We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

As an obedient believer, you are to stand firm in the strength of the Lord, to be sober in spirit, and to remain alert in order to resist the schemes of the devil. However, in all areas of your walk as a believer, you are incapable in your own strength and insufficient in your own resources to overcome the wiles and temptations of Satan. Therefore, you must put on the full armor of God to be an overwhelming conqueror in your continuing spiritual battle.
John Broger

To love this God means, among many other things, that we will be hungry to get to know Him better; conversely, in learning His words and ways, His attributes and His glory, what He loves and what He hates, we will find that our understanding of what it means to love God, what it means to love enemies, what it means to love brothers and sisters in Christ, will all be progressively modified and enriched. Precisely because, as created, dependent, and redeemed creatures, we are called to love our Creator, our Sovereign, our Redeemer with heart and soul and strength and mind, we will be firmly led to think robustly about what He is like, how He views evil, what rights and responsibilities He gives to the state in a fallen world, His role both in making peace and in judgment, and, above all, His commitment to His own glory as God.
D.A. Carson

Cleaning And Cooking Crab

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
La times, Latimes1 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

CLEANING AND COOKING CRAB

INSTRUCTIONS

Covered with a hard, sharp-edged shell and armed with two wildly
clacking pincers, a live crab can be a little intimidating. Relax.
Cooking crab is as easy as boiling spaghetti. And though cleaning
them is a bit tedious, it's not hard. Following these instructions,
you should be able to get 20% to 25% of the crab's raw weight in
cooked meat. Most crabs weigh 1 1/2 to 2 pounds, so that means a
yield of between 1/3 and 1/2 pound per crab. I figure two crabs for
every three people.
To COOK a crab, put it in a large pot and cover it with cold water
(always handle a live crab from behind, to avoid the pincers). Cover
the pot and place it over high heat. The crab is done when the shell
has turned bright red and you see bits of white foam at the joints
(that's from the protein firming). This will take about 15 minutes
for a 1 1/2 to 2 pound crab to as much as 25 minutes for a monster 2
1/2 pounder. Drain the water from the pot and rinse the crab in cold
water. Refrigerate until chilled through.
To CLEAN a crab, first remove the legs and pincers and set aside.
Find the arrow-shaped "apron" on the bottom of the crab and pull it
off. Take off the top shell. Grab it at the back and lift. It will
come right off (do this over the sink: There is usually a bit of
cooking water and/or barely congealed fat in the shell). Finally,
pinch off the "jaws" at the front of the crab. Remove the gills (the
grayish, feathery-looking things along each side -- crabbers call
them "dead man's fingers"). Break or cut the crab in half lengthwise
and rinse under cold water to remove any of the fat. Pull free any
loose flesh. To remove the meat, press with your thumb along the
division on the top half of the crab (the one that was under the
shell), pull one leg socket section free. Remove all of the meat.
Repeat, separating each section in turn and removing all of the meat.
Using the back of a chef's knife, crack the first, fattest section of
each leg right in the middle. Separate it from the section below it
by folding back at the joint. Pull the lower section free, removing
the thin, cellophane-like bone from the first section. Remove the
meat from the fat section. Do this carefully -- this is probably the
most attractive piece of meat in the crab, the one you'll use for
garnish. Repeat for all legs and as many sections as seem fat enough
to contain meat. Crack the pincers in the same way you cracked the
legs. Remove the small "thumb" piece, pulling free the
cellophane-like bone. Remove the meat. Repeat for all of the pincers
and also for the large leg section attached to them. Once all of the
meat has been separated, carefully feel through it with your fingers
to retrieve any bits of shell that slipped through.
Information Source: Los Angeles Times - 12-09-1998
Formatted for Mastercook by Lynn Thomas - Lynn_Thomas@prodigy.net
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“Rainbows – a gift from God”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?