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-   -   Best Snack Food? (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=332813)

John Bedtelyon 09-13-2005 11:57 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
Glad to hear it went well. Salsa is delicious, and if you try to keep the food off the table spills should hurt too bad.

I'm sure it's been said before but I HATE when people have drinks on the table, and I hate poker tables with built in cupholders. Just my opinion.

JMB

donkeyradish 09-14-2005 08:13 AM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
Avoid stuff that sticks to your fingers and mucks up the deck

Stork 09-15-2005 11:51 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
[ QUOTE ]
Avoid stuff that sticks to your fingers and mucks up the deck

[/ QUOTE ]

This is key.

The grilling wings idea should be good if people are willing to stay away from the table for that long. Seems like the losing players never want to stop playing.

As far as drinks go, we use napkins for coasters, so far its okay. Trying to limit the drinks to just light stuff like seltzer and water.

JJNJustin 09-25-2005 07:01 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
Believe it or not, I have found sushi to be one of the best poker foods to serve. Also, some of the dim-sum chinese varieties are extremely popular.

The reason sushi works so well is that
1) it is finger food
2) it is non-greasy and non messy, you eat it in one bite
3) the fiery hot wasabi pumps people up and is always a fun point of discussion
4) it can be made for a fraction of the cost of purchasing.

I have also served dim sum, which includes dumplings, wantans, and eggrolls, however, these usually take more prep work and time.

If you host alot of poker games, it might be worth it to buy a deep fryer at Target or Walmart. You can buy packaged of deep-fry foods, such as chicken wings, mozarella sticks, mushrooms, onion rings, french fries, etc.
Keep 'em in the freezer, and when they ask for snacks, heat up the fryer and drop em in.

dim-sum is very popular. You usually can buy bag fulls of pork filled buns, egg rolls, spring rolls, vietnamese rice rolls, dumplings, won tons at an asian store for very cheap. They are either served deep fried or boiled. They are, for the most part, a finger food and people just love asian food nowadays.

For a real shocking opener, try serving 1000 year old eggs. They are preserved duck eggs and sell at the China store for like $4. They aren't 1000 years old, although when you walk into the Chinese food store, you will smell things that smell as if they are 1000 years old.

www.foodnetwork.com has some party ideas, and directions for rolling your own sushi. Stick to cooked items and California rolls, as most people wont eat anything raw.
You'll be surprised how far a package of sea-weed wrappers, a bag of rice, and a bottle of vinegar go. You can make like 100 pieces for under $20. Buy canned sea food, like salmon, tuna, or crab meat, mix it with mayonaise and serve it aka California roll.

just some thoughts

-J

09-25-2005 10:18 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
You have got to be kidding. Show up at one of our games with sushi and I don't think you would ever hear the end of it.

California game?

smoore 09-25-2005 10:43 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
Yeah, at my game no one would play until it was all gone.

Stork 09-26-2005 08:49 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
You, sir, are a good man.

varoadstter 09-27-2005 10:59 AM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
sushi. yum.

I need lunch - NOW!

Can I come to your game?

derick 09-27-2005 11:40 AM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
[ QUOTE ]
You have got to be kidding. Show up at one of our games with sushi and I don't think you would ever hear the end of it.

California game?

[/ QUOTE ]

Sushi was invented by Japanese gamblers to keep the cards clean while gambling.

JJNJustin 09-28-2005 05:48 PM

Re: Best Snack Food?
 
I figured that post would draw some curious responses. Here's a little info:

You buy a bag of sushi rice, no more than 5 lbs. ($3-$5)
You buy a bottle of Marukun Japanese Rice Vinegar ($1-$2)
You buy a package of Nori toasted seaweed ($3), some wasabi paste($3-4), some pickled ginger slices ($2), and some light soy sauce ($2).
You buy a can of lump crabmeat ($4), an avocado ($1), a cucumber ($1), a can of salmon ($3), and a can of tuna fish ($1), and a small jarc of mayonaisse ($3).
You buy a small bamboo mat and wooden spoon which is sold in a kit($4).

You wash and boil the rice. When it is done, you spread it on a tray and fan it cool while you sprinkle on a mixture of vinegar, sugar, and salt.

You take the various seafoods and mix with mayonaise and a little wasabi. You put a nori seaweed sheet on the bamboo mat, spread the rice evenly, spread a row of the seafood salad in the middle and roll the thing up into a tube. Use the bamboo mat to help make it even and tight.

Take a clean sharp knife and cut evenly into 4 or 6 pieces, wiping the knife between cuts.

Repeat until all the sushi rice is gone. Use different combinations of seafood salads and cucumber or avocado, make some with plain cucumber.

Serve on a wooden tray with wasabi and pickled ginger slices on the side with a small dipping thing of soy sauce (you add a little sugar and ginger juice to the soy sauce).

The bamboo mat and wooden spoon you keep and the rice will make several batches. One can of seafood will make 50-100 pieces. The soy sauce, vinegar, and wasabi will last for several batches.

It's something cool to do. Imagine your friends when you serve a platter of sushi.

For your information, when we play, we have a big screen projector with the complete muppet show dvd and south park projected on the wall. Wasabi and seaweed arent the only natural green leafy things available. lol.
lol
-J


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