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by Tammy Davis
In
This Issue:
NOTES FROM
TAMMY
BONUS
RECIPES
WEBSITE NEWS
MESSAGE BOARD UPDATES FROM TAMMY
CONTESTS
GOURMET Q&A
COOKIN' AT THE
KEYBOARD WITH SHELLEY
CONSULTANT NEWS
30 DAY
GOURMET IN THE NEWS
COOK’S CHUCKLE
WEBSITE OF THE MONTH
COMING UP IN FEBRUARY
FINAL THOUGHTS
NOTES
FROM TAMMY
Happy New Year, everyone! I
can’t believe another year is gone… they go so fast anymore!
With the New Year comes change, of course. This is the first of many
newsletters I will put together for you, as Nanci has handed that job
off to me. My goal is to have the newsletter out the first week of every
month. Except for this month, when we have people out on vacations
because of the holiday. Also, we’re changing our contests a little bit.
The Crazy Cook and Do a Good Deed contests will be combined into one and
re-named. The Freezer Cook of the Month contest will be chosen from
entries about doing a good deed with your freezer cooking, a crazy story
that happened on your cooking day, an interesting story about your
cooking day or freezer cooking experience, a helpful tip you post on the
boards, etc. Entries may be submitted via email to
tammy@30daygourmet.com
or you can post it on the message boards under the appropriate category.
The Recipe of the Month contest remains the same. The prize for each
contest will be a $25 check, or your choice of $25 worth of product from
our on-line store.
Have you made your New Year’s Resolutions yet? I won’t ask if you’ve
broken them already. Just keep in mind it takes 21 days of doing
something before it becomes a habit. So don’t give up on yourself… keep
trying! Nanci said a couple of years ago that she gives herself the
month of January to get her resolutions set and started. Sounds like a
great plan to me!
Since a lot of New Year’s Resolutions have to do with getting organized,
I’ve asked our consultants to share some of their organizational tips
with us. I got quite a few great ones, some of which I plan to use
myself!
Dee Hilliard says “I found that dry erase boards with magnets on the
back work great for fridge & freezer. I'm able to leave DH a message of
what’s in the fridge & what to do with it. For the freezer, I list what
I have in it. I found my boards at a teacher supply store.” I read this
and said “Why didn’t I think of that?!?” I could especially see it
working for me with the fridge… not only to keep track of left-overs,
but to list directions of what I need my hubby to put in the oven if he
gets home before me.
Deb Robison shares another great tip. “One thing I do to make my cooking
day easier is to keep a few boxes of supplies, that I store between
cooking sessions.
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In the first box I keep items
to store food, such as ziplock bags, freezer containers, extra
casseroles or other freezer-safe dishes. As we use food from the
freezer, we wash it and it goes back to the box. I also keep a sharpie
marker, freezer tape and extra foil wrap in this box.
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In another box are the super
sized bowls, spoons and cookware I use for my cooking day.
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In a third box (or more) are
extra things I've purchased in-between cooking days. These items are
non-perishables, like canned goods, dried pasta, seasonings, etc. that
were on sale. Sometimes I'll take something from this box if there is a
call for food items for the local soup kitchen or pantry. I also keep a
packet of my favorite Chai Tea in the box. This is my treat to keep me
going!” What a great idea!! I would bet most of us would say we didn’t
have enough room in our kitchens. As long as you had somewhere to store
your boxes, this would really help to give you more space in your
kitchen.
Joyce Cassell shares how she maximized the space in her chest freezer.
“One thing that really helped for organizing my chest freezer was to get
some plastic bins to make compartments. I measured the inside of the
freezer and then went to Target with tape measure in hand. I am sure it
looked funny if anyone watched me as I set up boxes, bins, and garbage
cans in the aisle trying to get as close to filling the space as I
could. I now have 2 layers in the freezer and have mapped it out so I
know which bin things are in. If something is buried in the bottom I
just have to remove the bin on top and maybe move some of the things in
the one bin. It is much easier to defrost and keep inventory. I put the
code for the storage section in the description.” I don’t have a chest
freezer, but can definitely see the value in this tip! I’m sure the next
time I’m in Wal-Mart or Target, I’ll see someone setting up baskets and
bins in the aisle like Joyce did!
If you would like to see
Joyce's chest freezer inventory simply
click
here to download it. The is a Microsoft Word document, so you'll
need to have Microsoft Word installed on your computer in order to read
it.
Carol Santee shares “5 Quick Tips for Pantry Organization” with
us:
“Even the smallest pantry space can be organized so that all of your
staples are within reach. Take a look at the picture for 5 simple things
you can do to organize your pantry.
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Install a door rack. You
can find these at your local home improvement store. You can use them to
store spices, canned goods, bottles, etc. If you are using them for
spices and you have a large variety of spices, arrange the rows
alphabetically. You can even label each row so you know what goes where.
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If you have wire shelves,
install a small hanging basket to hold packets. This could be used for
taco seasoning mix, onion soup mix, Kool Aid, etc.
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Install extra shelving and
use pull out drawers. This allows you to get to the items in the back of
the cupboard with very little effort.
-
If you pack lunches, set
aside a place to store all your gear. This includes snack bags, sandwich
bags, snack items, thermoses or any canned goods you use for lunch.
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Be careful to put tall items
in the back and shorter items in the front. This way you’ll be able to
see everything and not have to dig through the shelf to find what you
are looking for. It also helps you tell at a glance if you have an
ingredient on hand so you do not over purchase.”
If you’re fortunate enough to have a pantry, Carol’s tips will help. I
especially agree with her idea of installing a door rack, extra shelving
and the basket to hold packets. One of the first things we did when we
moved into our newly-built home was buy more of the white-wire shelving
to add to every closet in the house. We easily doubled and even tripled
our storage space, including in the pantry! My current pantry had blank
wall space between the inside of the door jamb and the front of the
shelf. I bought shelf racks to line that space, floor to ceiling. Look
at the space you have, measure, and go see what your home improvement
store has that will help you get the most out of your space.
Caryn Parker shares her idea. “It may seem like a no brainer, but after
a few cooking days, I finally figured out that it is best to separate my
meals out on my freezer shelves as I put them in. I have four shelves,
and usually make three of each entree, so I put one portion of each
entree on each shelf. That way, when I get in my freezer I work through
one shelf at a time. It keeps me organized, and I don't end up with 5 of
the same dish tucked in the back of the shelf like I used to! If you
have a chest freezer, I suggest using paper or plastic bags for each
week.” Another great idea to help your freezer be easier to use!
I hope you’ve gotten some practical ideas you can put to use! The
important thing is to think about how you might be able to make the tips
work for you. Maybe not exactly as posted, but adjusted to work better
for you. What organizational tips can you share with us? Post them on
the message boards under
Newsletter Chatter… I’m looking forward to reading everyone’s
ideas!
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BONUS RECIPES
I don’t think anything is
more welcoming than coming home to the wonderful smells of dinner
cooking in the slow cooker! Especially when it’s cold and nippy outside!
So I went looking for some new slow cooker recipes this month. Did you
know you can make dessert in your slow cooker? Imagine coming home to a
house that smelled like chocolate! I’d be asking “Where do I sign up?!”
If you haven’t had much experience with slow cookers, don’t be
intimidated, because they are very easy to use. For the most part, you
put the food in, put the lid on and turn it on. Check back when the
recipe says it should be done. For a lot of years, I lifted the lid to
stir the recipe a few times during the day. It turns out you actually
shouldn’t do that, because of the heat it lets out. Then it takes the
slow cooker about 20 minutes to re-heat. Do that 3 or 4 times a day, and
you just lost an hour off your cooking time! For more tips about using a
slow cooker,
click
here to read some commonly asked questions about the Crock Pot
Slow Cooker.
Simple Spaghetti
My family raved about this
recipe! They even happily ate the leftovers! And it couldn’t be easier.
You mix up the sauce, with cooked ground beef and canned mushrooms, and
freeze it. The thawed sauce is cooked in the slow cooker, and you add
the dry spaghetti noodles to cook for the last 45-60 minutes. Very
saucy, great flavor; you can’t go wrong here!
Click here
to view/print this recipe!
Layered Mexican Chicken Casserole
This casserole gets layered
in the slow cooker. Definitely no stirring needed
on this one! I love the meld of flavors in this meal. And it isn’t
overly spicy, which is good for me, ‘coz I’m a wimp for spicy foods.
Kids and adults will appreciate this for dinner.
Click here
to view/print this recipe!
Homemade Cincinnati-style Chili
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If you’re fortunate enough to
live in Ohio and have access to a Skyline Chili restaurant, I hope you
appreciate it!! ‘Coz Skyline is hard to come by when you move away!!
Five months after we moved from OH, friends were driving to WV to visit
us. They called to let us know they were on the way and when to expect
them. They off-handedly asked if we needed anything. I jokingly said
“Yeah… run through the Skyline Drive-Thu on your way out of town!” Lots
of laughs and “Yeah, right!” met that request. Didn’t they show up 5
hours later with two 5-ways for us?!?! They went right in the freezer,
to be enjoyed at a later date. And boy, were they! My brother-in-law and
his family visited us a couple months ago, and brought some canned
Skyline for us. You’d think they were cans of gold, as excited as we
were to see them! I think that’s going to start being the “price of
admission” when anyone from OH comes to visit us… you can have a place
to stay, as long as you bring a couple cans of Skyline with you!
If you suffer Skyline withdrawals, then this recipe is for you! It’s not
exactly what you get in the restaurant, obviously, but it is a close
second, especially when you can’t get Skyline at all. If you have no
idea what I’m talking about, try the recipe and see for yourself. For
the un-initiated, basic Skyline is served as a 3-way… spaghetti with
chili and lots of finely grated cheddar cheese on top. A 4-way adds
kidney beans or diced onion on top of the chili. A 5-way is spaghetti,
chili, kidney beans, diced onion and a mound of finely grated cheddar
cheese. Oyster crackers are served on the side, and Tabasco sauce is
optional. Then some day when you’re in OH and see a Skyline Chili
restaurant, stop in for lunch and see what all the fuss is about.
Click here
to view/print this recipe!
Triple Chocolate Delight
Dessert in the slow cooker… I never even thought about the possibility.
Until this recipe caught my eye! What could be better than triple
chocolate? My family raved
about this one. You serve it warm, in a bowl, with a scoop of vanilla
ice cream. The texture of the dessert is different… it’s not gooey, but
it’s not a normal cake texture either. Very rich and dark-chocolate
tasting.
Click here
to view/print this recipe!
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WEBSITE NEWS FROM NANCI
Updates to Members section coming!
Curtis is working on updating the Members' section to include:
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FREE extra recipes. These are the same as the 50 we have always had
except they now include nutritional info and you will be able to
download them as one large file. (There are actually only 43 recipes now
since we took 7 of them for the 4th edition book).
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3rd edition recipes not included in the 4th edition. These also include
nutritional info. (33 recipes)
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Download section for software owners. This will include zip files for:
-newsletter recipes prior to 1-03
-Recipe of the Month winners prior to 1-03
-43 Free Recipes
-33 Recipes from 3rd edition manual not included in 4th edition
-65 Recipes from 4th edition manual (as of 2-04 software will be
pre-loaded with recipes from the 4th edition manual)
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Freezer Cooking Manual recipe additions/variations along with
nutritional info
We had hoped to have this all done before the 4th edition manuals began
shipping but it's a big job and he's close so be patient! Thanks!
Trying to get organized?
Do you have recipes here, there and everywhere? Order a 30 Day Gourmet
Cook's Assistant Notebook and get your act together! This 1-1/2" binder
comes with 12 tabbed dividers and 13 additional page protectors.
Click here to learn more!
OTHER NEW PRODUCTS
Healthy Freezer Cooking: A Guide to Creating Nutritious Meals by Carol
Santee.
Carol (author Freezer Lunches to Go) has come up with another winner
here. Want to learn how to reduce fat, sugar, cholesterol, and salt in
recipes? Then this is the book for you! Book includes sample recipes
that show you how to change recipes, tips on menu planning, and 25
recipes. We will send out a special e-mail as soon as the new ebook is
available for purchase.
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MESSAGE BOARD UPDATES FROM
TAMMY
The message boards continue to be busy! We had 294 posts in November/December.
Is
Weight Watchers on your plan for the New Year? Join some fellow
WW’s for encouragement, as well as ideas how you can use freezer cooking
to help you count your points.
How about just plain
eating healthier for the New Year? Have some advice to offer?
Do you need some help getting a better handle on
menu planning? Help is just a click away!
Need some help with
cooking dried beans? Lots of options and ideas here.
Do you have a large roaster oven that you use for your cooking day? What
recipes do you regularly use it for with good results? Someone wants to
know!
Click here.
Check out the rest of the message boards when you get a chance… they are
a great source of ideas, recipes, tips, and encouragement! If you have
any questions about the message boards, please email me! You can reach
me at tammy@30daygourmet.com.
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CONTEST
WINNERS
Recipe of the Month Winner
This month’s winner is Lynn Mims from Effingham, SC with her recipe for
Italian Meatball Subs. We quickly decided that this recipe made the best
meatball subs we’d ever eaten!
As far as the actual cooking goes, it couldn’t be easier. Mix up the
meatballs, mix up the sauce, layer them in the slow cooker and check
back in 4 hours. The recipe is versatile too. You can freeze the
meatballs raw or cooked, in or out of the sauce. Freeze each cooked
recipe together, to feed your family, or divide it up into single
serving sizes for snacks or individual meals. You decide, based on the
needs of your family.
Let’s meet Lynn:
My husband, Rondal and I have three wonderful children. Our two boys, RJ
and Timothy are 20 and 18. Our daughter, Laura, is 10. RJ's girlfriend,
Melissa, also lives with us, so that she can go to school here. Rondal
is a train engineer/conductor and I work on a web helpdesk for an
insurance company. I love to cross stitch and crochet. I stay busy
taking Laura to 4-H horse club meetings and soon, riding lessons as
well.
I found 30 Day Gourmet last year when I was playing on the internet. On
that day, my life changed forever. I was one of these people that bought
groceries for the week, got home and put all the meats in the freezer.
Then I dragged into the house each evening around 5:30. I would sit down
a few minutes because I dreaded going into the kitchen. Then I would
stare in the freezer trying to decide what to cook that night. I loved
to cook, but I didn't really want to cook "right then"!!
I started reading the website and I thought "oh my gosh" I need to do
this. I ordered the manual, planned a small cooking day for "two weeks"
and I was hooked. Now, I'm sure my coworkers want to hit me on the head
at times because I just can't quit talking about my new way of cooking.
Thank you 30 Day Gourmet, you have changed my life.
Click here
to view/print the January Recipe of the Month.
Submit your recipe for the Recipe of the
Month contest!
You too can submit a recipe for this contest! Just post it on our
Cook’s
Corner message boards under the appropriate recipe category. All
submitted recipes are considered, as long as they include freezer
directions and your email address so we can contact you. The winner
receives a check for $25 or $25 worth of their favorite products from
our on-line store.
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FREEZER COOK OF THE MONTH CONTEST
WINNER
Our first winner in the new Freezer Cook of the Month contest is Linda
W., with the following funny story.
"This is actually a crazy cooking story that
involved my husband. I had planned to make Beef Stew one day for supper,
but had to run an unexpected errand before I could start the stew. My
husband said he would be glad to get it going for me. When I returned
from the errand he told me I needed to get garlic the next time I went
to the grocery store since he had used all I had. I didn't understand
this since I knew I had close to a head and the stew recipe only called
for one clove. I then realized that he thought a clove meant the entire
thing! He had put a whole head of garlic in our stew. We tried to eat
it, but as much as I like garlic, that was just too much. I still kid
him about that and he hasn't made stew since."
Congratulations, Linda! I was unable to reach her before the newsletter
went out, so we will have to meet Linda next month. You too can get in
on the winning by posting your funny story, good deed, cooking tip,
assembly day story, etc. on the message boards under the appropriate
category, or email it to me at
tammy@30daygourmet.com.
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GOURMET Q&A FROM TAMMY
| Q. |
I don’t like to hand out my email address to everyone who asks
for it. Why do you need it? If I post it in my profile, isn’t it
likely to be skimmed off there by exactly the people I don’t want
to have it? Laurel |
| A. |
Good question, Laurel! Since your
email is unique to you, we use it to register you on our web site
and message boards. Your email is only for our internal use, which
means it will NEVER be sold or redistributed to anyone outside of
30 Day Gourmet, Inc. It is very unlikely that someone will lift
your email from your profile, because it’s too much work for them
to find it. People who are looking to scrape email addresses from
web sites lift them in bulk from the “Contact Us” portion of the
page, so it’s actually us at 30 Day Gourmet who have our emails
lifted and used by unscrupulous characters! And we never share
your personal information with anyone. Never.
When you give us your email, you are not setting yourself up to
get inundated with emails from us either. If you subscribe to the
Newsletter, you will receive that. If we have a special
announcement, we may send out an occasional email about that. But
I can count on one hand all the times we’ve done that in the last
few years. And have a few fingers left over!
If you choose to display your email in your profile for the
message boards, you may hear from another cook who has a question
about your post. But most of the time, those are just posted right
on the boards, and not emailed directly. I personally would love
to see everyone display their email in their message boards
profile, because it makes my job easier. If I’m trying a recipe as
a potential Recipe of the Month, and have a question or two about
it, it’s so helpful for me to be able to pull up your profile and
email you about it. Otherwise, I have to wait until I can reach
the web master to get your email address.
Now, hand-in-hand with that, comes a reminder to check your
profile occasionally and update it. That way, if you win one of
our contests, we can reach you, so you can claim your prize!
Perfect example… we had 3 contest winners for last month’s News.
And we have invalid email addresses for all 3 of them. So two $25
prizes and an apron sit unclaimed. We would much rather you have
the prizes than us! To change your email or anything else on your
profile, go to the message boards and click on a category. On the
right hand side of the screen will be a link that says “Edit my
Profile”. Click it, make the updates, click “Change Profile”, and
you’re done. Please take a minute to check your profile and make
sure we have your current email address. I personally would really
appreciate it!!! |
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COOKIN' AT THE KEYBOARD
WITH SHELLEY
New Year’s Resolutions…easy to make…sometimes difficult to keep. If one
of your resolutions is to get more organized in the kitchen and freezer
cook more consistently, then, of course, Advantage Cooking will help.
Let me guess what you’re thinking about now. “Ugh! Entering recipes will
take so much time!” Well, I’ve got good news for you. What may seem like
a monumental task at the moment can be reduced to something manageable
if you’ll use my New Year’s “new recipe” strategy.
A recipe’s two main components are the ingredients and the instructions.
While Advantage Cooking needs the recipe ingredients to accumulate a
grocery list or generate an action report, the recipe instructions
aren’t necessary until you get to the kitchen. Which brings me to the
strategy I employ more often than not.
When adding a new recipe, I enter only the recipe category, appliance,
ingredients, and containers (i.e. the information necessary to get the
reports I want). With the “type-and-fill” data-entry feature, adding
this information is a snap. When I get to the instructions, I simply
enter something like “See Betty Crocker cookbook, page 134.” And,
lickety-split, I’m on to the next recipe!
Once your new recipes are entered, print them and put each one in a
sheet protector. If the original recipe was on a recipe card, drop it in
the pouch and you’ll have both the ingredients and instructions in the
same place. To keep from piling recipe books on the counter as you cook,
photocopy the recipe instructions from the corresponding cookbook and
include it with the printed recipe in the sheet protector.
When I’m ready to share a recipe, whether by printing or emailing, I do
have to take the time to enter the instructions (but it’s certainly no
more difficult than hand-writing the recipe). And last, but not least,
remember to make a backup of your Advantage Cooking
directory.
Another bit of good news: a MasterCook® compatible recipe import program
will be included in Advantage Cooking version 1.5, which is now in beta
testing and will be available in February. If you’re a MasterCook® user,
ignore my strategy and wait for the software to do it for you!
Shelly is the designer of the 30 Day Gourmet Advantage Cooking Software.
If you haven't tried our software yet,
click here
to learn more about it, and for a free 30 day trial.
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CONSULTANT NEWS
Two new consultants have
joined our team. Please welcome:
-
Marilyn Podgorski from
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
-
Samantha Handley from
Cameron, Ontario (Canada)
Our consultants are having
classes in the following cities near you. Click on the city name to be
taken to their website for details.
Contact them or our other
consultants by accessing the "Consultants"
section of our site.
Interested in becoming a
consultant? Looking for a way to make a little extra money? Our
program is very “laid back”. No minimum party requirements, no
paperwork to file and no pink cadillac giveaways☺
But you can make good money talking about something that you love to
do and something that a lot of other people haven’t figured out yet.
What could be easier?
Click here for more info.
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30 DAY GOURMET IN
THE NEWS
Several of our cooks have
been contacted recently by their local newspapers. If that happens to
you, please don't panic. Give me a call or send me an e-mail and I
will get in touch with the reporter and answer the "general" freezer
cooking questions and give them info on ordering the book, etc.. Then
they will probably want to come out and interview you (preferably on a
cooking day) to get the "local angle". For all of your trouble, I'll
even send you a free apron!
Austin, Texas
A magazine called Texas Co-op Power is going to feature a few of our
recipes in their February issue.
St. Louis, Missouri
The St. Louis Dispatch will be doing a story soon on freezer cook
Angie Copple who cooks with her husband and her two sisters and their
husbands. The article may even appear on the front of the paper's FOOD
section. Watch for it!
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COOK'S CHUCKLE
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WEBSITE
OF THE MONTH
This may be a repeat for some
of you, but I gotta go with www.flylady.net as the Website of the Month.
If you have any interest in getting your house and your life organized,
this is the place to start! I’ve done a lot of reading about getting
organized, and FlyLady knows what she’s talking about! I’m sure it will
become your second favorite website, after ours, of course!
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COMING UP IN FEBRUARY
What can we do to show our
family we love them? How about a heart-themed dinner for Valentine’s
Day?
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FINAL
THOUGHTS
I hope
you're off to a good start with your New Year's
Resolutions. And I hope freezer cooking is a part of
that! If there's anything we can do to help you with
your freezer cooking, please drop me an email at
tammy@30daygourmet.com. We're looking forward to a great 2004.
Thank you so much for your support of 30 Day Gourmet!
We couldn't do it without you!
Best wishes for a happy and healthy New Year!
Tammy
30 Day Gourmet
P.O. Box 272
Brownsburg, IN 46112
www.30DayGourmet.com
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This
page was last updated on
Wednesday, June 11, 2008.
Copyright 2008 - 30 Day Gourmet. All rights reserved.
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