Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 8 topics

dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 06:19PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 7:23:42 AM UTC-10, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> Much too clean to be an American homeless person. Do you have a link to the
> accompanying article?
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Here you go:
 
https://note.com/kakunoshins/n/nce25ca4493be
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 06:59PM -0700

On Saturday, May 30, 2020 at 4:40:57 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
 
> --
> This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
> https://www.avg.com
 
It's a phrase made popular by the HBO Series "Game of Thornes."
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2fd2MiEu7g
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 07:10PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 9:01:49 AM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> weren't found to have spread any lingering infection, and virus samples
> collected from them couldn't be grown in culture, indicating the
> patients were shedding non-infectious or dead virus particles.
 
My wife was at the bank today and a white lady was twirling a mask in her hand saying that you don't have to wear a mask in the bank. My guess is that she said it to my wife because she was the only other white lady in there. Everyone had masks on and were struck speechless. My guess is that she was one of those nutty/pushy Trumpeter ladies. Her lord and master, king trump said it was okay.
 
I wish I was there because I could have used the laugh. Oddly enough, I was in the same building on the 4th floor having my teeth worked on. That was a 4 hour ordeal.
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jun 02 07:26PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 9:10:52 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
 
> My wife was at the bank today and a white lady was twirling a mask in her hand saying that you don't have to wear a mask in the bank. My guess is that she said it to my wife because she was the only other white lady in there. Everyone had masks on and were struck speechless. My guess is that she was one of those nutty/pushy Trumpeter ladies. Her lord and master, king trump said it was okay.
 
Half the people here don't wear masks out in public. The ones that tickle
my funny bone are the ones riding in a car, by themselves, and not a delivery
person either, wearing a mask.
 
I was at my doctor's office yesterday and he said of all his patients only
one had contracted the virus.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jun 03 01:00PM +1000

On Tue, 2 Jun 2020 19:10:48 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>
wrote:
 
>> collected from them couldn't be grown in culture, indicating the
>> patients were shedding non-infectious or dead virus particles.
 
>My wife was at the bank today and a white lady was twirling a mask in her hand saying that you don't have to wear a mask in the bank. My guess is that she said it to my wife because she was the only other white lady in there. Everyone had masks on and were struck speechless. My guess is that she was one of those nutty/pushy
Trumpeter ladies. Her lord and master, king trump said it was okay.
 
>I wish I was there because I could have used the laugh. Oddly enough, I was in the same building on the 4th floor having my teeth worked on. That was a 4 hour ordeal.
 
Don't tell me you were having your teeth whitened!
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 08:05PM -0700

> person either, wearing a mask.
 
> I was at my doctor's office yesterday and he said of all his patients only
> one had contracted the virus.
 
Around here, everyone wears masks. Well, everybody except that crazy lady in the bank. We ain't taking no chances.
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Jun 02 09:08PM -0600

On Tue, 2 Jun 2020 19:26:23 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
>person either, wearing a mask.
 
>I was at my doctor's office yesterday and he said of all his patients only
>one had contracted the virus.
 
If I had a mask on to enter a store and then was going on to another
place, I would leave my mask on as I was driving by myself.
Janet US
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 02 09:27PM -0600

On 2020-06-02 9:08 p.m., U.S. Janet B. wrote:
 
> If I had a mask on to enter a store and then was going on to another
> place, I would leave my mask on as I was driving by myself.
> Janet US
 
I was at the supermarket at 7am today for seniors' hour and because
there are few staff at that time, there is a spray bottle of sanitizer
that you can use on the cart. I spray the handle thoroughly and I wear
gloves and a mask. As I left, an elderly lady was spraying her cart so
thoroughly, I'm sure she sprayed the wheels as well.
Later on they have a person spraying the carts as they are returned.
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 02 07:29PM -0600

On 2020-06-02 6:23 p.m., jmcquown wrote:
 
> The "snow" was the best part of fond old memories of rabbit ear
> television. ;)
 
> Jill
My Grandparents bought the first TV in the village back in 1953 in time
for the Coronation. A tall mast had to be constructed for the aerial as
the signal came from London, at least 90 miles away. Every time the
"snow" started, my Grandfather would use a huge pipe wrench to turn the
mast a bit while we shouted whether the picture was getting better or not.
Things improved when the BBC put up a mast about 30 miles away and when
the Independent TV built one 6 miles away we had to get an attenuator to
cut the signal strength.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 02 11:09PM -0400

On 6/2/2020 5:51 PM, graham wrote:
 
>> needed to attenuate those Xrays.
> Certainly! :-) My parents also insisted that we turn off the TV if there
> was a thunderstorm.
 
You have to unplug it. Lightening took out my TV, a receiver, both
turned off, and doorbell. receptacle, and a circuit breaker.
 
In this house I have a whole house surge protector as it is one of the
most lightening prone areas of the country. Not in the season yet and
this year have had 1400 strikes within 20 miles according to my weather
station that has a sensor for it.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 02 11:19PM -0400

> friends would show up and we didn't have a den. We'd raise such a
> stink when parents insisted the TV be turned off so they could talk
> they'd slink off to the kitchen.
 
Were you allowed to stay up at night to watch Milton Berle or Sid
Ceaser? Friday night Fights sponsored by Gillette was a big deal too.
That may be a bit before your time.
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 02 09:22PM -0600

On 2020-06-02 9:09 p.m., Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> most lightening prone areas of the country. Not in the season yet and
> this year have had 1400 strikes within 20 miles according to my weather
> station that has a sensor for it.
Blimey! there have been a couple of storms this past week and there will
be many more before the fall. However, I haven't heard of anyone losing
their stuff, unless there is a direct strike of course.
We were much more vulnerable in the UK as my parents had an aerial on
the chimney which would have been a good lightning conductor. And I
remember unplugging it every night.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Jun 02 08:56PM -0500

Janet wrote:
 
 
> cataract surgery is done under local anaesthetic with the
> conscious patient breathing for themself, , so no issue for COPD
 
> Janet UK
 
Not always. Don is pending it and they knock him out for it.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Jun 02 08:57PM -0500

Sqwertz wrote:
 
> probably in New York?
 
> Your friend wanted his mother to die.
 
> -sw
 
Way too cold Steve. Might want to rethink that comment.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jun 02 09:56PM -0500

cshenk wrote:
 
>> Your friend wanted his mother to die.
 
>> -sw
 
> Way too cold Steve. Might want to rethink that comment.
 
Yeah. The poor guy HAD to put her in the home, to keep her safely
away from Popeye.
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Jun 02 09:09PM -0600

>> conscious patient breathing for themself, , so no issue for COPD
 
>> Janet UK
 
>Not always. Don is pending it and they knock him out for it.
 
It only takes a couple minutes. What do they do with him while he is
knocked out and they want to move on to another patient?
Nemo <nemo@nospamatnotime.org>: Jun 02 08:08PM -0500

> wrote it down. Maybe she made it for my dad after they moved here but
> it sure wasn't a part of our food lexicon when growing up.
 
> Jill
 
Every summer as a kid, I used to stay with my aunt,uncle and cousin
for a couple of weeks. My aunt had a huge garden where she grew all
kinds of vegetables. I would clean large wash tubs of Collards by
picking any bugs off and using a hose to spray the sand off. We
would sit around for hours shelling butterbeans and peas. She had
a big pressure canner, the kind with weights that cover the vent,
and she'd can all kinds of things in Ball canning jars. I was a
bit afraid of it. One job I didn't care for was going in the hen
house and feeling under them for eggs. Often you'd get pecked.
In the corner of her kitchen there was a 5 gal. covered pail where
all kinds of kitchen and table scraps were tossed. This included egg
shells, coffee gounds, bacon grease, moldy biscuits, chicken bones,
porkchop bones, fish bones, that kind of thing. They were usually
raising a couple of big red hogs. One of my favorite "chores" was
carrying the slop bucket down to the hog pen and dumping it over
the fence into a big wooden trough. They'd come running when
they saw me coming with the pail. I'd also pick citrons in the
garden,bring them over and bust them up to toss in the trough.
I found the hogs to be entertaining. We'd also go fishing for
several hours nearly every day. I'd dig up red wiggler's with a
grub hole and we'd walk a mile or so through the woods with our
bamboo poles to a large creek (pronounced like creak and
not like crick as in cricket, Yankees) where there were a lot of
fish. We'd catch a bunch and walk back home where I'd scale and
clean them. They had a large horizontal freezer locker. Oddly
enough they didn't have an indoor bathroom for a few more years.
Chamber pots were under the beds for use in inclement weather. The
outhouse, a 2 holer, was down a short path beside the barn. In it
was the obligatory Sears and Roebuck or Montgomery Wards catalog.
My Uncle worked at a Texaco station and my cousin at a shirt
factory. My other cousin there was away in the Navy on the USS
Constellation. It was his bedroom I slept in. There was a lot to
do but I was young enough to think work was fun. I spent many hours
talking with my aunt and she taught me a lot. She was hands down the
hardest working woman I've ever known. My Aunt and Uncle never
watched TV. They had absolutely zero interest in it. My aunt lived
to a ripe old age.
 
Are there Alligator's on Jilligan's Island and signs saying "Please
don't pet the gators"?
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jun 02 07:31PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 7:26:49 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
 
> >IF you have a cast-iron skillet that would be the best choice.
 
> Ah, like this:
> <https://food.fnr.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/food/fullset/2015/4/15/0/GE_Cast-Iron-Skillet-Corn-Bread_s4x3.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.826.620.suffix/1429126498940.jpeg>
 
Yes, perfect pan!! I gotta admit I've never seen cornbread cut up like that
in a skillet, but whatever works.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jun 03 12:41PM +1000

On Tue, 2 Jun 2020 19:31:45 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
>> <https://food.fnr.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/food/fullset/2015/4/15/0/GE_Cast-Iron-Skillet-Corn-Bread_s4x3.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.826.620.suffix/1429126498940.jpeg>
 
>Yes, perfect pan!! I gotta admit I've never seen cornbread cut up like that
>in a skillet, but whatever works.
 
Ok, thanks.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jun 02 08:07PM -0500

John Kuthe wrote:
> MUCH better than Heath bars! :-)
 
> John Kuthe...
 
Take some to work and share with coworkers, and maybe even
patients, if any are not diabetic.
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jun 02 07:37PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 8:07:44 PM UTC-5, Hank Rogers wrote:
 
> > John Kuthe...
 
> Take some to work and share with coworkers, and maybe even
> patients, if any are not diabetic.
 
Good idea!
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Jun 02 07:29PM -0600

On Tue, 2 Jun 2020 18:22:01 -0500, heyjoe <sample@example.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>Appreciate it. Will have to play with it a bit (seems like it needs a
>little chili powder).
 
>Thank you.
 
I wouldn't add chili pepper, wrong taste
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 06:07PM -0700

On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 1:24:16 PM UTC-10, cshenk wrote:
> frozen for a period of time, it is safe. I googled it once and I think
> it's 10 days. True 'fresh' sounds good, but taste is the same and
> safer if flash frozen.
 
I can't say if the previously frozen is safer than the fresh or if the fresh is taster than the frozen. All I know is that the fresh is more expensive than the frozen. It all tastes like fish to me.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 02 06:23PM -0700

On Monday, June 1, 2020 at 11:57:25 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
 
> ===
 
> Everything you show us that she makes looks good:))) Did you ask her
> about the potato bread?
 
The potato bread is my project. She's making some cookies. I'll try to post a picture when she's done.
Nemo <nemo@nospamatnotime.org>: Jun 02 08:16PM -0500

>> into Dallas on I35 and immediately recognized the old school book
>> depository and the window that Oswald fired from.
 
> Not forgetting the Mount Carmel remains at Waco as you passed by. :)
 
I had been out of the Army many years and was living in Phoenix when
that happened.
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