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<title>Latest Nutmeg Flavored Recipes</title>
<description>Get the latest Nutmeg flavored recipes from Group Recipes.</description>
<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/tag/nutmeg</link>
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		<title>Pork Terrine With Pickled Cherries And Mushroom Salad</title>
		<description>My adaptation of "Top Chef" Kevin Gillespie's Elimination Challenge winning appetizer.</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/108334/pork-terrine-with-pickled-cherries-and-mushroom-salad.html</link>
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		<title>Nana - Nog Cupcakes</title>
		<description>A simple, sweet way to use up the last bits and pieces of the Christmas food lying around the house! An orange glaze is wonderful on these, but they're awesome plain for breakfast too.</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/108291/nana---nog-cupcakes.html</link>
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		<title>Harvest Honey Spice Cake</title>
		<description>A great cake!! so doggone good!</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/108233/harvest-honey-spice-cake.html</link>
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		<title>Chai Spice Mix For Tea</title>
		<description>I usually make my own mix of chai tea spices. I buy the spices on sale. Another trick is that I often put tea bags in my container of mixed spices and leave them in the container so they are infused with the flavor of the mix!

Try not to overpower you mix with too much of one spice. With some experimentation, you will end up with your own spcial blend!</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/108073/chai-spice-mix-for-tea.html</link>
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		<title>Red Yam Flan</title>
		<description>Borrowed from the Spanish flavors,  flan has been incorporated as being a traditional South Western cuisine.</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107996/red-yam-flan.html</link>
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		<title>Spinach Chevre Crepes</title>
		<description>What is Caerphilly Cheese?  Caerphilly cheese is a semi-firm white cheese made from raw cow’s milk, which was developed in the region of Caerphilly, Wales, sometime around 1830.

Caerphilly cheese is moist and pale, with a mild and salty paste. It is now produced in southwestern England as well as Wales. The English preference is for fresh Caerphilly cheese, eaten after only a few weeks (from two to eight) of aging. At this stage, the paste has a fresh, tangy flavor.

Traditionally aged, from twelve to twenty weeks, Caerphilly cheese has a milder, smoother flavor. The rind, which is natural, is thin, dry to the touch, and pale. Occasionally, the wheels, which are typically about 10 inches (25 cm) in diameter and weigh about 8 pounds (3.6 kg) are waxed. Waxed Caerphilly cheese tends to have a milder flavor than the cheese in its natural rind. 

Caerphilly cheese will continue to age once purchased and care should be taken to ensure that flavor and texture are preserved. Artisanal cheese breathes and sweats—don’t smother it with plastic wrap. Instead, use waxed paper to wrap small pieces of cheese. Larger pieces, like a wheel with wedges cut out of it, can be left uncovered except for the cut surfaces, which can be covered with plastic wrap. This way, the cheese will not lose moisture through its cut surfaces but will still be able to breathe.

Caerphilly cheese benefits from a bit of humidity to prevent cracking. If storing a large piece in the refrigerator, keep it in the vegetable crisper or snack drawer. If the drawer has a separate temperature control, set it to be less cool than the rest of the fridge. Place a slightly damp dish towel or paper towels over the surface of the rind to keep it from drying out. 

Whole cheeses or partial wheels of Caerphilly should be turned over on a weekly basis. This distributes moisture evenly within the cheese and keeps it from developing cracks. Be sure to bring the cheese up to room temperature (about 55 degrees F [13 degrees C]) before eating. 

 
Caerphilly is delicious served alone on dark bread with sliced tart apples. It is popularly grated into scones, melted into fondue, and it is one of the chief ingredients of the curiously vegetarian Welsh Glamorgan Sausage, which is essentially a panfried formed cheese stick.</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107769/spinach-chevre-crepes.html</link>
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		<title>Southern Eggnog</title>
		<description>Never had it this way and it sound good!!</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107747/southern-eggnog.html</link>
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		<title>Deliciously Chewy Double Chip Cookies</title>
		<description>A couple interesting ingredients make these cookies unique – Kamut flour for a delicious buttery note and texture, cream cheese for tenderness, a touch of nutmeg for that “bakery” aroma and a combination of three sugars and corn syrup for an out-of-this-world chewy / crispy bite! These are best if the dough is wrapped and chilled overnight (or up to 3 days - but you can freeze it too!) in the fridge, but works for immediate baking also.</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107670/deliciously-chewy-double-chip-cookies.html</link>
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		<title>Orange Spice Cookies</title>
		<description>This is a great Christmas cookie and truly unique in flavor. you are going to get some compliments on these</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107666/orange-spice-cookies.html</link>
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		<title>Vegetarian Mulligatawny Soup</title>
		<description>Being brutally cold  now, I adapted several  soup recipes to my liking to make a large pot of  vegetarian Indian soup.
Truley delicious, and if one wants to make it meat based, use chicken broth and add some chopped cooked  Indian flavored or spiced chicken to the finished soup recipe
Serve with my posted Indian chickpea salad and some Indian bread and you'll have a splendid meal!
I also posted  another  soup version that is made in the slow cooker and also delcious but different!</description>
		<link>http://www.grouprecipes.com/107493/vegetarian-mulligatawny-soup.html</link>
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