God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
Meekness is not to be confused with weakness: the meek are not simply submissive because they lack the resources to be anything else. Meekness is quite compatible with great strength and ability as humans measure strength, but whatever strength or weakness the meek person has is accompanied by humility and a genuine dependence on God. True meekness may be a quality of the strong, those who could assert themselves but choose not to do so.
Leon Morris
Deviled Crab
0
(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Seafood, Meats, Dairy, Eggs
Creole, Fish, Seafood, Crab
6
Servings
INGREDIENTS
1
lb
Louisiana crabmeat
2
tb
Onion,chopped
2
tb
Flour,all-purpose
1
tb
Lemon juice
1
ts
Worcestershire sauce
3
dr
Tabasco sauce
1
pn
Cayenne pepper
1
tb
Parsley,chopped
3
cn
Crabmeat(6.5oz ea)
3
tb
Butter or margarine,melted
3/4
c
Milk
1
ts
Mustard,powdered
1/2
ts
Salt
1
pn
Black pepper
1
Egg,beaten
1/4
c
Bread crumbs,dry
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Thaw frozen crabmeat or drain canned crabmeat; pick over.
2. Cook onion in tablespoons butter until soft, then blend in flour.
3. Add milk gradually and cook until thick, stirring constantly.
4. Stir in lemon juice and seasonings.
5. Stir a little of the hot sauce into beaten egg; add egg mixture to
remaining sauce, stirring constantly.
6. Add parsley and crabmeat; blend well.
7. Divide among six well-greased individual shells or 5-ounce custard
cups.
8. Combine 1 tablespoon melted butter and the crumbs; sprinkle over mixture
in each shell.
9. Bake in 350'F. oven 20 to 25 minutes or until tops are brown.
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini
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