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| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Mar 06 10:46AM -0700 On 2019-03-06 9:17 a.m., Ed Pawlowski wrote: > in an hour or so. If eating a meal that justifies a red, I always open > the bottle and take a taste, maybe 30 to 60 minutes ahead. Then tasting > again with the meal, it has evolved to a smoother more mellow drink. I once opened a bottle from a leading Bordeaux chateau 30 minutes or so before grilling some lamb chops during a friend's visit. It was thin and acidic and I thought that I would have to open a different red. However, it was great when we drank it with the chops. Then, with the remaining wine, I served some 5yr-old cheddar. What an experience!! The flavours of both the wine and cheese just "exploded". Years later, my friend still talks about that meal despite having drunk many excellent wines since. |
| ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 06 12:37PM -0600 >Bruce wrote to Christ's favorite boy: >> You talk a lot of crap. >Said the pot to the kettle. ;) bruce ask any supertaster and they will most likely say they can not stand beer and/or wine... I am not lying to talking crap. I do joke a lot but never lie when in a serious conversation. -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
| ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 06 12:32PM -0600 On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 08:55:55 -0800 (PST), A Moose in Love >> -- >chili 24 hours later. i wouldn't mind reading your technique/recipe. >mine's simple. inside round cut into small cubes. i put passata into a pot. add chickStock. add diced onion. add diced garlic. add chili powder, a bit of salt, paprika (mild), some oregano, some cumin, and a bit of hot sauce. simmer for an hour. then add the cubes of beef and simmer for 2 or so hours. note i don't brown beef, onion, or anything. that's because it doesn't really need it, and it is healthier as it doesn't create free radicals. add drained and rinsed red kidney beans .5 hour before serving. i use commercial chili powder. i could purchase powdered ancho, but it is so expensive. The thing about browning the beef beforehand is you get to drain off a lot of fat and cholesterol... This last batch of chili that I made did not follow a recipe. I just threw in what I wanted and it was freakin awesome... Here is what I remember... Browned the beef after I chopped onions I added those and chopped carrots and added those. By that time the excess oil was ready to be drained so I just poured it into a bowl to be used at another time to make french fries. A can of Bushes Black beans the entire can, then Bushes refried beans the entire can. And about another half can of water. Then I added a pack of McCormick gluten free chili <https://www.google.com/search?q=gluten+free+McCormic+chili&rlz=1C1AVNE_enUS716US716&oq=gluten+free+McCormic+chili&aqs=chrome..69i57.11423j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8> spice. It is just an easy way to get a bunch of spices in at once then added about a tablespoon of sriracha sauce I added a little extra paprika salt and black pepper. Then I let it simmer for about 20 mins to let the veg soften and the flavors to combine and allow the water to reduce by about half. It took about 30 minutes total. -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
| ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Mar 06 12:34PM -0600 On Wed, 06 Mar 2019 12:32:57 -0600, >carrots and added those. By that time the excess oil was ready to be >drained so I just poured it into a bowl to be used at another time to >make french fries. Oops I forgot to put I also added a bit of sausage -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
| penmart01@aol.com: Mar 06 12:36PM -0500 On Wed, 6 Mar 2019 11:34:12 -0500, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >drains the water. It doesn't get overrsaturated in one spot. You'd >have to know the soil on this island to get what I'm talking about. >Jill I'd think a stream of water falling from roof height would cause erosion, probably make a large depression in sand. Living on Long Island for years I know about sand, water seeps right through immediately but still during heavy rains erosion was horrific. Everyone has downspouts... if you say you don't need downspouts then why do you need gutters? A lot of people here don't have downspouts or gutters, they have all rocks and large gravel where the water runs off the roof, the soil has washed away. I don't have gutters on my barn, soil has washed away from the perimeter and all that remains are the rocks.... soil here is very rocky, that's why there are so many rock walls. |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 06 10:01AM -0800 On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 11:34:36 AM UTC-5, Jill McQuown wrote: > drains the water. It doesn't get overrsaturated in one spot. You'd > have to know the soil on this island to get what I'm talking about. > Jill Why have gutters at all, then? Is there something on the ground beneath the drop to prevent erosion? Cindy Hamilton |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 01:06PM -0500 > erosion, probably make a large depression in sand. Living on Long > Island for years I know about sand, water seeps right through > immediately but still during heavy rains erosion was horrific. Long Island is not Saint Helena or Dataw or any of these sea islands. > Everyone has downspouts... if you say you don't need downspouts then > why do you need gutters? Don't ask me, I didn't built the house. All the houses around here have gutters and/or rain chains. A lot of people here don't have downspouts > or gutters, they have all rocks and large gravel where the water runs > off the roof, the soil has washed away. Uh huh. > barn, soil has washed away from the perimeter and all that remains are > the rocks.... soil here is very rocky, that's why there are so many > rock walls. Yeah, but we weren't talking about your barn or your rocky soil. I live on an island. Oyster shells get churned up occasionally when it rains. No rocks or gravel. It's sandy soil. It absorbs the water very quickly. It's an island that doesn't tend to flood even during a hurricane. Natural drainage. Jill |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 01:12PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 1:01 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > Why have gutters at all, then? Is there something on the ground > beneath the drop to prevent erosion? > Cindy Hamilton Why gutters? I don't know. My parents built the house, it has gutters. <shrug> All the homes in the neighborhood have gutters. Likely it would cost more money to pull them out and do something to seal the roof where they are attached than to just have them cleaned once a year. No biggie. The ground underneath the gutter isn't eroding or getting washed away. The sandy soil absorbs the water very quickly. Jill |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 06 10:21AM -0800 On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 1:13:20 PM UTC-5, Jill McQuown wrote: > The ground underneath the gutter isn't eroding or getting washed away. > The sandy soil absorbs the water very quickly. > Jill Ok. I've lived on sandy soil before, but nothing like that. I'm having trouble picturing soil so thirsty that a frog-throttling rain doesn't wash it away. Cindy Hamilton |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 01:31PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 1:21 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > trouble picturing soil so thirsty that a frog-throttling rain doesn't > wash it away. > Cindy Hamilton Sorry, I can't explain it. Perhaps a geologist could but I'm not one. Jill |
| penmart01@aol.com: Mar 06 12:41PM -0500 >> > I mean who is going to say hey it is 18.8889c if it was 18.3333c the >> >game would have been canceled >> Does that mean you prefer centimeters to inches? Every gal I've known prefered inches to centimeters/ |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Mar 06 01:03PM -0500 > low... I think they purposely under inflate so you return so they can > sell you something. Fortunately that idiot light doesn't indicate > over inflation. Over inflation of tires is not much better than under inflation. Air pressure does vary with extreme temperature differences. Tires are not perfectly sealed and the slowly lose air through the rubber. They should be checked regularly. I was not the only with air issues yesterday. There was a car at the air pump when I arrived and another pulled up while I was doing my tires. |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Mar 06 01:29PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 1:03 PM, Dave Smith wrote: > should be checked regularly. > I was not the only with air issues yesterday. There was a car at the air > pump when I arrived and another pulled up while I was doing my tires. Before sensors, cars often road much of the winter under inflated. The stated pressure for the car is always a compromise between good handling and smooth ride. I always run about 3 psi over the recommendation. In winter, a couple more pounds makes a difference in really cold temperature. Evey 10 degrees means a 1 to 2 pound change. |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Mar 06 12:30PM -0500 >> here. > Behavoral issues is a whole nother topic... I've found that those who > haven't served have far more behavoral issues. That is a different story. I think the country would have better citizens if they brought back the draft. The military fixed a lot of wayward teenagers. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 12:49PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 10:42 AM, Janet wrote: > management, leadership, teamwork; at the very least, personal > presentation and attention to detail. > Janet UK My father was a career U.S. Marine. After he retired he got a job as Director of Security at Rhodes College in Memphis for about 15 years. They were looking for someone to maintain and direct a security staff for the campus, deal with issues reported from the dorms and any other sort of disturbance on campus. Call local police when required. His background certainly qualified him for a job outside of military. He was on call 24/7 and there was only one phone in the house. In the kitchen. A wall mounted dial telephone. LOL I was a teenager so I was once on the phone with a girlfriend in the middle of the night when the operator cut in with an emergency call. Trying to reach my father. Uh, okay. I'll go get him. It was about 2:00 in the morning and I had to pretend the phone woke me up. I wasn't supposed to be talking on the phone at 2AM. LOL At any rate, that's what he did after he retired from the Marine Corps. Took the skills he'd learned and put them to use in a second time around. Jill |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Mar 06 12:59PM -0500 On 2019-03-06 10:42 a.m., Janet wrote: > civilian life; such as analysis and problem solving, resilience, > management, leadership, teamwork; at the very least, personal > presentation and attention to detail. Exactly. The military can be a great place to learn skills that will help you in life. There are all sorts of opportunities to learn trades. Then again, there are a lot of people who end up in the military because they have no other prospects. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 01:21PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 12:30 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > That is a different story. I think the country would have better > citizens if they brought back the draft. The military fixed a lot of > wayward teenagers. The Draft is still in affect, Ed. Men aged 18 are required to register. They just haven't been "called up" using what we know of as the Draft. Lottery numbers. Most of the the people serving right now are voluntary. There's a move for a change in the Draft regulations to include Women since women have been allowed to and have been serving in combat situations. It's only fair they should also be part of the Draft. IMHO. Jill |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Mar 06 01:25PM -0500 On 3/6/2019 12:59 PM, Dave Smith wrote: > help you in life. There are all sorts of opportunities to learn trades. > Then again, there are a lot of people who end up in the military because > they have no other prospects. I remember when I was a teenager (1970's) some young guys I went to school with got into minor scuffles with the law. They were given a choice by the judge: jail or join the Navy. Most of them chose the Navy. Not exactly the types you'd want defending the country. It was what it was. Jill |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 06 09:55AM -0800 On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 12:04:09 PM UTC-5, A Moose in Love wrote: > > CBD oil treatments and cannabis "breathing treatments" too! > > John Kuthe, RN, Cannabis Nurse and Climate Activist! > good. i wonder though, does CBD treatments make you at all(even a little bit) high? the reason i ask is that i cannot stand the high of cannabis. not even a little bit. CBD has no THC in it, so it doesn't make you at all high. My husband has been taking it for chronic pain. He also takes something with a tiny amount of THC in the evening; it helps him sleep. Cindy Hamilton |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Mar 06 10:15AM -0800 On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 3:24:39 AM UTC-10, John Kuthe wrote: > CBD oil treatments and cannabis "breathing treatments" too! > John Kuthe, RN, Cannabis Nurse and Climate Activist! How about a yeast that, when used to make dough, creates CBD and THC when you bake it? Yes, how about that. :) https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-00714-9 |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Mar 06 10:23AM -0800 On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 1:15:25 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote: > > John Kuthe, RN, Cannabis Nurse and Climate Activist! > How about a yeast that, when used to make dough, creates CBD and THC when you bake it? Yes, how about that. :) > https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-00714-9 Maybe. There's more to it than CBD and THC (and more than one kind of each). The hemp plant produces additional compounds, and if you refine the oil and remove them, the result isn't as effective. Cindy Hamilton |
| Pamela <pamela.poster@gmail.com>: Mar 06 06:20PM On 22:20 4 Mar 2019, wrote: > capitol hill > capitol hill hotel > capitol tower Why don't you answer the question? I asked what's a "capitol letter?" |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Mar 06 10:49AM -0700 On 2019-03-06 8:23 a.m., Janet wrote: >> Mr. Boarding House has spoken. Time to flush the toilet. > Bet he never puts the seat down either. > Janet UK Why should he? Are the women incapable? |
| "Ophelia" <OphElsnore@gmail.com>: Mar 06 05:50PM "Bruce" wrote in message news:iv5u7ed522qmst26lcgq9fuhn6kapmuo16@4ax.com... >>> and would blow all the money if he got his hands on it. >> You're rapidly becoming the most useless and obnoxious person here. >Nothing she said was not factual. The endless bitching, constantly against and about the same people is unnecessary and nasty. People like Joan, Sqwertz, Dave and Alex are trying to fix their own unhappiness by making other people unhappy. Get over yourselves and get professional help if you can't do it alone. == If only they could understand how disgusting they are to others ... but they seem to think they are being clever. Ugh. I can't bear to read any posts from them any more. No, they really enjoy hurting people |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Mar 06 10:40AM -0700 On 2019-03-06 9:17 a.m., Gary wrote: >>> ones. >>> My wooden one has lasted over 20 year with no problem. >> If I could find one with good reviews, I would. Excuses, excuses! More and more excuses! |
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