Monday, March 21, 2016

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 9 topics

anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:24AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 4:18 AM, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
 
>> If Sanders loses, will you admit I'm a better judge of your political
>> situation than you?
 
> If he loses the general election? Sure.
 
IF"????
 
It is to laugh!
 
At YOU and HIM!
anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:24AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 4:59 AM, Bruce wrote:
>>> situation than you?
 
>> If he loses the general election? Sure.
 
> To Clinton.
 
Bugger off Auztard.
anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:27AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 6:12 AM, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> general. Hey, 20,000 in Seattle. That follows 11,000 in Phoenix and
> 14,000 in Salt Lake City.
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lp5k59OyYho
 
How FUCKING STUPID are you anyway????
 
http://www.npr.org/2016/02/18/467230964/survey-clinton-maintains-massive-superdelegate-lead
 
In the battle for primary votes, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders are
locked in a tight battle.
 
But you wouldn't know it to look at the superdelegates. In the unseen
battle for these party insiders, Clinton has an overwhelming lead. Of
the 712 Democratic superdelegates, 449 (or about 63 percent) currently
support Clinton, according to the latest Associated Press survey of
superdelegates. Only 19 support Sanders. (AP did not reach 62
superdelegates, and 182 remained uncommitted or undecided.)
 
 
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/mar/6/bernie-sanders-supporters-say-superdelegate-system/?page=all
 
What steams Sanders supporters is that the Democratic Party
superdelegates — party insiders who receive a vote at the party
convention and are not bound to back any candidate, like the elected
"pledged" delegates — are lining up overwhelmingly behind former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
 
She holds a not-insurmountable lead over the Vermont senator after Super
Saturday by 663 to 459 delegates, but when it comes to superdelegates,
it's not even close. Mrs. Clinton has the backing of nearly every
superdelegate with 458, while Mr. Sanders has just 22, according to
Associated Press estimates.
 
The candidates need 2,383 delegate votes to win the nomination at the
Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.
 
In other words, there's a scenario in which Mrs. Clinton could lose the
popular delegate vote but win the nomination by amassing enough
superdelegates.
anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:28AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 6:21 AM, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> he is the stronger candidate in the general
> election.
 
No he's not.
 
Your delusions define you.
anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:29AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 7:42 AM, sf wrote:
 
> Yeah, he'll lose the primary. Hope he's on the ticket anyway. That
> would be a real one-two punch. She appeals to old voters, he appeals
> to the young and the disenchanted.
 
She gets the old hard line liars, he inveigles the young economically
illiterate entitlement demographic.
 
Yes, there's the end of this nation as a viable capitalist entity.
anomaly <not@he.re>: Mar 21 09:32AM -0600

On 3/21/2016 7:53 AM, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
>> would be a real one-two punch. She appeals to old voters, he appeals
>> to the young and the disenchanted.
 
> He wouldn't take it, and I doubt that Senator Warren would either.
 
Speak of the Devil, literally.
 
Liz the hypocritical home flipper:
 
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/418907/elizabeth-warren-bought-foreclosed-homes-make-quick-profit-jillian-kay-melchior
 
Before the crash that she blamed on speculators, Senator Elizabeth
Warren made a bundle by flipping houses.
 
"It was really, really nice," says Hickman's granddaughter, Andrea
Martin. That's part of the reason she's so surprised her grandmother
sold the home in 1993 for a mere $30,000. Despite a debilitating stroke,
Martin says Hickman remained sharp, and she had always been
business-savvy. As an Avon saleswoman, she had at times ranked among the
top ten in the country. "So I don't know why," Martin says. "Maybe she
just wanted out from underneath it, but to sell it for such a low number
— I don't know. Maybe she got bad advice, maybe she was just tired." The
home's new owner: Elizabeth Warren, today a Massachusetts senator who
has built a political career on denouncing the sort of banking titans
and financial sophisticates who make a buck off the little guy. Five
months after purchasing Veo Vessels' old home, Warren flipped the
property, selling it for $115,000 more than she'd paid, according to
Oklahoma County Property Assessor records.
 
Read more at:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/418907/elizabeth-warren-bought-foreclosed-homes-make-quick-profit-jillian-kay-melchior
 
 
> I wonder, and I'm actually asking--
 
> Are there any of you who would vote for Clinton in the general election,
> but who would not vote for Sanders if he were the nominee?
 
Sanders will immediately destroy this nation's economy.
 
Clinton will only part it out to China like Bill did.
sf <sf@geemail.com>: Mar 21 07:08AM -0700

On Mon, 21 Mar 2016 03:31:28 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
> > cookies.
 
> Depends on the cookie; depends on how you like your cookies. I prefer
> to melt the butter for chocolate-chip cookies. It makes them chewy.
 
Tell me more! Can I use the Toll House recipe and just melt the
butter? I love chewy cookies and can never get them to Mrs. Field's
quality. I love the texture of those cookies but they are way too
sweet for me.
 
--
 
sf
notbob <notbob@nothome.com>: Mar 21 02:45PM


> With a wooden spoon, in a bowl. You must be very young!
 
In my dreams. ;)
 
nb
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.net>: Mar 21 11:01AM -0400

On 3/20/2016 10:35 PM, Doris Night wrote:
 
> make whipped cream.
 
> I can't picture using it to cream butter and sugar, though.
 
> Doris
 
Same here. Tough turning.
 
Funny that we should be discussing a pretty simple task in the scheme of
life. Look at the Pyramids, castles, cathedrals, all built before the
advert of electricity and powered engines of any sort. I'd love to hop
in the time machine and visit a worksite for a day.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Mar 21 08:26AM -0700

On Monday, March 21, 2016 at 8:08:38 AM UTC-6, sf wrote:
> sweet for me.
 
> --
 
> sf
 
No, If you melt the butter, it radically changes the outcome of the final product. Creaming the sugar into the butter means creaming the SOLID butter into the sugar, not melted butter. But try it if you'd like. How gross could it be? ;-)
 
John Kuthe...
dsi1 <dsi100@yahoo.com>: Mar 21 08:26AM -0700

On Monday, March 21, 2016 at 4:08:38 AM UTC-10, sf wrote:
> sweet for me.
 
> --
 
> sf
 
My guess is that the texture is tied to the amount of brown sugar used and you won't be able to achieve the desired result because you won't be willing to use the amount of sugar needed. That's the bad news. The good news is that at least the cookies won't be too sweet. :)
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Mar 21 08:29AM -0700

On Monday, March 21, 2016 at 9:01:23 AM UTC-6, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> life. Look at the Pyramids, castles, cathedrals, all built before the
> advert of electricity and powered engines of any sort. I'd love to hop
> in the time machine and visit a worksite for a day.
 
Probably very brutal! The aristocracy used a lot of slaves to build that stuff! Slaves were a disposable form of human labor! :-(
 
John Kuthe...
"Colonel Edmund J. Burke" <burkesgurlz@t-girls.com>: Mar 21 08:28AM -0700

On 3/19/2016 1:16 PM, burfordTjustice wrote:
> Donald Trump was right about the national security threat posed by the massive influx of Muslim immigrants into the United States. Protests like the one he referenced during an early GOP debate are indeed happening in America, the news media is just failing to report it.
 
> Less than two years ago Hamas supporters converged on downtown Chicago and chanted "Death to America" over, and over again – but few outside of the Windy City ever learned of incident.
 
> http://www.angrypatriotmovement.com/muslims-death-to-america/
 
DEATH TO ALL SILICATE NIGS, I SAY!
 
http://i.imgur.com/kaRaTzy.jpg
 
VOTE TRUMP AND MAKE AMERICA WHITE AGAIN!
"Colonel Edmund J. Burke" <burkesgurlz@t-girls.com>: Mar 21 08:21AM -0700

On 3/20/2016 6:04 PM, Eris wrote:
> https://scontent-lga3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/v/t1.0-9/12821471_1256549374358542_6604694307120541546_n.jpg?oh=58199170b824e535cf9a8d211615d3e7&oe=578D4E9D
 
Them charlatans are running a business, like any other. It's really
quite simple, as are most folks.
Religion can be safely called the Great Whore Mother of Ignorance as well.
Think about that, and don't forget to Vote Trump in '16.
Letz make America great again!!
& <ampersand.the.great@gmail.com>: Mar 20 10:23PM -0400

On 03/16/2016 10:22 AM, Dave Norris wrote:
> beast locked up.
 
> This is a perfect example of the benefits of legal gun ownership.
 
> http://tinyurl.com/hz8wv4v
 
they must not have been christians
graham <gstereo@shaw.ca>: Mar 21 08:09AM -0600

> what pork belly is - the purveyor of loads of crackling! Nancy must
> have wondered why I left it uncovered overnight in the fridge, that
> was so the crackling would be even better.
 
All the pork in the SMs here is skinless. I was told that that's the way
it arrives from the packers. I did find some in a Vietnamese meat market
once but the shop ran into hygiene problems and the owners have been
charged with running a drugs racket and money laundering:-)
Graham
sf <sf@geemail.com>: Mar 21 07:15AM -0700

On Mon, 21 Mar 2016 11:28:12 -0000, "Ophelia" <OphElsinore@gmail.com>
wrote:
 
 
> I bought some the other week in Ripon. I chose a piece from display and he
> proceeded to score it!! I politely informed him I didn't want it scored!
 
> I like to use my .. um .. thingy with all the wee blades.
 
Jaccard tenderizer?
 
--
 
sf
"Ophelia" <OphElsinore@gmail.com>: Mar 21 03:06PM

"Gregory Morrow" <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1dc47650-3275-419f-bc1d-5567f7ae0247@googlegroups.com...
 
>> I like to use my .. um .. thingy with all the wee blades.
 
> "Care to see my etchings, luv...???"
 
> ;-)
 
*Thwap* No luv but I will use my Jaccard on you ... ;-)
 
 
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
"Ophelia" <OphElsinore@gmail.com>: Mar 21 03:07PM

"sf" <sf@geemail.com> wrote in message
news:3b00fbpglr8i349bkg8gfogr0d5qb9uuf6@4ax.com...
>> proceeded to score it!! I politely informed him I didn't want it scored!
 
>> I like to use my .. um .. thingy with all the wee blades.
 
> Jaccard tenderizer?
 
Yes:))
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
"Ophelia" <OphElsinore@gmail.com>: Mar 21 03:00PM

"sf" <sf@geemail.com> wrote in message
news:j6vvebdbttll5vv3ea9q6426mmagpdo3gv@4ax.com...
 
> children gave me an Anova sous vide for my birthday yesterday, so I'll
> probably skip trying out the slow cooker on corned beef for the first
> time and go straight to sous vide. Why not?
 
Why not indeed and if you think it is a good thing to do, will cook mine
sous vide too:)
 
Happy Birthday for yesterday:)) I hope you enjoy your sous vide as much as
I do mine:)
 
I suspect we will need to soak them well first, yes? Remember there will be
no liquid in there to dilute the salt etc?
 
Incidentally your method of finishing off in the oven will work very well.
Just be sure to cook the meat rare. Any meat I cook sous vide, I always
brown in a very hot pan or oven after it comes out.
 
I buy commercial. I was
> going to buy it from the place that supplies the local restaurants,
> but if I buy a grocery store corned beef, it comes vacuum packed - so
> it's sous vide ready. :)
 
Maybe it is:)) When will you try it? Mine doesn't come out of the soak
until at least Wednesday but I am happy to leave it longer if you intend to
do your sooner.
 
 
--
http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Mar 21 09:11AM -0400

On 2016-03-21 2:52 AM, sf wrote:
 
>> The only time I tried wild duck, I didnt like it. I am sure some
>> purists will find that odd but i like the domestically raised sorts.
 
> Agree about that, I prefer farmed salmon too.
 
Wild duck is pretty lean compared to domestic. The taste varies from one
species to another, and some are too fishy tasting. I don't mind farmed
salmon, but I am usually willing to pay more for wild.
sf <sf@geemail.com>: Mar 21 06:44AM -0700

On Mon, 21 Mar 2016 09:11:37 -0400, Dave Smith
 
> I don't mind farmed
> salmon, but I am usually willing to pay more for wild.
 
I don't like the flavor of wild, so I'm not willing to pay for it.
 
--
 
sf
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Mar 21 10:55AM -0500

MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
 
> My son threw me a curveball this evening. He wants to learn archery, and
> said he might like to hunt. I explained to him that wild turkeys don't
> taste as good as grocery store ones.
 
True. Also, you can buy a fat, tasty turkey for about the same as a
hunting licence and for sure less than bow and arrows too. He also
might not like killing animals once he gets one. That's what stopped
me from hunting.
Target archery is very fun though. I used to do that often as a kid.
 
Speaking of archery though, check this out. I have a relative that
competes in archery contests. He actually makes a living off of prize
money and sponsorships. He's my 1st cousin's grandson...so I'm related
in some remote way. hehh
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_Broadwater
 
My mom sent me a newspaper about one contest he won in Europe. Boiled
down to just him and some German archer so they did a final playoff to
decide the winner. The showdown was...one arrow to a target at 100
yards. The other guy went first and he hit the bullseye. Then my guy
shot and he also hit the bullseye but dead center, so he won. I'm
impressed. He was world champion compound bow archer that year.
"taxed and spent" <pleasedonot@spamme.com>: Mar 21 08:00AM -0700

"Gary" <g.majors@att.net> wrote in message news:56F0198E.61D7C489@att.net...
> yards. The other guy went first and he hit the bullseye. Then my guy
> shot and he also hit the bullseye but dead center, so he won. I'm
> impressed. He was world champion compound bow archer that year.
 
I am not impressed: Robin Hood would have split the first archer's arrow.
:)
notbob <notbob@nothome.com>: Mar 21 02:55PM

>> eat them. 8|
 
> Do you know if you have a nightshade intolerance? Nightshades (bell
> peppers, tomatoes I think, some other veggies) can inflame arthritis.
 
I do not.
 
I love grn pprs, even more than tomatoes, both which I've been eating
all my life. OTOH, I've gotten an allergic reaction to cucumber
peelings and, when I was younger, avacado pulp. Not so much,
anymore. Those BnB sausage are the only food that effects me, that
way. 8|
 
nb
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