- Aunt Jemima is gone - 3 Updates
- My ongoing pizza trouble - 5 Updates
- Help! I can't find it - 2 Updates
- Cookies! - 2 Updates
- Miss Manners on what to ask for at meals - or not - 1 Update
- you guys just don't get it - 2 Updates
- Early Dinner 6/20/20 - 4 Updates
- OT My Leaf got KILLED! - 2 Updates
- I'm working at a new place for $25/hr two days a week, Sat and Sun! - 2 Updates
- Coffee Cup repair step 1 - 1 Update
- Have Fast Broken and a Pot O Rice on on this fine Father's Day Sunday morning! - 1 Update
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:29AM -0700 Ed Pawlowski wrote: > were paying the Japanese workers $3 a month so that is not slavery > according to David. Maybe while toiling in the fields they played Don > Ho songs for them. Not Hawaii - related, but since our history - including statues/monuments/narratives - is now under "revision", this caught my eye: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53123947 Gelsenkirchen: Controversial Lenin statue erected in German city "A far-left party in Germany has erected a controversial statue of communist leader Vladimir Lenin. The tiny Marxist-Leninist Party of Germany (MLPD) installed the statue in front of its headquarters in the western city of Gelsenkirchen. City authorities had attempted to stop the statue being installed and launched an online hashtag saying there was "no place for Lenin". But courts blocked their appeals and the unveiling went ahead on Saturday. Lenin was a leader of the 1917 Russian Revolution and led the country until his death in 1924, when he was succeeded by Josef Stalin. However, he has remained a symbol of communism rule across the world, both among supporters and those who remember the human rights abuses that took place under the USSR. Germany itself was divided for decades between the West and the communist East, until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 In the debate surrounding the Gelsenkirchen statue, which was made in Czechoslovakia, as it was then known, in 1957, both sides drew parallels to the tearing down of monuments linked to slavery which has taken place in anti-racism protests across the world in recent weeks. "We live in a time in which many countries of the world are reflecting on memorials," said mayor Frank Baranowski in one of a series of YouTube videos posted by the city council against the statue. "It's hard to put up with the fact that a dictator from the 21st Century is being placed on a pedestal and a memorial is being made out of it. Unfortunately the courts have decided otherwise, we must accept that, but not without comment." However, MLPD's chair, Gabi Fechtner, described the communist leader as "an ahead-of-his-time thinker of world-historical importance, an early fighter for freedom and democracy", according to the AFP news agency..." </> |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 21 11:19AM -0400 On 6/21/2020 11:08 AM, Gary wrote: > started their own businesses. > Same with building railroads on the mainland and even doing > the salmon canning in Alaska. In the 1850s in the US you could make as much a $1 an hour. Hawaiians were paying the Japanese workers $3 a month so that is not slavery according to David. Maybe while toiling in the fields they played Don Ho songs for them. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 21 09:35AM -0700 On Sunday, June 21, 2020 at 3:04:13 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote: > bitching about the past that can't be changed. > And in the black community, clean up your own act then > the police won't go so hard on you. My wife has a problem with Washington and Jefferson being slave owners. I don't have any particular feelings about it. Logically, she's right, of course. My guess is, that in the future, these two founding fathers are going to go down too. It might be real soon. |
| bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Jun 21 08:40AM -0700 Sat, June 20, 2020 at 4:58AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared/aWH4T5TiQQOkvMnOHSmmVw.550tmAA8kQE5L5Gx_r5xtt > == > oooh that look lovely. I tend to spread tom paste on the top ... I heard a lady say something like that. Apply tomato paste separately, then spread on Marinara sauce. That makes the sauce as a whole seem more wholesome. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 11:19AM -0400 On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 00:11:31 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >pizza. I don't. Less is better for me, maybe because of the way I make >it. >leo I'd add the unused portion of sauce to soup... can even use it in salad dressing. I don't like throwing perfectly good food away. Except for the garlic there are plenty of critters here that would lap it up from a saucer or even from the ground. Even your dog would lap up tomato sauce... mix it with dog food and it'll be gone within seconds. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 12:14PM -0400 >> That's a good idea, I never thought to preheat on a top burner, I will >> try it next time. >You've never made a homemade pizza. No picture ever so not true. Last time I made home made pizza was pre-usenet... and pre-digital cameras. I gave up making scratch pizza in the Navy... Sicilian style on huge sheet pans... was a PIA so was made rarely. We had no mozz so I used Swiss and Parm... no one complained. Like everyone else I used to take pictures with a film camera, but was expensive to buy the film, flash bulbs, and developing was prohibitively expensive because I still had to pay for developing the pictures that didn't turn out. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 12:17PM -0400 >Nothing bad to say about a perforated pan. Just a worthless >new thing to buy. Any pizza I make, Homemade or store bought >cooks just fine and the same on my solid 16" pan. So truth is you never had one, too CHEAP to spend the $15. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 21 09:23AM -0700 On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 9:11:14 PM UTC-10, Leo wrote: > pizza. I don't. Less is better for me, maybe because of the way I make > it. > leo I'm not into sauce either. Sometimes, I'll just put some oil on the dough and top with chopped garlic. I suppose that means I win the prize for laziest pizza. When my daughter was little I made a pizza with a little too much sauce. She took a bite and the entire flap of blazing hot cheese flopped down on to her chin and stuck there like napalm. She screamed in a panic and I couldn't believe what I was seeing. I think we both got PTSD from that incident. I guess that's why I'm not into sauce. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 11:41AM -0400 On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 21:07:20 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >better than beer steam into the cavity. I considered getting one of the >wire racks once when "beer can" chicken was all the rage, but I didn't. >leo Would've been a waste of beer. I'd rather simmer tube steak in beer. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jun 21 12:21PM -0400 On 6/20/2020 1:43 PM, U.S. Janet B. wrote: > Alton Brown proposed it on his TV show 10+ years ago. His preferred > guzzle is Dr. Pepper. > Janet US Yup! I had a friend in Memphis who brought some sort of pork roast to a party. He said he'd cooked it in Dr. Pepper. Whether he meant marinated in or actually braised it in Dr. Pepper, I don't know. Jill |
| songbird <songbird@anthive.com>: Jun 21 11:55AM -0400 Sqwertz wrote: ... > Harden? No. And especially not when you add a cup of corn syrup, > butter, and vanilla to it! It turns into a milkshake consistency - > obviously. peanut butter and corn syrup isn't going to be a milkshake consistency. are you using lite corn syrup or something else? anyways, no, this doesn't make sense to me. but i think the point i missed here is that i would be replacing the corn syrup AND the flavored chips with peanut butter and powdered sugar. so, yes, a mistake on my part and i admit that not being clearer could have messed up someone else. songbird |
| songbird <songbird@anthive.com>: Jun 21 11:49AM -0400 Sqwertz wrote: ... > None of the white chocolate in most supermarkets is really white > chocolate anymore (They call it White morsels, white fudge, white > chips, etc...). It all contains palm oil. i'm well aware of that and read the labels if i'm in doubt about a product. i don't use most flavored chips sold because they're often not very good and the mouth feel is wrong (slimy, waxy, gross vs. smooth). > And White chocolate has a worse profile then milk chocolate. So > what are you achieving by substituting white chocolate for peanut > butter chips, anyway? the slimy grossness. cocoa butter is a different fat than palm kernel oil. white chocolate is just fine nutritionally, but like all things in moderation is a good idea for extra calories. i used to make a lot of various desserts and chocolates. for flavor and mouth feel there wasn't anything that was better than actual chocolate (either white, dark or milk). most of the time i would not cut with other ingredients other than cream or liquors (or both). sometime chopped nuts. peanut butter and powdered sugar is very easy and good. songbird |
| songbird <songbird@anthive.com>: Jun 21 11:58AM -0400 Gary wrote: ... > Easy with city water (with chlorine) to let it sit out over > night and let it dissipate. Or you can just boil it then > cool it down in the fridge. we were always used to well water without any stuff added to it at all. when we visited Grandma in the city her water tasted sweet to me and i'd drink several glasses of water when getting there (it was a few hour drive too). the well water here has a bit of iron and calcium in it and not everyone will drink it but i am ok. it's good and cold. songbird |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jun 21 10:48AM -0500 On Thu, 11 Jun 2020 04:26:29 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote: > The point is, white lives already matter. We need to make a change > so that black lives matter, too. If Black Lives Matter, why are 53% of people murdered in the U.S. black, and 93% of those culprits black? If Black Lives Matter, then why the fuck are they killing each other? WE don't need to make a change. THEY need to make a change. They are their worst enemies, by astounding numbers, not White people. White people should be rallying against blacks killing blacks. To the tune of 12,000 black on black killings each year. https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/bvvc.pdf Keep in mind that blacks are only 14% of the US population when reading some of those numbers and charts. -sw |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jun 21 10:17AM -0500 On Tue, 16 Jun 2020 18:47:18 -0400, songbird wrote: > chocolate. this would probably end up in a similar > consistency as peanut butter chips but avoid the palm > kernel oil. None of the white chocolate in most supermarkets is really white chocolate anymore (They call it White morsels, white fudge, white chips, etc...). It all contains palm oil. Cocoa butter has a worse nutritional profile than the palma oils. And White chocolate has a worse profile then milk chocolate. So what are you achieving by substituting white chocolate for peanut butter chips, anyway? -sw |
| bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Jun 21 08:27AM -0700 On June 20,.2020 16:24:12 -0400, jmcquown <j_mc...@comcast.net> wrote: - hide quoted text - >A small plate. Two crab cakes... Sometimes I wonder if so-called Maryland crab cakes really use crabmeat driven up from the Gulf of Mexico. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 11:36AM -0400 On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 00:26:10 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >> of the hairballs my cats leave splattered on the kitchen floor. >That's the Sheldon I was expecting! ;) >Jill I didn't write that... and our cats have never eaten crab cakes... we don't ever have crab cakes here, we don't eat crab anything. The only time I've ever eaten crab was some 50 years ago at an all the Alaskan king crab you can eat for $5.99 at Red Lobster... first arrived a bowl of hush puppies to take away people's appetite. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:43AM -0700 Gary wrote: > Was posted at 4:43 in the afternoon - still sober. > His 2nd message was posted AFTER drinking for 2 hours... > 6:49 in the evening. LOL! One drink per day, my ass. The second "Sheldon" post is a "froggery", he did not write that*... [* nor did I, lol... ] -- Best Greg |
| Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Jun 21 12:52PM -0300 >Both meals sound good. >Why are the fishermen having trouble selling their catches these >days? Ninety percent of their catches ship out to China but markets are down there and they only have a fraction of what they used to. So I eat now while it is really fresh, reasonable price and before international trade resumes completely and our prices make me balk at buying :) |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:35AM -0700 graham wrote: > pair of speakers with a well-known British name. When I read the > brochure, they may have been designed in the UK but they were made in > the PRC. Please don't tell me they were Wharfedales or B&W's or KEF's...!!! -- Best Greg |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 21 09:15AM -0600 On 2020-06-20 8:35 p.m., Alex wrote: >>> Chinese speakers? >> Cheap Chinese. > That's what I thought. Every bloody thing is now made there! A few years ago, I auditioned a pair of speakers with a well-known British name. When I read the brochure, they may have been designed in the UK but they were made in the PRC. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:36AM -0700 Gary wrote: > > You should NOT put stuff like that down a drain - polluter!!!!! > no doubt John would have preferred to put that extra morphine in > his own arm but he had someone there to make sure he didn't. LOL, Gary... -- Best Greg |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:39AM -0700 Lucretia Borgia wrote: > >In my nursing school clinicals I had a patient who had fallen and broke her wrist and was fresh out of surgery that day I had her and she had an order for 1mg of morphine sulfate IV for breakthrough pain and as I went to the med room to get it we discovered that the IV morphine Sulfate cam in 2mg ampules so me and another nurse had to witness one of us wasting it, into a sink. And to me it was just a small thin tube of a clear liquid medicine I was giving to a patient, but some were literally kill for it! > >John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Employed RN! > You should NOT put stuff like that down a drain - polluter!!!!! Shocking that such a thing would be allowed to happen...there are strict protocols for disposing of medical waste... -- Best Greg |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jun 21 11:23AM -0400 On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 01:30:30 -0500, Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid> wrote: >In another fit of despondence, you'll just throw it against the wall >again next year on Father's Day. >-sw In prison Kootchie would have a stainless steel cup. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 21 08:01AM -0700 On Sunday, June 21, 2020 at 9:29:45 AM UTC-5, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > dough recipe: > <https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2012/07/basic-new-york-style-pizza-dough.html> > I made a half batch since it's an experiment. Hope it works out really well for you! How bad can it be? ;-) John Kuthe... |
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