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Phil Yearout 01-20-2026 02:39 PM

Lunch
 
Club crackers with a big ol' smear of cream cheese, and a tin of sardines packed in Looz-iana hot sauce. Yum!

https://i.imgur.com/GhYZf6el.jpg

allen newell 01-20-2026 02:49 PM

Argh, disgusting

CraigThompson 01-20-2026 03:19 PM

My pop would eat sardines or kippers on a saltine cracker with mustard . Not my cup of tea but to each his own .

Phil Yearout 01-20-2026 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CraigThompson (Post 442456)
My pop would eat sardines or kippers on a saltine cracker with mustard . Not my cup of tea but to each his own .

Yeah; I love them in mustard sauce too, and saltines are the way to go.

allen newell 01-20-2026 04:12 PM

Saltiness rule

Andrew Sacco 01-20-2026 04:28 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Good taste Phil

Sardines on toasted french bread after rubbing it with a smashed garlic clove; red onion, chopped tomato mixed with EVOO and some dill. Yummmmmmm..... plus very good for you.

Daryl Corona 01-20-2026 04:46 PM

Sardines, crackers and beer was our sustenance meal in the duck blind along with oysters we would gather from in the front of our blind. Those were the days.

Stan Hillis 01-20-2026 05:30 PM

My Mom loved sardines, but me?, I ain't never got that hungry.

Gimme a can of original flavor Beenie Weenies.

Clark McCombe 01-20-2026 08:57 PM

Back in my bachelor days I’d have “surf and dirt” - can of sardines and a microwaved baked potato.

CraigThompson 01-20-2026 11:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daryl Corona (Post 442467)
Sardines, crackers and beer was our sustenance meal in the duck blind along with oysters we would gather from in the front of our blind. Those were the days.

The guys I used to hunt with in the Poconos had little house cubicles usually perched on top of a large boulder and inside those houses they’d keep smoked oysters or clams in tins , sardines , saltine crackers , peanut butter and God knows what else . I think three of the little cubicles had little pot belly stoves they’d stoke up . I set in one or two of them never bothering their provisions but I’d almost get claustrophobic in these things .

CraigThompson 01-20-2026 11:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stan Hillis (Post 442468)
My Mom loved sardines, but me?, I ain't never got that hungry.

Gimme a can of original flavor Beenie Weenies.

Yeah I never could stomach sardines either . My wife likes taking the left over steamed rice from dinner and use it to make fried rice for breakfast and in this stuff she puts dried anchovies . I’ve not dared to try that either the smell cooking isn’t the best id say on par with the odor from chittlins .

Mike Koneski 01-21-2026 09:30 AM

Sardines and anchovies, it’s like you died and went to heaven! Put those hairy fish on pizza and have at it. As for sardines, just like Phil did, on a cracker. Delicious! Now I’m hungry and I didn’t even have my first cup of coffee!! You’re killing me Smalls!!

Andrew Sacco 01-21-2026 09:44 AM

You have to get good sardines, not the cheap ass tasting stuff from Dollar General. Fresh sardines lightly grilled and drizzled with sea salt and olive oil is heaven. Big Mike I brought you a can of Matiz wild sardines didn't I? Those are my go to.

Phillip Carr 01-21-2026 09:58 AM

I had a can of Smoked Mussels drained the oil and added a couple of splashes of balsamic vinegar. Ate them with a small slice of cheese on a cracker and they were great. My wife didn’t even want to come in the kitchen while I ate them. LOL

Daryl Corona 01-21-2026 10:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Andrew Sacco (Post 442465)
Good taste Phil

Sardines on toasted french bread after rubbing it with a smashed garlic clove; red onion, chopped tomato mixed with EVOO and some dill. Yummmmmmm..... plus very good for you.

That's bruchetta on steroids Andy. If your never tried fresh or even frozen sardines at around 4-6 inches in length that you grill yourself you'll never go back to the canned ones except in an emergency. And Lord, do I love anchovies.

Phil Yearout 01-21-2026 11:09 AM

Take you a tin of smoked oysters, little minced garlic, some good cheese grated, a splash of Franks, sprinkle on some Panko bread crumbs, pop ‘em in the air fryer until golden. Um hum!

Andrew Sacco 01-21-2026 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daryl Corona (Post 442502)
That's bruchetta on steroids Andy. If your never tried fresh or even frozen sardines at around 4-6 inches in length that you grill yourself you'll never go back to the canned ones except in an emergency. And Lord, do I love anchovies.

I have Daryl. While bonefishing in the Bahamas. Had them every night as an appetizer (or two). Fresh 6 inchers over a wood fire they drizzled with olive oil. Good Lord just heaven, you are right.

Kevin McCormack 01-21-2026 12:11 PM

On a brant shoot years ago just south of Cedar Island VA, we backed the boat up against the west bank of the inland waterway and set our rig according to the wind. As the tide began to fall out the brant started flying and the water level fell, exposing a nice little oyster bed around us. As I recall we had some cheese, saltines, tinned sardines, and fresh apples. We hove to and gathered a dozen oysters or so from the bottom and had a lunchtime feast. The only thing missing was some shaved onions, lemon wedges, coarse ground black pepper and some Verve Clicquot Ponsardin yellow label. Managed to shoot a limit of brant, too!

Daryl Corona 01-21-2026 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin McCormack (Post 442511)
On a brant shoot years ago just south of Cedar Island VA, we backed the boat up against the west bank of the inland waterway and set our rig according to the wind. As the tide began to fall out the brant started flying and the water level fell, exposing a nice little oyster bed around us. As I recall we had some cheese, saltines, tinned sardines, and fresh apples. We hove to and gathered a dozen oysters or so from the bottom and had a lunchtime feast. The only thing missing was some shaved onions, lemon wedges, coarse ground black pepper and some Verve Clicquot Ponsardin yellow label. Managed to shoot a limit of brant, too!

Did you find a recipe for the brant?:)

Dave Noreen 01-21-2026 12:52 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I loved sardines and King Oscar Kippered Snacks when I was in my youth. Hadn't had any for years, but recently got back into them.

In 1927 my mother and several of her classmates took a road trip from Mound, Minnesota to Monterey, California, and spent the season working in one of the Sardine canneries earning money for their senior year high school tuition. In those days anything past 8th grade cost money. My mother second in the picture --

Attachment 139045

The waterfront in Monterey looks a lot different today!!

Phillip Carr 01-21-2026 01:31 PM

What a great story and picture Dave.
All of this talk of sardines and such brought back memories of my mom cooking Smelts we ate them fried bones and all.

Dave Noreen 01-21-2026 04:41 PM

One year during my college years the fire danger was so high in Eastern Washington that the Game Department delayed the opening of dove season. So, for Labor Day weekend I went with some old Cub/Boy Scout friends to their cabin on Camano Island and raked smelt. I don't remember how Elmer prepared them but probably fried.

What I remember most about that weekend was the six nice grain fed Columbia Basin mallards I brought that Mrs. Lundstrom roasted in the woodstove and all of us sitting out on their deck high above Utsalady Bay eating duck and tossing the bones over the side!

Daryl Corona 01-21-2026 04:49 PM

Dave;

Cool picture of your mom. They certainly had hairstyles from the roaring 20's. Is she second from the bottom? Could you imagine young girls doing that today?

Phillip Carr 01-21-2026 05:09 PM

I’m guessing the girls were having fun posing like the sardines they packed.

Dave Noreen 01-21-2026 07:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daryl Corona (Post 442528)
Dave;

Cool picture of your mom. They certainly had hairstyles from the roaring 20's. Is she second from the bottom? Could you imagine young girls doing that today?

Yes. She is second from the bottom. The one in back was my father's cousin Edna who was also my mother's best friend. Back in those times a cross-country road trip wasn't hitting the Interstate and setting your cruise control! I wish I'd have paid more attention to the stories but from the photo album there was three carloads of workers and my grandmother went along and cooked and kept house for them. I know from the photo album they came or went via Yellowstone National Park.

Mike Koneski 01-21-2026 09:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Andrew Sacco (Post 442500)
You have to get good sardines, not the cheap ass tasting stuff from Dollar General. Fresh sardines lightly grilled and drizzled with sea salt and olive oil is heaven. Big Mike I brought you a can of Matiz wild sardines didn't I? Those are my go to.

Yes you did. The sardine and anchovy sauce. :cool:

Stan Hillis 01-22-2026 02:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave Noreen
In those days anything past 8th grade cost money.

I never have heard that, Dave. Was it a Washington State thing?


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