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Go to GRANDMA'S GARDENAdd a commentGo to It rained and I can feel the plants sobbing in disbelief.

maj, okay, I'll post the recipe, you did give me teriyaki.
Yup, still sporadic, unsatisfactory reading as my list of Favorites is long and my time allocated for Blogit, short. Sigh....

posted by benzinha on April 20, 2006 at 12:07 AM | link to this | reply

My question stands, Benzinha. I gave you my teriyaki as I recall...

What if I sent a self-addressed stamped envelope?

Hey, we could do a cookbook!

Best to you, glad to see you're at least still reading.

posted by majroj on April 19, 2006 at 6:36 AM | link to this | reply

Very funny, majroj, that was 2003 and I have much to do....

posted by benzinha on April 18, 2006 at 11:34 AM | link to this | reply

Benzinha so where's Amelia's recipe?

posted by majroj on April 6, 2006 at 9:23 PM | link to this | reply

It's a small world after all. Thanks for your post of mutual experiences..
I shall Google the name that you suggested.

One of my good friends here in town is from Sao Paulo and she is Japanese Brasilian, married to an American now and living here in my desert environment.

She is the best cook in our women's group and I shall post one of Amelia's recipes on my recipe blog later.

posted by benzinha on July 25, 2003 at 1:44 AM | link to this | reply

You touch on so many things I have done and seen

My grandparents retired to the high Mojave desert for ten years, and my English grandmother kept her stocks and bedding plants (from seed, not planters) and little trees despite the winds and the sun.

I has a friend from decades ago who went to Brazil to research the Japanese utopian communes and wound up marrying ans staying and writing. Google the name "Karen Tei Yamashita" when you get a chance.

posted by majroj on July 24, 2003 at 9:18 PM | link to this | reply