Greetings people! Name's Greg, I'm 27 years old and a very proud member of the United States AirForce. I am currently stationed at Peterson AFB here in Colorado Springs, CO. but originally from Mississippi. I can offer fantastic advice on most any subject, but I'm particularly good with relationships (in any capacity), cooking, and social settings. Any questions are welcomed!
E-mail: greg.yarbrough@peterson.af.mil Gender: Male Location: Colorado Springs, CO Occupation: Airfield Management, United States Airforce Age: 27 Member Since: December 12, 2006 Answers: 35 Last Update: December 17, 2006 Visitors: 4227
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Has anyone ever had a Pita Bread Sandwich? Or alteast knows what goes in it? If you know, it'd be a whole lot of help. thanks. (link)
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Pita bread is a typical Greek cuisine, so try things like lamb, feta cheese, olives, chicken, eggplant and a homemade Greek vinaigrete. Enjoy!
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I'm a 19/F in my first student house, and I'm living with (gasp) four boys. We've got a really sweet arrangement going between three of us where each of us is responsible for dinner two nights a week... it's great because it means you spend less time cooking, and we're like a little family eating dinner together every night!
The thing is that although I'm a good cook and make up my own recipes all the time, I'm kind of short on interesting ideas for what to make for us. Does anybody have any cool, inexpensive recipes that will serve 3-4 people? The only real restriction is that one of us doesn't eat spicy food.
Thank you! (link)
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Poor girl, seriously 4 boys? Eh, we're not that bad to live with :) I taught myself out of necessity to cook when I was in college, and I still use the same recipes and tecniques today. A good way to feed 4 or more people on a college student budget is to make various pasta dishes. Make homemade sauces so you can control the sodium and fat content yourself, and good sauces are easy to make. I typically use foodnetwork.com or allrecipes.com to find whatever I'm in the mood for.
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i'm trying to find some healthy snacks to eat after school. i'm thinking about making my self a banana smoothie, but i'm not sure how. all of the recipes that i've read include ice cream or yougurt. and 1) ice cream would be too unhealthy and 2)i hate yogurt and i don't have any.
is it possible to make a banana smoothie with 1 whole banana and milk in a blender? what else would i need to add to this? and is this considered healthy?
if not...what are some other easy healthy snacks that i can eat. not peanut butter & apples or celery because i don't like those things.
thanks! (link)
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Being in the AirForce, we have to maintain a high standard of health and fitness so recently I taught myself to make smoothies for meal substitutes sometimes. This is exactly what I do: instead of using fattening products like ice-cream or yogurt (you could use fat-free yogurt but you won't have a good consistency) try this. Make what's called a "slurry" with corn starch and water, or better yet orange juice or skim milk, and put it in with various fresh fruits to get a thicker consistency. Bananas also help thicken smoothies.
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