S'mores Sabat Mung Sable Potatoes Sabra Liqueur Sacchi -- Bartolomeo Sachertorte Sachet Bags Sack Apples Saco Potatoes Saddle of Lamb Saddle of Turkey Safe Cooking Temperatures Safflower Safflower Oil Saffron Saffron Thistle Sagan -- À la Sage Saginaw Gold Potatoes Sago Flour Sago Grubs Sago Meal Sago Palm Sago Pearls Sago Starch Sahnequark Saint-Germain -- À la Saint-Honoré Cream Saint-Mandé -- À la Saint Agur -- (Crème de) Saint Agur Cheese Saint Edmund's Pippin Saint Paulin Sake -- Fugu Sake -- Shiro Previous | Next | Red River Cereal© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedRed River Cereal is a Canadian mix of dried grains for making a porridge-like cooked cereal. It contains wheat flakes, rye flakes, sugar, flax (cracked and whole), salt, and artificial flavour. It is sold in distinct red boxes and comes in Original, Ready to Serve and Ready to Serve flavoured (Maple & Brown Sugar) versions. The Ready to Serve kinds can be prepared in the microwave, or by pouring boiling water on them and letting them sit. Red River Cereal is served hot and like porridge, you put milk and sugar on it. It has a somewhat gritty texture when cooked up. Detractors say it feels like sand in your mouth. Wags say it looks like birdseed, and tastes like it. It also often emerges from the cooking process lumpy and stiff. It is particularly popular in Western Canada, but sold in most grocery stores throughout Canada. That being said, many Canadians don't know about it. It has been available from time to time at some places in the States, such as Iowa. Red River Cereal is actually now (2006) made in central Canada (specifically, Toronto) by Robin Hood Multifoods Company. Similar mixtures in bulk stores are sometimes labelled as "Tri-Grain Mix." Cooking Tips See Also:FlaxOther entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale, Wheat |
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