Showing posts with label newsletter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newsletter. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Throwback Thursday: Three-sided chicken, use your next campfire to roast a chicken in a Dutch oven

I wrote this article while camping in Oregon's Diamond Lake 10 years ago. It ran in the fall 2004 issue of the IDOS Dutch Oven News. It was written from the perspective of fall camping. With fall quickly approaching, why not give it a try?

Do you remember the last time you stood around a glowing fall campfire? Your backside froze in the crisp autumn air while your front roasted. To equalize the radiant energy of the campfire, you’d momentarily turn your back to the fire. But soon, your front would freeze and you’d once again turn to face the fire.

The autumn campfire gives fall campers the perfect opportunity to cook a favorite among camp dishes. So, why waist a good campfire? Prepare three-sided chicken for dinner with your next fall campfire. Like the two-sided effect of the campfire, a whole chicken fryer roasts on three sides (top, bottom and the side facing the fire) in a deep-model Dutch oven.

Three-sided cooking in camp

Next time you light a campfire on a fall camping adventure, clear a spot in front of the fire for a large Dutch oven. Meanwhile, slip a jacket on to keep your back warm, step over to the chuckbox and rub a fresh four to five pound chicken fryer your favorite seasoning. Once the campfire burns to a nice bed of coals, you’re ready to cook.

You’ll need a large campfire to produce sufficient coals to boost the oven to an estimated internal temperature of 375 degrees to 400 degrees F. The hot oven turns the skin to a crisp golden brown and the breast meat to a succulent juiciness when cooked just right. To evenly brown the bird, apply heat to three sides of the oven. Top, bottom and backside heat creates a bird with perfectly browned skin.

To start, burn a large campfire until a hot, glowing bed of coals remains. This’ll take 30 to 60 minutes, depending on the available wood. Then clear a shallow pit in front of the fire that’s the approximate diameter of a 12-inch Dutch oven. When ready, use a shovel to transfer hot coals to the pit and pre-heat the Dutch oven over the bed of coals.

Since you don’t want to set the chicken onto the floor of the oven, place a round baking rack or Dutch oven trivet in the oven. (Don’t have a trivet? Set the chicken on a bed of roughly chopped onion, carrot and celery.)

Place the seasoned chicken on the rack or trivet. Then place the lid on the oven and shovel a heap of coals over the Dutch oven. It’s this blast of heat that’ll radiate to the skin and transform the chicken into a delicious meal.

The problem with three-sided cooking is that the fourth side languishes without intense heat. It sets at sub-roasting temperatures while the side that faces the fire sizzles dangerously close to carbonization. To ensure even cooking, frequently turn the Dutch oven. At the same time, rotate the lid in the opposite direction. This’ll compensate for the uneven cooking of the coals.

If you haven’t done so already, add fresh firewood to the fire. Heat from the flame and the coals of the fire will radiate to the exposed side of the oven. Next time that you lift the lid, you’ll notice the skin and juices sizzling toward a simple meal.

Senses become your doneness meter

I can’t tell you how long you’ll be able to face the fire before you must turn your body. Each person comes to the campfire with his own tolerances for heat and cold. This is where you’ll have to depend on experience––both as a camper and cook.

Nor can I tell you how many coals that you’ll need to heat the oven to 375 degrees F. Just pile fresh coals on the lid of the oven as often as needed to maintain oven temperature. Experience will teach you how many coals to add to the pot.

Your senses will become your thermometer and doneness indicator. You’ll have to gauge temperature by watching the chicken cook. (Is the skin sizzling or sitting limp? Has the skin started to brown within 20 to 30 minutes?) Since you don’t want to lift the lid too often, listen for cooking sounds (can you hear the sizzle?). And as the chicken cooks, satisfying aromas will waft up to you.

All three--browning action, sizzle and aroma--work together to help you assess the bird’s progress and ultimate doneness. To gauge doneness, simply pull one leg from the body. If it gives with an effortless twist and the juices run clear, the chicken is done. It’ll take 1-1/4 to 1-1/2 hours to roast the chicken.

The key is to cook the chicken just until it’s done––not a minute longer. Overcook the bird and you’ll be rewarded with dry meat. You’ll need a quart of gravy to make the meal palatable. And remember, if it smells burnt, it is.

For a complete meal, add Yukon Gold or Klondike Rose potatoes to the pot about 45 minutes before the chicken is done. One or two small potatoes per person should do. Or cool the chicken slightly and pull the meat off of the bone. Then wrap in flour tortillas with Spanish rice, salsa and sour cream.

Plan to cook three-sided chicken on your next fall camping adventure. Follow these simple techniques and you’ll be rewarding with one of the simplest Dutch oven meals that you can produce in camp. You’ll need a jacket to warm your back and a campfire to heat your front and roast the chicken.

The softwood solution

I depend on downed softwood in the Sierra Nevada high country to build my campfires. To me, it’s a waste of precious dollars to haul oak firewood or charcoal briquettes to the campground. I instead rely of the natural resources of the forest.

I’ve learned that to be successful with softwood you must pay constant attention to your Dutch oven. Pine, fir and cedar burns quickly. As a result, you need watch your oven and replenish the coals often.

I don’t focus oven temperature when camping. I just pile hot coals from the campfire onto the oven with a gloved hand and a pair of 14-inch tongs. I use experience and the five senses to approximate the correct number of coals.

I usually build a campfire that’s four to five times the volume of the camp oven and burn it down to a glowing bed of coals. You can accomplish this in approximately 30 minutes with pine, fir and cedar.

I've learned from many poorly cooked dishes that you can never have too many campfire coals. To make sure I finish the dish with sufficient heat, I continue to feed the campfire even after I’ve heated the oven. I keep feeding the fire as long as I have a plentiful supply of firewood.

TIPS FOR A PERFECTLY ROASTED CHICKEN
  • Don’t truss the chicken. Though recommended by chefs, trussing forces the breast up into the oven’s head space. This reduces the likelihood that the chicken will brown properly.
  • Rotate the Dutch oven often. For a perfectly browned chicken, rotate the oven in increments. You have to judge how often based on experience and observation. As the skin in the first section browns, give the oven a 45- to 90-degree turn to brown the next section.
  • Think food safety. A bout of Salmonella is the last thing you want in camp. Freeze the bird at home. Then wrap it in two sheets of newsprint and enclose it in a large zipper-lock bag. And thoroughly scrub your hands in warm soapy water after handling the chicken.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Cee Dub reduces cooking clinic prices

Howdy Ya'll,

I wrapped up my winter tour this past weekend at the International Dutch Oven Society's World Championship Cookoff in Sandy, Utah. Never have I seen or tasted such delicious food all cooked in Dutch ovens. Thanks to IDOS and the folks at Camp Chef for sponsoring my visit to this great event.

In eleven years of demonstrating Dutch oven cookin' at sportsmen's shows in the NW, I've visited with countless folks who've cooked for years with the old black pots and people just starting to cook with Dutch ovens. In the last 2-3 years I've detected a shift in what's motivating folks to expand their outdoor cooking skills. The fun and novelty of Dutch oven cooking is still there, but more and more folks tell me that given the state of our economy they're keeping their Dutch ovens handy, along with extra charcoal, dried and canned food, just in case. Also more folks are growing and preserving their own food to cut costs, and for preparedness purposes as well. People still like to eat when the power is off!

Spring has arrived here in the Texas Hill Country. Now that I'm through traveling, it's time to wrap up our winter garden and get our summer garden planted. This weekend we'll be putting up beets and picking cabbage for a big batch of homemade sauerkraut. In a month or so, we'll harvest our onions and garlic.

GOOD NEWS & REMINDER FOR ALL

A reminder about our upcoming DUTCH OVEN AND BBQ CLINIC in Round Top, Texas, on Saturday and Sunday, April 9 and 10, 2011, featuring CEE DUB and PITMASTER KONRAD “TEDDY BEAR” HASKINS.

The GOOD NEWS is that we are REDUCING THE PRICE to attract more attendees realizing that money might be tighter these days. CEE DUB and KONRAD are lowering the price for the entire weekend to $500, and the daily rate to $300 for either day. NOTE that this price will be adjusted for all those that have already signed up to attend. Here's the scoop on this one-time-only scheduled event!

Throughout CEE DUB's and KONRAD's travels over the last few months around the country, some general themes rang true. Most folks don't think that the downturn in the economy is over; and, everyone is looking for ways to cut costs and save money. CEE DUB and KONRAD know that by learning to BBQ and cook in DUTCH OVENS, you will save money cooking at home for family and friends rather than going out to restaurants. Plus, everyone will enjoy the experience of cooking outdoors, making the gathering an event. Here's an opportunity to beat the prices, have some fun, and eat well, too!

The CLINIC is a joint endeavor featuring CEE DUB and PITMASTER KONRAD "TEDDY BEAR" HASKINS taking your cooking skills to the next level. KONRAD's skills and experience include being a caterer, restaurateur, and competitor who knows how to barbeque everything from a dinner for two to lunch for 5,000 soldiers returning from Iraq. His classes provide a clear and easy-to-follow roadmap to success. CEE DUB will take you through making all the side dishes, breads, and desserts in Dutch ovens to compliment your BBQ events. Together, these two guys have years of experience in the preparation of mouth-watering dishes outdoors.

To answer some questions we've had: RV spaces on site are available for $25 for the weekend as well as camping and showers for no charge. Friday night Cee Dub and Penny will be there to meet and greet folks when they arrive. Spouses who want to attend the clinics may register for a discount, but must do so by calling Cee Dub at 208-340-5113. But spouses are very welcome at meal times as there will be lots of food to eat. A side trip is a visit to Brenham to tour the Blue Bell factory!

Don’t miss this opportunity to take advantage of learning BBQ and DUTCH OVEN cooking from the pros. Sign up and reserve your spot today!

Check out our website for cookbooks and equipment to make your summer Dutch oven cooking easier and more enjoyable.

Thanks to all of you for supporting Cee Dub's over the years!

Have a Fun & Safe Summer!

Cee Dub & Pen

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

New Year newsletter from Cee Dub & Penny


Howdy From Cee Dub & Pen:

With the holidays behind us and 2010 underway, I'm keeping one of my New Year's Resolutions ... to get these newsletters out on a more regular basis.

Here's how that Resolution came about. Most married folks learn something new when overhearing their spouse talking to someone on the telephone. And, that's how I learned about MY New Year's Resolution.

I was sitting at the kitchen counter one afternoon while Pen was on the phone taking a phone order from a customer who'd recently received our Christmas Newsletter. My ears really perked up when I heard her say this, "He's made a New Year's Resolution to send out newsletters on a more regular basis. He just doesn't know it yet!"

Well, so far, so good.

Sweet Heart Deals & Winter Tour

Based on the response to the special pricing we did for Christmas to the New Year, we're extending those price breaks through Valentine's Day. So take advantage of the specials and price roll backs and get a special gift for your camp cook. Spring and summer are just around the corner!

As a result of us both working full time, we've had to reduce our appearance schedule. Last year Pen and I did nine shows in nine weekends from Seattle, Washington, to LaGrange, Texas.

This year, Pen is holding down the fort in Texas. Her brother, Al, will be making the appearances with me. For our friends and customers in the Northwest, here is our appearance schedule. Check the "Appearance Page" on our website.
  1. Tri-Cities Sporstmen's Show - Pasco, Washington - January 15-17, 2010. 
  2. Washington Sportsmen't Show - Puyallup, Washington - January 27-31,2010. 
  3. Pacific Northwest Sportsmen's Show - Portland, Oregon -February 10-14, 2010. 
  4. Central Oregon Sportsmen's Show - Redmond, Oregon - March 11-14, 2010. 
Check Out Our Sweet Heart Deals

We had a great holiday season, and hope you and yours did as well. See you out there on the trail!

Cee Dub, Pen, and Al

Friday, December 11, 2009

Merry Christmas From Cee Dub, Pen & Al

Howdy from our camp to yours,

No, we haven't dropped off the edge of the earth, but we did drop into the Sabinal River Canyon near Utopia, Texas.

The last two years have been a real challenge for everyone, Cee Dub's included. The impact of the changing economy impacted us in ways we did not envision when we started Cee Dub's over ten years ago.

Last winter we realized that after ten years of being in business for ourselves, we needed to re-enter the work force in order to keep things afloat. Anyone who is looking for work whose hair is more salt than pepper knows the apprehension of doing resumes and getting ready for a job interview.

We were very blessed to find the perfect place for our combined skill sets after answering just one "Help Wanted" ad. We truly enjoy what we are doing.

We now work year around at a Texas Hill Country ranch that is a seasonal camp for kids ages 7-16 years of age. We plant a large garden in the spring, along with lots of flowers.

During the summer camp season, we teach 40+ hours of "Outdoor Cooking" each week along with cooking for campouts, doing "food preservation" demonstrations with things grown in the camp garden, and making sure the campers leave here with practical knowledge that will last them a lifetime.

The rest of the year is much slower paced and spent doing landscape work, growing a winter garden, farming food plots, shipping orders from the camp store, and getting ready for the next camp season.

By any measure, times were much tougher when Dutch oven cookin' was an everyday matter versus today when many of us do it for fun, recreation, or just as a change of pace. The moral of the story for those of us who love our Dutch ovens is this. Because our DO's are "timeless" ... by holding on to them we continue to use our past to make the future better, a lesson we try to impart to our campers.

If you would like a closer look at where we are, you can visit the website at http://www.lonehollow.com/.

Anyway ... sorry for the long greeting, but we wanted to get caught up with all of you, our friends and customers, with our changes and what has been going on in our lives.

Price Roll Backs, Christmas Specials, Good Through December 2009
Store closures and consolidation within the sporting goods market have made finding some items more difficult. Here are a few items that are available for new or experienced Dutch oven cooks.

Lid Lifter and Glove Combo - $26.95. Cee Dub’s is offering this combo now for the current price, but we are raising the price January 1, 2010 to $29.95.

Add a set of 16 inch tongs for an additional $10.00, a savings of $2.95.

We are lowering the price of Cee Dub’s latest cookbook, Gather 'Round the Table, 10%, from $19.95 to $17.95. (Amazon.com copy is not discounted.)

And, the two DVD set, Series I, with Cookbooklet, is $49.95, a savings of $20.00.

Combining a Dutch oven with the tools, a DVD, and one of Cee Dub’s cookbooks can get a beginning DO cook stocked up with all the essentials to get started.

Also, we’re offering the following Dutch oven specials:

Camp Chef 12 inch Classic Pre-seasoned DO discounted from $44.95 to $39.95, a savings of $5, a great price for a great oven.

NEW! Camp Chef is now offering a cast aluminum 12 inch Dutch oven which Cee Dub’s is introducing at the GREAT PRICE of only $79.95 through December 31, 2009.

Firepans are ALWAYS a great gift for Dutch oven and outdoor cooks. RV’ers also find firepans useful additions as well. We've rolled back the prices a few years to the following:

Large Firepan - $209.95, a savings of $35!
Small Firepan - $199.95, a savings of $25!

So take advantage of these special low prices now for the holidays! They won't last long!

Click Here For Cee Dub's Christmas & Year End Specials

With both of us going back to work full time, we've cut back the number of both our appearances and our clinics. Typically we announce the coming year's Dutch oven cooking clinics in our Christmas newsletter.

Time limitations have forced us to cut our winter tour down to just four appearances in the Northwest January-March 2010. We hope to offer a couple of spring 2010 clinics here in Texas. When we confirm the dates and details, we'll post them on the website and send out another newsletter.

Were it not for you, our friends and customers, we would have much less to say thanks for as this year winds down. We wish everyone a Very Merry Christmas and may 2010 Be Your Best Year Ever!

Take Care,

Cee Dub, Pen & Al

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the latest edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter. Email Don to receive a copy electronically.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the mid-summer edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to you, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the summer edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to you, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.


Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the early spring edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to you, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Howdy From Cee Dub's

Howdy from Cee Dub & Pen:

When I wrote last we were putting the finishing touches on our new cookbook and getting ready for our winter tour. The new book, Gather 'Round the Table with Cee Dub, came off the presses just as we started our tour the third week of January. Our tour consisted of nine different venues in nine weeks. After 80+ demonstrations and 7,000+ miles, we took a couple of weeks off to catch our breath.

Last year's sky-high fuel prices, along with the economic down-turn, has impacted Cee Dub's as it has most small businesses. Shortly after getting back to Texas, both Pen and I were offered full-time employment on a different ranch than the one we'd been at since moving to Texas the fall of 2006. Given the current economic situation it made good sense to accept the offer.

But ... as a result the two clinics currently scheduled for May 2009 will be the only ones we'll have this year. So, with Mother's Day, Father's Day, Graduations, and Weddings coming up, now would be a good time give a gift to your favorite DO cook and sign up.

2009 Clinics, Our New Book, & Tuning Up Dutch Ovens
When I, the author, and Pen, the publisher, send a new manuscript to the printer, the apprehension we feel is somewhat like waiting for the birth of a child before the days of ultra sounds. As with a baby you want it to be perfect.

The printing process takes a certain amount of time and there is nothing the author or publisher can do to make it happen any faster. The editing, tweaking of the manuscript, spell checking, and proof reading is over and there is nothing to do but wait.

The thrill of opening that first box right off the delivery truck and seeing the "baby" for the first time is a very fulfilling moment. But, the apprehension we feel as the "parents" continues until we receive the "reviews."

The cookbooks were literally hot off the press when we set them out on the display table at the start of our first sportsmen's show in Pasco, Washington on January 16, 2009. By the last day of the show some folks had already read the book cover to cover and came back to us with their comments. Trust me we were, and are, as proud as new parents when folks tell us it's our best cookbook yet!

Given the current economic state in the country right now, we believe, as the author and publisher, that it is the right book at the right time. In our travels this winter we talked to lots of folks who want to lower their food costs, and processing one's own meat is a great way to cut costs and end up with a superior product. But, all is not all doom and gloom! The section on Hillbilly Cookin' will bring a smile and show folks just how much fun outdoor cookin' really can be. It's a great addition to any cookbook collection or camp library.

We've been teaching Dutch oven cookin' for twelve years and cannot count the friends we've made in those clinics. More than a few recipes in our cookbooks actually come from folks who have taken our clinics. A personal benefit for Pen and me is the knowledge we gain from the folks who come to attend our clinics.

With us both holding full-time jobs now for the first time in ten years our opportunity to teach clinics will be curtailed. We still have openings in both our Round Top and Hunt, Texas, clinics next month. We're not saying this is your last chance to attend a Cee Dub clinic, but it's a sure thing that we'll be teaching fewer clinics in the foreseeable future.

Register for Your Dutch Oven Clinic

With the weather getting nice, it's time to get those Dutch ovens out of the shed or garage and get them ready for some great new recipes and summer fun. Here are some things I do to tune up our Dutch ovens when they've been in storage a long time.

1. If I smell a rancid grease odor when I remove the lid I place the DO upside down on my propane camp stove and turn the burner on medium heat for 5-10 minutes. It doesn't get hot enough to take the seasoning off but it quickly eliminates that rancid odor.

2. Check the lid fit. If food debris has built up on the inside flange of the lid, just clamp the lid handle in a bench vise and clean the inside flange with a wire brush.

3. Wipe each oven and lid inside and out with a very thin film of Camp Chef Cast Iron Conditioner and you're ready to cook!

Have a great time cooking with your Dutch ovens this summer, try out some new recipes from the new cookbook, and remember to check out our 2009 summer clinics on our website!

May yer grub never burn!

Butch & Pen

Friday, January 23, 2009

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the winter edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to you, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the fall edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to you, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.

I've been posting Don's newsletter to 'Round the Chuckbox since April 2005. Every two or three months, Don fills Dutch Oven Cooking with news of Northern California Dutch oven events and cookoffs. Each issue contains three or four Dutch oven recipes -- recipes tested by cookoff contestants from the north state region.

So, enjoy the fall edition. I'm sure Don will have the winter issue ready in time for the Colusa Winter Camp Cookoff.

Friday, September 05, 2008

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here is the summer edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to your computer, contact Don at dmason50@att.net.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here is Don Mason's latest newletter for Dutch oven cooking.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Cookin' In the Park

It's almost time for the Cookin' In the Park Dutch oven cookoff in Red Bluff, California.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter

Here's the latest edition of Don Mason's Dutch oven newsletter.

Friday, January 18, 2008

2008 Northern California Dutch oven cookoffs

Here's a list of Dutch oven cookoffs in Northern California for 2008. Don Mason, who chair several of these events, assembled the list, which also includes one event in Oregon. Check with the contact person for applications, information and maps and to make sure dates and time are correct.

January
Winter Camp Dutch Oven Cookoff
January 19, 2008: Colusa County Fairgrounds, Colusa, California
Contact: Vicky Stegall 530-458-8009 or Liz Dawley Erdawley@usdavis.edu

February open

March
Nor Cal Sports Show and various cookoffs
February 29 to March 2, 2008: Shasta County Fairgrounds, Anderson, California
February 29: iron chef cookoff
March 1: Dutch oven cookoff
March 2: BBQ cook-off
Contact: Lynn Gilliss 530-365-1381

April
Colusa Western Days and Dutch Oven Cookoff
April 4-6, 2008: Colusa County Fairgrounds
April 5: Dutch oven cookoff
Contact: Colusa chamber of commerce 530-458-5525

May
Cook’en in the Park Dutch Oven Cookoff
May 17, 2008: Red Bluff Marina City Park, Red Bluff, California
Boy Scouts and 4-H cooking teams are invited
Contact: Red Bluff Parks and Recreation 530-527-8177 or Don Mason 530-527-1027 or iron-kettle@hotmail.com

June
Fall River Pioneer Days and Dutch Oven Cookoff
June 7, 2008: Fort Crook Museum, Fall River Mills, California
Contact: Jim and Caroline Geiger 530-873-4863 or jimsadventures@aol.com

August
High Desert Challenge of the Black Pots
August 2, 2008: L&S Gardens, La Pine, Oregon
This is a three pot IDOS sanctioned cookoff
Contact: Linda Stephenson 541-536-2049 or lsgarden@uci.net

Olive Festival and Dutch Oven Cookoff
August 23, 2008 (saturday) corning, california two dishes must contain california processed olives. Contact: corning chamber of commerce 530-824-5550 or don mason
530-527-1027 or iron_kettle@hotmail.com


September
Draft horse classic and Dutch Oven Cookoff
September 21, 2008: Nevada County Fairgrounds, Grass Valley, California
Contact: fairgrounds 530-273-6217 or Larry Martin 530-764-5310 or motherloadcastironcookers@yahoo.com

October
Fortuna Apple Harvest Festival and Dutch Oven Cookoff
October 4, 2008: Rohner Park, Fortuna, California
The dessert dish must have apples
Contact: Aaron Atkisson 707-764-5310 or Fortuna Parks and Recreation 707-725-7620

November open

December open

If you have a Dutch oven cookoff coming up in 2008, let Don Mason know soon. He will add your event to the list and send out a correction.

Dutch oven cooking newsletter
Don mason
23390 Hillman court
Red bluff, California 9608
530-527-1027
Iron_kittle@hotmail.com

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Don Mason's Dutch Oven Newsletter

Here's blog no. 2 ...

Here is Don Mason's early winter edition of his Dutch Oven Cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to your computer, contact Don at iron_kettle@hotmail.com.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Don Mason's Dutch Oven Newsletter

Here is Don Mason's late fall edition of his Dutch Oven Cooking newsletter. To have a copy emailed directly to your computer, contact Don at iron_kettle@hotmail.com.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007