Rose is Rose by Don Wimmer and Pat Brady for July 06, 2013
July 05, 2013
July 07, 2013
Transcript:
Jimbo: Yes, I had a tuna salad sandwich...
Jimbo: With a finely chopped onion..fresh parsley...a little mayo...
Jimbo: And...just a hint of horseradish.
I let my kitty smell my fingers when they smelled of onion once. It hurt his little nose. He was so hurt he wouldn’t talk to me for a week. He was such a sweet kitty
Jalapenos are great on a tuna sandwich. I believe they react with the lead in the tuna and turn it into lead jalapenide, which is actually a brain enhancing chemical. With some provolone, of course. Always the provolone.
Poor Peekaboo, it’ll take awhile to get him out of raccoon mode, which is what I call it since my first cat tiger’s tail would get all puffy like a raccoon tail whenever he saw a strange cat lurking around the backyard.
I’ve never cared that much for tuna salad, but some of your ingredients sound intriguing (except for what I thought was “chopped bread,” when I read Sharon Hayes’ ingredients wrong).
Rather than mayonnaise, my family would use low-fat, plain/unflavored yogurt – enough to keep the tuna together without being sloppy and drippy. Some minced bread-and-butter sweet pickles and a good amount of grated Parmesan cheese added to the mixture, and voila, my favorite lunch.
at a company dinner i got some ranch for my salad and actually spit it out, commenint that it was the raunchiest ranch I ever had; i was told it was really good horse radish though……
My cats get that way when we give them their flea treatments. If I get any on my hands they avoid pettings for a few days.
I only like tuna and mayo. I can’t stand the vinegar smell and taste of pickles. This goes back to how my grandmother would prepare pickles, relish and pickled peppers in the house. I still have a poster that was made from a picture of a jar of her pickled peppers. Pretty to look at, but the cooking process has put me off anything pickled for as long as I will live.
I prefer mine with the ingredients separate, and with crackers. Yes, they mix in my stomach, but if you have a reflux problem like I do, you already know what that tastes like.
My best for tuna salad was a little mayo to hold it together, stone ground mustard, dill, and sweet relish, dash of Lawry’s Season Salt and fresh ground pepper medley. Put in between two sliced Udi’s Chia gluten free bread with provolone, in a hot buttered skillet till the cheese slightly melts. Serve with Homemade tortilla chips and a cold tea.
vwdualnomand over 11 years ago
glad it was tuna sandwich. and, not a philly cheese steak with peppers and onions. or, a beef on weck, or a portillo’s big beef.
tammyspeakslife Premium Member over 11 years ago
I let my kitty smell my fingers when they smelled of onion once. It hurt his little nose. He was so hurt he wouldn’t talk to me for a week. He was such a sweet kitty
Zero-Gabriel over 11 years ago
Hey Peekaboo, wasabi?
Ray_C over 11 years ago
Jalapenos are great on a tuna sandwich. I believe they react with the lead in the tuna and turn it into lead jalapenide, which is actually a brain enhancing chemical. With some provolone, of course. Always the provolone.
alondra over 11 years ago
From Peekaboo’s reaction it was more than a ‘hint’ of horseradish!
Sharon Hayes over 11 years ago
Some of you make strange tuna salad. All I put in mine is chopped celery, chopped bread and butter pickles and mayo.
Allen Rymer over 11 years ago
I love it when peekaboo cat puffs. Reminds me of Julia (my icon)
Zero-Gabriel over 11 years ago
Thank You!!
Doctor11 over 11 years ago
Poor Peekaboo, it’ll take awhile to get him out of raccoon mode, which is what I call it since my first cat tiger’s tail would get all puffy like a raccoon tail whenever he saw a strange cat lurking around the backyard.
Gokie5 over 11 years ago
I’ve never cared that much for tuna salad, but some of your ingredients sound intriguing (except for what I thought was “chopped bread,” when I read Sharon Hayes’ ingredients wrong).
emjaycee over 11 years ago
Rather than mayonnaise, my family would use low-fat, plain/unflavored yogurt – enough to keep the tuna together without being sloppy and drippy. Some minced bread-and-butter sweet pickles and a good amount of grated Parmesan cheese added to the mixture, and voila, my favorite lunch.
Me3000 over 11 years ago
at a company dinner i got some ranch for my salad and actually spit it out, commenint that it was the raunchiest ranch I ever had; i was told it was really good horse radish though……
Saucy1121 Premium Member over 11 years ago
Tuna, chopped hard boiled egg, mustard, mayo/miracle whip (whichever I have) and sweet pickle relish.
Robert Allen over 11 years ago
My cats get that way when we give them their flea treatments. If I get any on my hands they avoid pettings for a few days.
I only like tuna and mayo. I can’t stand the vinegar smell and taste of pickles. This goes back to how my grandmother would prepare pickles, relish and pickled peppers in the house. I still have a poster that was made from a picture of a jar of her pickled peppers. Pretty to look at, but the cooking process has put me off anything pickled for as long as I will live.
hippogriff over 11 years ago
I prefer mine with the ingredients separate, and with crackers. Yes, they mix in my stomach, but if you have a reflux problem like I do, you already know what that tastes like.
kwon_sarang over 11 years ago
Horseradish does that to me too.
Aslan Balaur over 11 years ago
My best for tuna salad was a little mayo to hold it together, stone ground mustard, dill, and sweet relish, dash of Lawry’s Season Salt and fresh ground pepper medley. Put in between two sliced Udi’s Chia gluten free bread with provolone, in a hot buttered skillet till the cheese slightly melts. Serve with Homemade tortilla chips and a cold tea.