Sunday, May 10, 2020

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

Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 10 01:11PM -0400

On 2020-05-10 9:03 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
 
>> Humans really SUCK! :-( I hate that I am one too!
 
> This is what's keeping you from a nursing job and will have the
> police at your door hauling you away again.
 
 
It becomes obvious how he managed to flunk out of orientation.
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: May 10 11:25AM -0300

>>though, so I only made what was needed for my kids for the next few
>>days.
 
>But they need extra sugar, foam suppressant and xanthan gum.
 
If you don't have it in your food, you don't miss it.
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: May 10 11:32AM -0300

On Sun, 10 May 2020 08:33:27 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>
wrote:
 
>certainly doesn't cook but he's very quick to find ingredients lists and
>ASSume everyone in the US drinks nothing but sugar.
 
>Jill
 
There are many things in NA that I never consume because of the added
sugar, not because of the environment etc etc but purely because I
don't like the taste of it! When I was in the hospital they were
trying to make me drink that Ensure stuff, it made me puke and I asked
one of the docs why something supposed to be 'healthy' could have so
much sugar in it. He was at a loss and said it was the 'way people
liked it' -
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: May 10 08:43AM -0600


>It kept running off the bread, so I tossed it at half-a-jar and
>bought some Jif. ;)
 
>nb
 
you must have purchased Adams natural with another oil subbed in. The
REAL Adams peanut butter is ground peanuts and is thick, thick, thick.
It's even tough to spread.
Janet US
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 10 11:22AM -0400

notbob wrote:
 
> It kept running off the bread, so I tossed it at half-a-jar and
> bought some Jif. ;)
 
> nb
 
ha ha ha
WELCOME to the world of *real peanut butter," nb :)
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: May 10 08:28AM -0700

On Sunday, May 10, 2020 at 8:57:06 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
 
> We like peanuts but not peanut butter, peanut butter is exactly the
> same as preground mystery meat.
 
Anything you don't grow or raise yourself is a mystery. You just choose
which mysteries you will look at.
 
> peanut shells is easy and is a big part of the enjoyment of eating
> peanuts. And in my opinion in-shell roasted peanuts taste far better
> than any peanut butter.
 
I'm not all that fond of peanuts. I sometimes use peanut butter for
various Asian recipes. It's just not worth buying peanuts. For
snacking I prefer pecans, pistachios, or walnuts.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 10 01:10PM -0400

On 2020-05-10 8:54 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
 
> ObFood: I love Borat in the movie 'Hugo' (as well as the rest of the
> movie). I'm watching it again for the 5-6th time. I didn't know
> that it was him the first time - not a Borat fan previously.
 
Someone gave me a season of Da Ali G show. I was not impressed at first
but then I realized that he was just playing the character and that it
really was funny. I only managed to catch a couple episodes of Who is
America. That was priceless.
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 10 11:23AM -0400

Dave Smith wrote:
> progression, the 1st, the 4th and the minor 7th, or the tonic, the sub
> dominate and the dominate 7th. If it is a minor key it is the same three
> chords but they throw in the relative minor of the tonic.
 
Good grief, Dave. This was my big laugh of the day. You are
obviously no musican. What you said came straight from a
class of "Music Theory 201," textbook.
(Music Theory 101 is about classical music}
 
Rock music is just rock music that sounds good. No need to
analyze it to death like that.
 
> Punk is basically the same. They are just basic chords,
> played by amateur musicians to entertain the people that
> want to be disenfranchised.
 
LOL. Settle down, dude. :-D
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: May 10 08:33AM -0700

On Sunday, May 10, 2020 at 11:24:26 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
> (Music Theory 101 is about classical music}
 
> Rock music is just rock music that sounds good. No need to
> analyze it to death like that.
 
No need, but it can be useful, especially if you want to play it.
The list of great rock bands with classically trained musicians
is pretty long.
 
Cindy Hamilton
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 10 09:51AM -0700

On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 10:48:03 AM UTC-10, John Kuthe wrote:
 
> Rock-n-Roll was never about the music, it's about the backbeat and the FEELING!
 
> Punk came around in the late 1970's because once again Rock-n-Roll got to full of itself and turned into the moldy oldy Classic Rock. Three chords and attitude, you look up Rock-n-Roll in a dictionary and you see a pic of The Ramones! No solos, just one Big Ramone every song! I know, I was THERE! More than you will ever know!
 
> John Kuthe...
 
My guess is that the younger generation would agree with you. A lot of musicians these days are not interested in playing that 12 bar blues progressions and pentatonic scale riffs/solos. Some of them seem to hate that stuff with a passion. That punk attitude of not caring about what the squares think and trying to whip their audiences into a frenzy is still alive. The musicianship is somewhat better though.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GA4kKqYv0QE
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 10 11:31AM -0400

> The first dish Julia Child ever ate in France was Dover sole.
 
The only time I saw a Julia Child cooking show was in her
end of years. She was so damn old she could do nothing but
stand there next to a guest chef doing the actual cooking.
 
Looked like she might have been held up with strings like
a marionette puppet. Quite disturbing and I couldn't stand
to watch a whole show.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: May 10 08:39AM -0700

On Sunday, May 10, 2020 at 11:32:57 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
 
> Looked like she might have been held up with strings like
> a marionette puppet. Quite disturbing and I couldn't stand
> to watch a whole show.
 
I can't say I have much use for French cooking, but I used to watch
her show in the late 60s or early 70s. She was very inspiring.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 10 12:46PM -0400

On 2020-05-10 8:03 a.m., jmcquown wrote:
>> much.  Today they seem to say use olive oil, but I prefer butter for
>> sole or halibut.
 
> Yes, I'll be using butter to pan fry the lightly crumbed sole. :)
 
Don't forget to tell us how you lightly fried it so Gary can throw a
hissy fit ;-)
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 10 11:23AM -0400

Sheldon Martin wrote:
> mowing tomorrow. Right now it's snowing heavily. Supposed to be a
> bit warmer tomorrow. Yikes, right now I can't see out my window, a
> white out!
 
Mowing addiction.
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 10 11:24AM -0400

Sheldon Martin wrote:
 
> >Is that the royal "we" or does your wife piggyback when you're on the
> >tractor?
 
> She has her own tractor.
 
I'll bet she's never allowed to use your nifty giant one.
How about a side by side pic of the two tractors.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: May 10 08:36AM -0700

On Sunday, May 10, 2020 at 11:24:48 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
> > bit warmer tomorrow. Yikes, right now I can't see out my window, a
> > white out!
 
> Mowing addiction.
 
This has been a very weird spring. I mowed once in April and it snowed
a few days afterward. I mowed again a few days after the snow melted.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: May 10 12:09PM -0400

>> >tractor?
 
>> She has her own tractor.
 
>I'll bet she's never allowed to use your nifty giant one.
 
She's allowed but is not sure about its controls.
 
>How about a side by side pic of the two tractors.
 
Why? I posted several side by side pictures but if you weren't such a
newbie you'd have seen them.
Snag <snag_one@msn.com>: May 10 11:38AM -0500

On 5/9/2020 5:52 PM, Sheldon Martin wrote:
 
>> Is that the royal "we" or does your wife piggyback when you're on the
>> tractor?
 
> She has her own tractor.
 
Yer just to cheap to buy her a Harley .
--
Snag
Yes , I'm old
and crotchety - and armed .
Get outta my woods !
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 10 12:40PM -0400

On 2020-05-10 7:02 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> Unless the layer of clippings is so thick as to smother the grass.
> There are areas on my lawn where I have to be cautious not to do
> that.
 
I have a septic bed and the grass over that grows about 5 times faster
than the rest of the lawn. I tend to make several extra passes and I
raise the deflector shield on the discharge to blow it over a wider area
to stop it from piling up in rows and smothering the grass under it.
 
Last week my de-thatching rack arrived. As soon as my lawn tractor was
returned... finally fixed.... I towed it around and it ripped up a lot
of the old clippings that had been sitting on the surface impeding grass
growth.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 10 12:44PM -0400

On 2020-05-10 7:37 a.m., jmcquown wrote:
> run the AC once this year and that was only because it was really humid.
>  The temps have been great the last few weeks (never hit 80F) and
> humidity has been negligible.  It's fantastic!
 
 
I hope it was not so cold that you had to put on a sweater. It was
snowing here yesterday.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 10 08:51AM -0700

On Thursday, May 7, 2020 at 4:45:16 PM UTC-10, Bruce wrote:
 
> >Here I am at age 12 or 13; try not to choke laughing so hard.
 
> >https://i.postimg.cc/dQyhXfXj/Joan-age-12-or-13.jpg
 
> Were you already a bully in those days?
 
Mostly, bullies are taught to be bullies by their parents. They then bully their peers, who then become bullies when they grow up.
jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: May 10 12:43PM -0400


> Here I am at age 12 or 13; try not to choke laughing so hard.
 
> https://i.postimg.cc/dQyhXfXj/Joan-age-12-or-13.jpg
 
Cute, Joan!
 
This is me at age 9:
 
https://i.postimg.cc/43tZDqSh/jill-9.jpg
 
Jill
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: May 10 11:50AM -0400

>is caused by moisture held in.
 
>Good example is old 100 years old barns. Painted outside but
>not on the inside.
 
Even when applying a wood preservative/stain to a wooden deck apply it
only on the top side and end grain. The faster exterior lumber can
dry the longer it will last.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 10 08:43AM -0700

On Saturday, May 9, 2020 at 11:16:26 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
> coconut milk in it. It's some pretty smooth stuff.
 
> ====
 
> She is one busy daughter!!! You had better watch your weight:)))
 
I think that I should get a grip and get moving - starting tomorrow.
 
Last night I made spicy eggplant with pork. The dish is flavored with black bean sauce, chili sauce, garlic, ginger, light and dark soy sauce, ketchup, chili oil. The addition of dark soy sauce changes the appearance dramatically.
 
https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared/4gQ8BxFVQYSJ9FTFITNBDQ.niIs6WIipT3DR22Xkejskj
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 10 08:35AM -0700

On Friday, May 8, 2020 at 1:12:36 AM UTC-10, John Kuthe wrote:
 
> Fuck off, fucknut! I have BEEN looking, I've gotten my tax info to H&R Block and YOU ignore the FACTS!
 
> Just Eat stinky shit and DIE!
 
> John Kuthe...
 
Beats the shit out of me why people are so interested in your taxes. Mostly, you're guilty of not being very good at putting together paperwork and filing stuff. I can dig that. The real scammers are people that are very good at paperwork and hire people skilled at moving their assets about.
 
I think that people that hassle you about your business have serious mental problems. Their grip on reality is a loose one.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=paaen3b44XY
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