Monday, April 20, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 13 topics

graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Apr 19 08:41AM -0600

On 2020-04-19 4:38 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> <https://www.foxnews.com/>
 
> That's probably the most liberal news outlet Trump supporters see.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Summed up perfectly here:
 
https://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/blkp1x/they_can_sense_brain_death_richardyou_have_to/
 
http://tiny.cc/cwtbnz
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Apr 19 08:46AM -0600

On 2020-04-18 11:55 p.m., Leo wrote:
> Nobody is certain if a palliative is right around the corner, already here
> or never to be. Hang in there buddy!
 
> leo
 
https://freethoughtblogs.com/singham/2020/04/15/if-donald-trump-had-been-the-captain-of-the-titanic/
 
http://tiny.cc/96tbnz
Taxed and Spent <nospamplease@nonospam.com>: Apr 19 06:54AM -0700

On 4/19/2020 6:38 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> Some women speak in affected high, breathy tones. Others speak in
> natural tones. Do any of them disgust you?
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
yes.
Taxed and Spent <nospamplease@nonospam.com>: Apr 19 03:44PM -0700

On 4/19/2020 2:39 PM, Dave Smith wrote:
> having some hearing loss from years of working around loud noises, I
> don't hear high pitches as well as I do with lower pitch. When
> listeneing to choral pieces the soprano voices tend to fade away.
 
I have a similar hearing loss, and I prefer a woman with a high pitch.
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 20 08:28AM -0400

John Kuthe wrote:
 
> > Jill
 
> I prefer one client, not many. And I keep telling everyone here, I PASS each and every background check easily! The folks that DO legitimate background checks do not INFER/INVENT nearly as much as the NOODS around RFC do!
 
> John Kuthe...
 
Many here are gossiping about you losing this job even before
you start it. Wishful thinking, evidently. RFC is one mean crowd.
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Apr 20 06:41AM -0500

On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 23:32:07 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
>> be many lessons from the coronavirus pandemic, but we would be wise not
>> to forget this one. This newfound proficiency could be lifesaving.
 
>Making bread is getting popular too. It's due to the fact that people have more time on their hands, and a shortage of bread at the markets. Unfortunately, that means a shortage of yeast and flour. I think I got a 2 lb bag of yeast in the cabinet so I better join in on all the fun. ?
 
 
Yeah I dont see it.... I did hear the other day that some people had
time on their hands and started making toilet paper... Oh no wait they
had shit on their hands not time...
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 20 05:21AM -0700

On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 4:56:28 PM UTC-4, graham wrote:
> https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/18/opinion/covid-cooking-health.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
 
> http://tiny.cc/h8ecnz
 
> How Covid-19 Is Making Millions of Americans Healthier
 
Evidence? Or is this just wishful thinking?
 
Cindy Hamilton
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 20 08:08AM -0400

Sheldon Martin wrote:
> Over time Garish has become more and more nasty, however he confuses
> nastiness with humor... his idea of joking is not funny.
 
Like this one, Sheldon?
---------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 17 Mar 2018
From: penmart01@aol.com
 
You can bring bacon ferret scrapple, with their little crying
faces looking up at you... nightmares for you every night for the
rest
of your wretched life.
---------------------------------------------------------
"Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Apr 20 01:25AM -0700

"Ed Pawlowski" <esp@snet.xxx> wrote in message
news:iu7nG.7424$8k1.5487@fx26.iad...
>> prostate cancer.
 
> Yes, only for medical reasons. Or course, it conflicted with my catholic
> school education so had to abstain.
 
I never liked graham crackers either. We were supposed to eat them as a
snack in Kindergarten. I refused and was allowed to have a Saltine instead.
I didn't really like those either but they were tolerable.
 
Then when I had a threatened miscarriage and was in the hospital, they
brought me graham crackers and regular ginger ale. Both of those things will
make me gag when I try to swallow them.
 
I don't really like any cereal but cornflakes is one kind I could eat if I
had to.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 20 05:05AM -0700

On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 3:29:52 PM UTC-10, GM wrote:
 
> A Curious History of Sex
> By Kate Lister
> Illustrated. 456 pages. Unbound. $28.95..."
 
Female "hysteria" was a seen as a serious medical problem during the Victorian age. There were several treatments available. The invention of the electric vibrator was seen as a godsend.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FWReqkTWfA
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 20 07:53AM -0400

John Kuthe wrote:
 
> And SMOOTHE!! Yesterday's was just the "adjust the mirrors and seats" day, TODAY possibly the full smooth HOUR of 'Tracking!
 
Your indoor exercise machine has mirrors?
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Apr 19 12:26PM -0400

On 2020-04-19 11:00 a.m., graham wrote:
> On 2020-04-19 12:52 a.m., dsi1 wrote:
 
>> My guess is that the Chinese invented ketchup. I love that stuff!
 
> Well the word is derived from one of the Chinese languages.
 
 
The Chinese has a sauce made of fermented fish and salt and it had a
name that was anglicized to ketchup, got modified and evolved into a
tomato based product. They get credit for the name, but tomato ketchup
is a condiment that is nothing like the Chinese condiment from which it
got its name.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 20 03:05AM -0700

On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 6:13:22 PM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
 
> >Cindy Hamilton
 
> Your citations are absolute nonsense, based soley on modern
> expectations... like claiming egg noodles are pasta.
 
<https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/fresh-pasta-dough>
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 20 02:59AM -0700

On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 9:17:00 PM UTC-4, John Kuthe wrote:
 
> Homo Sapiens are One Race: The Human Race!
 
> Get over it!
 
> John Kuthe...
 
It's patently obvious you have no idea what white supremacism actually is.
 
Cindy Hamilton
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Apr 19 11:52PM -0500

>level of protection but I think all are good.
 
>https://imgur.com/gallery/7VJYEj1
 
>I'm going with #8 since I have the material.
 
I have never worn a face mask and I wore gloves only once. I go around
people everyday and I have not gotten sick, although I may be one of
the ones that are immune to the disease by having the antibodies
already in my blood which can only mean one thing. The idiot doctors
that were so quick to spread this "novel(new)" virus to the media were
wrong and there is Nothing new about it. Especially seeing how so many
people are not affected by it at all.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
"Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk>: Apr 20 10:49AM +0100

"Ed Pawlowski" wrote in message news:eJ8nG.157759$mf1.109315@fx45.iad...
 
Here is a variety of face masks you can make at home. You can vary the
level of protection but I think all are good.
 
https://imgur.com/gallery/7VJYEj1
 
I'm going with #8 since I have the material.
 
===
 
lol
 
 
 
--
This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
https://www.avg.com
S Viemeister <firstname@lastname.oc.ku>: Apr 20 08:26AM +0100

On 4/19/2020 9:31 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>> meaning a paste, of semolina flour and water.
 
> Pasta can be dry or fresh, made with semolina or regular wheat flour,
> with or without eggs.
 
Yes.
coltwvu@gmail.com: Apr 20 02:36AM -0700

I once tried egg noodles for spaghetti, it wasn't good.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Apr 19 09:17PM -0500

Jinx the Minx wrote:
 
 
> > Is there something about America I'm overlooking?
 
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8207245/Six-THOUSAND-families-line-
> past month, so unless you are first in line in the morning, you're
> not getting, meat, dry pasta, rice, dairy goods, flour, sugar, bread,
> or much of anything at all.
 
It's different everywhere but that specifically is a food bank that
normally served 58,000 a week. Texas doesn't seem to have smaller
local outlets everywhere like most areas.
 
I worry that some of the smaller areas may have distribution problems
but as a whole, we are fine. Might be out of pork in one place, beef
in another, chicken in a third. No one is out of all meat, just not
getting preferred type at the time (I'd love a pork butt but ok, out,
so got something else).
 
Our problem is distribution and covid hitting food manufacturing plants
(butchers for cows and pigs etc). We aren't out of flour for example,
we are just having trouble getting wheat to the processing plant then
to bag it as flour and off to the stores.
 
The main difference is we produce more food, than we eat in the
continental USA. That may be true of Canada as well but just like us,
they have pockets that don't. That will be a problem in a bit probably.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Apr 19 01:53PM -0400

On 2020-04-19 10:08 a.m., Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 4/19/2020 7:45 AM, Bruce wrote:
>> On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 04:39:01 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
air hands during the covid pandemic.
 
> True, but you have to look at where the statistics come from. Unoccupied
> houses?  Some cities have plenty of them with tax liens and such that
> would have water shut off.
 
 
Detroit is an urban phenomenon in a class of its own with an incredible
number of abandoned homes and buildings. Before writing about that I
Googled it to make sure I had the reliable information. I started to
type in "how many abandoned houses......" and Google auto filled "in
Detroit". There were a lot more than I had expected... 70,000 abandoned
buildings, 31,000 abandoned houses and 90,000 vacant lots. With a little
more research I learned that a lot of those vacant homes and buildings
had been abandoned without shutting off the water. Pipes burst and
copper pipes were stolen, so water was gushing. That could account for a
lot of the "homes" were the water was shut off.
Taxed and Spent <nospamplease@nonospam.com>: Apr 19 03:45PM -0700

On 4/19/2020 2:50 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> our society chooses not to avail themselves of it.
 
> There are poor that need help. There are poor that made their own
> choices.
 
There is a big difference between the poor, and the truly needy.
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 19 01:07PM -0400

jmcquown wrote:
> > rather make your own special cream of mushroom soup. You often
> > scoff at me when I mention making it. Good eats, btw.
 
> There you go making things up again.
 
Not at all. You have said that in the past. No worries though,
cshenk will back you up in a few days.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Apr 19 06:03PM -0500

> > where the crust seemed to be mostly cauliflower based?
 
> Wasn't that Crusty Kruller who mentioned cauliflower pizza dough??
> One of his many gluten-free 'recipes.'
 
I thought it was Bruce but Gary says it was CK.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Apr 19 06:03PM -0500

Gary wrote:
 
> > awful to me but then I've not tried it. It was a cauliflour pizza
> > where the crust seemed to be mostly cauliflower based?
 
> And that wasn't even Bruce. It was the Christkiller fellow.
 
Ok, thought that was Bruce.
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Apr 19 08:55AM -0600

On 2020-04-19 4:08 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> Trump has espoused both positions in as many days.
 
> What kind of President is that?
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Someone who believes the news should be all about him and not some pandemic.
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