Thursday, August 1, 2019

Messy Josephine Bake


Here is an interesting twist on the old favorite sloppy joe casserole. We dedicate this to a true LGBT hero Dr. Richard Isay. Read about his contributions after this simple recipe.



Ground beef, onion and mushroom in a Carolina white bar-b-que sauce topped by pastry. Uniquely supprising and easy to put together.

Ingredients:
1lbs ground beef
1 cup fresh mushrooms cut up
½ onion chopped
1 cup slave sauce*
1 cup shreaded cheddar
1 tube cressant rolls

*Slave sauce
  • 1 cups low fat mayonnaise
  • ¼ cup white wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp each: pepper, salt, sugar
  • 1 Tbs whole grain mustard
  • 1 tablespoon fresh garlic, finely minced
  • 2 teaspoons prepared horseradish
Directions:
Place rack in lower third of oven and pre heat to 350 degrees


Do you cutting: Rinse, drain and cut up the mushrooms, chop the onion, mince the garlic, set these aside.


Cook the ground beef in a skillet over medium high heat.




Let the beef turn brown and completely cooked, for about 8 minutes then add the onion and mushrooms, let cook for another 8 minutes. Drain well!


While that cooks, whip together the sauce. Place sauce ingredients in a bowl and whisk to combine.


Spray a 9 x 14 casserole baking dish.


Mix the sauce into the ground beef mixture until well combined and spoon into the baking dish. Stir in the cheese.


Lay out some waxed paper on the counter and unroll the cressant rolls (don't worry about the dotted lines, they will alow steam to escape).
Make sure it is the same size as your baking dish.


Carefully flip this on the top of the casserole mixture tucking in the sides.
Peel off the paper. (if you wish, brush with a mixed egg for a golden crust) sprinkle with a pinch of sea salt.


Set casserole on a cookie sheet and bake for 35 minutes or until golden.
Let set for 5 minutes to rest before serving. A good time to microwave your green vegetable. Then both will be ready to serve at the same time.



What an unexpected supprize to serve my Master Indy
socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes by Dan White http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00F315Y4I/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_vAT4sb0934RTM via @amazon



 
===============================
RICHARD ISAY (pronounced EYE-say)

Even after the American Psychiatric Association declassified homosexuality as an illness in 1973, the stigma persisted in the medical community. Gay patients were approached as sick individuals who needed to be cured. Dr. Richard Isay was one of the first prominent psychiatrists/psychoanalysts to encourage his patients to accept themselves rather than deny their feelings. Isay, a gay man himself, was already an established mental health professional when he came out of the closet. While ostracized by his colleagues, he continued to present his then-radical notions about homosexuality at meetings and in his writings nonetheless.
Attitudes shifted in 1992 when Isay threaten the American Psychoanalytic Association with a discrimination lawsuit. The APA agreed to start treating analysts the same regardless of their sexuality and to promote education on the subject within the network.

Richard Isay was born in1934 and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His father managed a steel mill. Isay graduated from Haverford College and the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. Soon after completing his psychiatry residency at Yale University, he completed his training at the Western New England Psychoanalytic Institute.

During the era in which Dr. Isay trained, homosexuality was viewed as a lower level of psychological development. It was something to be cured in therapy, and openly gay professionals were barred from training as analysts at institutions accredited by the American Psychoanalytic Association.

Early in his career, Dr. Isay accepted the mainstream view. Troubled about his own sexuality, he thought psychoanalysis might help, and he had 10 years of therapy.
In the early 1970s, soon after the analysis ended and he was supposedly “cured,” he realized that he was homosexual. By then, he had a wife and two sons.

For a time, he lived as a closeted gay man, but he worked with gay patients — helping them to accept themselves, not trying to turn them straight — and writing the idea that homosexuality was normal, not a matter of arrested development or illness.

Even though the American Psychiatric Association stopped classifying homosexuality as a disease in 1973, many members of the American Psychoanalytic Association continued to regard it as an illness.
Dr. Isay tried reasoning, badgering and other forms of persuasion for about 15 years, but the analysts held firm.

In 1983, as chair of the APsaA's program committee, Isay organized a panel called "New Perspectives on Homosexuality".
Isay argued that homosexuality is a normal variant of sexual identity and that psychoanalysts should stop trying to change the sexual orientation of their patients, which he considered injurious, creating a firestorm of controversy. "Several analysts walked out", Isay later recalled.

Isay wrote widely on the subjects of psychoanalysis and homosexuality, including texts such asBeing Homosexual: Gay Men and Their Development (1989). This was one of the first books to argue that homosexuality is an inborn identity. It is widely considered a breakthrough in psychoanalytic theory and important, historical work.

In1991, after Isay's lawsuit, the APsaA adopted a non-discrimination policy for the training of analytic candidates and changed its position statement on homosexuality. They also agreed to allow gays and lesbians to become training analysts, and to promote gay and lesbian teachers and supervisors.

Dr. Isay also wrote, “Becoming Gay” (1997) and “Commitment and Healing: Gay Men and the Need for Romantic Love” (2006).

On August 13, 2011, Isay married Gordon Harrell, his partner of 32 years.
Isay died about seven months later in 2012. The cause was cancer.



At his death, Dr. Isay was a professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College and a faculty member at the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research.

“He changed the way the psychoanalytic world viewed the subject of homosexuality,” said Dr. Jack Drescher, training and supervising analyst and the author of “Psychoanalytic Therapy and the Gay Man.” “He was a pioneer, a very brave man. He was attacked by psychoanalysts. He took a lot of flak.”

Dr. Richard A. Friedman, director of the psychopharmacology clinic at Weill Cornell Medical College, said that Dr. Isay had “made the field see that their view was based on ideology, not evidence.” He pushed the field to do what it should have done, and he did not stop. We’re all richer for it.”




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