard drive shits the bed.
  
  Second project: Putting together an EP-960 Teeter Hang Up inversion table. 
  The written instructions that come with it are worthless, and just as I was 
  about to call up the company and rip 'em a new one, I remembered the DVD 
  that came with it. So, I fired it up, and sure enough, the DVD has a 
  chapter that perfectly demonstrates proper assembly. Duh.
  
  Getting back to the potluck...
  
  Law of Nature: The positively absolutely unmistakably *BEST* way to cook 
  boneless skinless chicken breast is sous vide at 140 deg F for 3 hours.
  
  My favorite source of external validation is cooking outstanding food for 
  potlucks, and potlucks chez Rory and Rena are great because they are a 
  meat-friendly household. So, on Saturday morning, I cooked a couple organic 
  chicken breasts at 140 deg F for 3 hours and then popped the bag into the 
  fridge until Sunday morning. I then made some balsamic vinegar reduction, 
  using a recipe I found online that called for balsamic vinegar, soy sauce, 
  and brown sugar. Big mistake.
  
  Law of Nature: The *ONLY* ingredient in a balsamic vinegar reduction is 
  balsamic vinegar.
  
  The soy sauce and sugar ruined it, so I tossed it down the drain and made a 
  fresh batch in accord with Natural Law. 
  
  Rena was going to make roast lamb, and I suggested she buy some Crosse  
  Blackwell mint sauce, which is a vinegar based mint sauce, instead of that 
  godawful, radioactive green, jelly crap. She couldn't find any, so I made 
  my own version of it. I made a cider vinegar reduction, sweetened it with 
  jaggery, and infused mint leaves in the hot reduction. 
  
  I woke up Sunday morning and did my usual Sunday ritual: had my coffee, 
  turned on the far infrared sauna, and watched CBS Sunday Morning from 
  inside the sauna. After that, I hit the kitchen. First task: make 
  lime-ginger flash pickles. Inspired by this video:
  
  http://youtu.be/yuDFFJ2mazg
  
  I make a pickling liquid from either fresh squeezed lemons or limes and 
  then use a vacuum canister and the vacuum port on my foodvac to vacuum 
  infuse the liquid into the cucumber slices. This time, I used limes, and 
  for the first time, used the single-gear juicer to make fresh ginger juice 
  to add to the citrus. In the future, I won't add quite so much ginger, as 
  the pickles were a bit medicinally bitter. I almost didn't bring them to 
  the potluck, but I'm glad I did because people LOVED them. 
  
  Second task: make the chicken breast hors d'oeuvres. I cut the chicken 
  breast into neat little rectangles and topped them with fresh basil and/or 
  fresh tarragon and half a cherry tomato, with a toothpick holding them 
  together. Then I drizzled them with the balsamic vinegar reduction. I tried 
  one and was totally blown away... unbelievably delicious. What's great 
  about cooking chicken at 140 degrees is that very little liquid separates 
  out; it's fully cooked, and any microorganisms are destroyed, but the meat 
  is not subject to higher temperatures where the proteins contract and 
  express out all the moisture. At the potluck, the chicken breast was a HUGE 
  hit; people raved about it, and they polished off the entire platter.
 





[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-02 Thread Ann


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, authfriend authfriend@... wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@ wrote:
 
  Excellent. That's *real*, and a celebration of the 
  little things in life that make life worth living. No
  one had to change the world, no one had to be all
  enlightened, and no one seemed in need of deeper
  meaning or importance.
 
 No one had to be in Paris, either. ;-)  

You got it. And no one had to be smirked at, belittled or denounced. 
  
 
  
  Just as you say about a balsamic reduction, the Law
  Of Nature of a good life reduction seems to be to
  just simmer life slowly, without adding all that other
  crap like spirituality and self-importance.
  
  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@ 
  wrote:
  
   Despite being the laziest person on the planet, overeating at Rory and 
   Rena's Easter potluck, sleeping like crap, and dragging my sorry carcass 
   out of bed at 7am, I actually had a very productive day. 
   
   First project: I decided to upgrade the iMac that serves up 
   http://alex.natel.net/ from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion. And rather 
   than simply running the downloaded upgrade app, I extracted the install 
   data from the download and used it to create a bootable USB flash drive. 
   That way, I always have bootable media from which to reinstall the OS, 
   even if the hard drive shits the bed.
   
   Second project: Putting together an EP-960 Teeter Hang Up inversion 
   table. The written instructions that come with it are worthless, and just 
   as I was about to call up the company and rip 'em a new one, I remembered 
   the DVD that came with it. So, I fired it up, and sure enough, the DVD 
   has a chapter that perfectly demonstrates proper assembly. Duh.
   
   Getting back to the potluck...
   
   Law of Nature: The positively absolutely unmistakably *BEST* way to cook 
   boneless skinless chicken breast is sous vide at 140 deg F for 3 hours.
   
   My favorite source of external validation is cooking outstanding food for 
   potlucks, and potlucks chez Rory and Rena are great because they are a 
   meat-friendly household. So, on Saturday morning, I cooked a couple 
   organic chicken breasts at 140 deg F for 3 hours and then popped the bag 
   into the fridge until Sunday morning. I then made some balsamic vinegar 
   reduction, using a recipe I found online that called for balsamic 
   vinegar, soy sauce, and brown sugar. Big mistake.
   
   Law of Nature: The *ONLY* ingredient in a balsamic vinegar reduction is 
   balsamic vinegar.
   
   The soy sauce and sugar ruined it, so I tossed it down the drain and made 
   a fresh batch in accord with Natural Law. 
   
   Rena was going to make roast lamb, and I suggested she buy some Crosse  
   Blackwell mint sauce, which is a vinegar based mint sauce, instead of 
   that godawful, radioactive green, jelly crap. She couldn't find any, so I 
   made my own version of it. I made a cider vinegar reduction, sweetened it 
   with jaggery, and infused mint leaves in the hot reduction. 
   
   I woke up Sunday morning and did my usual Sunday ritual: had my coffee, 
   turned on the far infrared sauna, and watched CBS Sunday Morning from 
   inside the sauna. After that, I hit the kitchen. First task: make 
   lime-ginger flash pickles. Inspired by this video:
   
   http://youtu.be/yuDFFJ2mazg
   
   I make a pickling liquid from either fresh squeezed lemons or limes and 
   then use a vacuum canister and the vacuum port on my foodvac to vacuum 
   infuse the liquid into the cucumber slices. This time, I used limes, and 
   for the first time, used the single-gear juicer to make fresh ginger 
   juice to add to the citrus. In the future, I won't add quite so much 
   ginger, as the pickles were a bit medicinally bitter. I almost didn't 
   bring them to the potluck, but I'm glad I did because people LOVED them. 
   
   Second task: make the chicken breast hors d'oeuvres. I cut the chicken 
   breast into neat little rectangles and topped them with fresh basil 
   and/or fresh tarragon and half a cherry tomato, with a toothpick holding 
   them together. Then I drizzled them with the balsamic vinegar reduction. 
   I tried one and was totally blown away... unbelievably delicious. What's 
   great about cooking chicken at 140 degrees is that very little liquid 
   separates out; it's fully cooked, and any microorganisms are destroyed, 
   but the meat is not subject to higher temperatures where the proteins 
   contract and express out all the moisture. At the potluck, the chicken 
   breast was a HUGE hit; people raved about it, and they polished off the 
   entire platter.
  
 





[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-01 Thread Ann
Alex, have I ever said I loved you?

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@... 
wrote:

 Despite being the laziest person on the planet, overeating at Rory and Rena's 
 Easter potluck, sleeping like crap, and dragging my sorry carcass out of bed 
 at 7am, I actually had a very productive day. 
 
 First project: I decided to upgrade the iMac that serves up 
 http://alex.natel.net/ from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion. And rather than 
 simply running the downloaded upgrade app, I extracted the install data from 
 the download and used it to create a bootable USB flash drive. That way, I 
 always have bootable media from which to reinstall the OS, even if the hard 
 drive shits the bed.
 
 Second project: Putting together an EP-960 Teeter Hang Up inversion table. 
 The written instructions that come with it are worthless, and just as I was 
 about to call up the company and rip 'em a new one, I remembered the DVD that 
 came with it. So, I fired it up, and sure enough, the DVD has a chapter that 
 perfectly demonstrates proper assembly. Duh.
 
 Getting back to the potluck...
 
 Law of Nature: The positively absolutely unmistakably *BEST* way to cook 
 boneless skinless chicken breast is sous vide at 140 deg F for 3 hours.
 
 My favorite source of external validation is cooking outstanding food for 
 potlucks, and potlucks chez Rory and Rena are great because they are a 
 meat-friendly household. So, on Saturday morning, I cooked a couple organic 
 chicken breasts at 140 deg F for 3 hours and then popped the bag into the 
 fridge until Sunday morning. I then made some balsamic vinegar reduction, 
 using a recipe I found online that called for balsamic vinegar, soy sauce, 
 and brown sugar. Big mistake.
 
 Law of Nature: The *ONLY* ingredient in a balsamic vinegar reduction is 
 balsamic vinegar.
 
 The soy sauce and sugar ruined it, so I tossed it down the drain and made a 
 fresh batch in accord with Natural Law. 
 
 Rena was going to make roast lamb, and I suggested she buy some Crosse  
 Blackwell mint sauce, which is a vinegar based mint sauce, instead of that 
 godawful, radioactive green, jelly crap. She couldn't find any, so I made my 
 own version of it. I made a cider vinegar reduction, sweetened it with 
 jaggery, and infused mint leaves in the hot reduction. 
 
 I woke up Sunday morning and did my usual Sunday ritual: had my coffee, 
 turned on the far infrared sauna, and watched CBS Sunday Morning from inside 
 the sauna. After that, I hit the kitchen. First task: make lime-ginger flash 
 pickles. Inspired by this video:
 
 http://youtu.be/yuDFFJ2mazg
 
 I make a pickling liquid from either fresh squeezed lemons or limes and then 
 use a vacuum canister and the vacuum port on my foodvac to vacuum infuse the 
 liquid into the cucumber slices. This time, I used limes, and for the first 
 time, used the single-gear juicer to make fresh ginger juice to add to the 
 citrus. In the future, I won't add quite so much ginger, as the pickles were 
 a bit medicinally bitter. I almost didn't bring them to the potluck, but I'm 
 glad I did because people LOVED them. 
 
 Second task: make the chicken breast hors d'oeuvres. I cut the chicken breast 
 into neat little rectangles and topped them with fresh basil and/or fresh 
 tarragon and half a cherry tomato, with a toothpick holding them together. 
 Then I drizzled them with the balsamic vinegar reduction. I tried one and was 
 totally blown away... unbelievably delicious. What's great about cooking 
 chicken at 140 degrees is that very little liquid separates out; it's fully 
 cooked, and any microorganisms are destroyed, but the meat is not subject to 
 higher temperatures where the proteins contract and express out all the 
 moisture. At the potluck, the chicken breast was a HUGE hit; people raved 
 about it, and they polished off the entire platter.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-01 Thread Alex Stanley


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Emily Reyn emilymae.reyn@... wrote:

 Fabulous Alex!  I will try this for a boneless, skinless chicken
 breast (although I like the skin, I sometimes buy them).  9.5
 times out of 10 I overcook them and they come out dry - sauce or
 no sauce.  They can be undercooked one minute and overcooked the
 next.  I had given up.  


Sorry to be a Debbie Downer, but you need a special water oven to cook sous 
vide. Chefs first started cooking this way using laboratory grade water baths, 
which cost $1000+. Some years ago, a company that makes digital temperature 
controllers came out with a $120 unit into which you plug in a crock pot or 
rice cooker, filled with water, and the controller turns the electricity on and 
off, keeping the water at exactly the temperature it's set at. That's the 
set-up I use, but there's now a company that makes a reasonably priced consumer 
water bath:

http://www.sousvidesupreme.com/

Still kinda pricey, and for best results, you should have a foodvac for vacuum 
packing the food to be cooked. If you already own a crock pot, and you have 
$150 burning a hole in your pocket, you can still get the latest version of the 
unit I use:

http://www.auberins.com/index.php?main_page=product_infocPath=8products_id=44




[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-01 Thread Alex Stanley


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@... wrote:

 Alex, have I ever said I loved you?
 

No, I don't believe you ever have. But, if the urge to do so becomes too 
overwhelming, I'll try to keep my manly pheromones to a minimum.



Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-01 Thread Emily Reyn
Ha ha ha...yes, I breezed over the term sous vide.  I'm not that good a cook 
- just looked it up - sounds a bit complicated for my skill level.  I just 
started cooking two years ago and then took last year off, mostly, except for a 
few good soups.  Oh dear, oh dear. I'm ready to pick it up again though.  
Perhaps I'll just go with a traditional cooking method for a naked chicken 
breast (not leaving the meat alone to dry out while I go out and mow the lawn) 
and start playing around with reductionssmile.  Your inspired post has 
inspired me




 From: Alex Stanley j_alexander_stan...@yahoo.com
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, April 1, 2013 6:55 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0
 

  


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Emily Reyn emilymae.reyn@... wrote:

 Fabulous Alex!  I will try this for a boneless, skinless chicken
 breast (although I like the skin, I sometimes buy them).  9.5
 times out of 10 I overcook them and they come out dry - sauce or
 no sauce.  They can be undercooked one minute and overcooked the
 next.  I had given up.  

Sorry to be a Debbie Downer, but you need a special water oven to cook sous 
vide. Chefs first started cooking this way using laboratory grade water baths, 
which cost $1000+. Some years ago, a company that makes digital temperature 
controllers came out with a $120 unit into which you plug in a crock pot or 
rice cooker, filled with water, and the controller turns the electricity on 
and off, keeping the water at exactly the temperature it's set at. That's the 
set-up I use, but there's now a company that makes a reasonably priced 
consumer water bath:

http://www.sousvidesupreme.com/

Still kinda pricey, and for best results, you should have a foodvac for vacuum 
packing the food to be cooked. If you already own a crock pot, and you have 
$150 burning a hole in your pocket, you can still get the latest version of 
the unit I use:

http://www.auberins.com/index.php?main_page=product_infocPath=8products_id=44


 



[FairfieldLife] Re: Free Man In Fairfield, v1.0

2013-04-01 Thread turquoiseb
Excellent. That's *real*, and a celebration of the 
little things in life that make life worth living. No
one had to change the world, no one had to be all
enlightened, and no one seemed in need of deeper
meaning or importance. 

Just as you say about a balsamic reduction, the Law
Of Nature of a good life reduction seems to be to
just simmer life slowly, without adding all that other
crap like spirituality and self-importance.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@... 
wrote:

 Despite being the laziest person on the planet, overeating at Rory and Rena's 
 Easter potluck, sleeping like crap, and dragging my sorry carcass out of bed 
 at 7am, I actually had a very productive day. 
 
 First project: I decided to upgrade the iMac that serves up 
 http://alex.natel.net/ from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion. And rather than 
 simply running the downloaded upgrade app, I extracted the install data from 
 the download and used it to create a bootable USB flash drive. That way, I 
 always have bootable media from which to reinstall the OS, even if the hard 
 drive shits the bed.
 
 Second project: Putting together an EP-960 Teeter Hang Up inversion table. 
 The written instructions that come with it are worthless, and just as I was 
 about to call up the company and rip 'em a new one, I remembered the DVD that 
 came with it. So, I fired it up, and sure enough, the DVD has a chapter that 
 perfectly demonstrates proper assembly. Duh.
 
 Getting back to the potluck...
 
 Law of Nature: The positively absolutely unmistakably *BEST* way to cook 
 boneless skinless chicken breast is sous vide at 140 deg F for 3 hours.
 
 My favorite source of external validation is cooking outstanding food for 
 potlucks, and potlucks chez Rory and Rena are great because they are a 
 meat-friendly household. So, on Saturday morning, I cooked a couple organic 
 chicken breasts at 140 deg F for 3 hours and then popped the bag into the 
 fridge until Sunday morning. I then made some balsamic vinegar reduction, 
 using a recipe I found online that called for balsamic vinegar, soy sauce, 
 and brown sugar. Big mistake.
 
 Law of Nature: The *ONLY* ingredient in a balsamic vinegar reduction is 
 balsamic vinegar.
 
 The soy sauce and sugar ruined it, so I tossed it down the drain and made a 
 fresh batch in accord with Natural Law. 
 
 Rena was going to make roast lamb, and I suggested she buy some Crosse  
 Blackwell mint sauce, which is a vinegar based mint sauce, instead of that 
 godawful, radioactive green, jelly crap. She couldn't find any, so I made my 
 own version of it. I made a cider vinegar reduction, sweetened it with 
 jaggery, and infused mint leaves in the hot reduction. 
 
 I woke up Sunday morning and did my usual Sunday ritual: had my coffee, 
 turned on the far infrared sauna, and watched CBS Sunday Morning from inside 
 the sauna. After that, I hit the kitchen. First task: make lime-ginger flash 
 pickles. Inspired by this video:
 
 http://youtu.be/yuDFFJ2mazg
 
 I make a pickling liquid from either fresh squeezed lemons or limes and then 
 use a vacuum canister and the vacuum port on my foodvac to vacuum infuse the 
 liquid into the cucumber slices. This time, I used limes, and for the first 
 time, used the single-gear juicer to make fresh ginger juice to add to the 
 citrus. In the future, I won't add quite so much ginger, as the pickles were 
 a bit medicinally bitter. I almost didn't bring them to the potluck, but I'm 
 glad I did because people LOVED them. 
 
 Second task: make the chicken breast hors d'oeuvres. I cut the chicken breast 
 into neat little rectangles and topped them with fresh basil and/or fresh 
 tarragon and half a cherry tomato, with a toothpick holding them together. 
 Then I drizzled them with the balsamic vinegar reduction. I tried one and was 
 totally blown away... unbelievably delicious. What's great about cooking 
 chicken at 140 degrees is that very little liquid separates out; it's fully 
 cooked, and any microorganisms are destroyed, but the meat is not subject to 
 higher temperatures where the proteins contract and express out all the 
 moisture. At the potluck, the chicken breast was a HUGE hit; people raved 
 about it, and they polished off the entire platter.