Saturday, June 20, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 7 topics

Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jun 20 10:35PM -0400

Hank Rogers wrote:
 
>>> John Kuthe...
 
>> Chinese speakers?
 
> Cheap Chinese.
 
That's what I thought.
Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jun 20 10:37PM -0400

Gary wrote:
> someone else hits you and either runs off (like what
> happened to you) or if they did stop but didn't have any
> insurance to cover your damage.
 
Maybe he saved enough in premiums to cover the expense?
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 20 08:17PM -0400

On 6/20/2020 7:25 PM, cshenk wrote:
 
> Uncle Ben is already mentioned. Apparently mostly for the name
> association. It's wierd. Black people calling out any product that
> seems black affiliated?
 
Old Ben could grow rice better than anyone else. He should be
celebrated, not cast aside. Blacks should be proud of what he achieved.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 20 08:26PM -0400

On 2020-06-20 7:25 p.m., cshenk wrote:
 
> Uncle Ben is already mentioned. Apparently mostly for the name
> association. It's wierd. Black people calling out any product that
> seems black affiliated?
 
Imagine the nerve of companies in the racist USA using the image of a
coloured person on their product. One might expect the racists to
boycott the products for using darkies instead of white folk.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 20 08:37PM -0400

On 6/20/2020 6:45 PM, dsi1 wrote:
>> company profits off images of our slavery. And their answer is to erase
>> my great-grandmother's history. A black female. … It hurts."
 
> Sure, why not use a reminder of a horrible past to sell product? What's the harm? Let's change the pancake box mascot to Cousin Anne and sell product aimed at holocaust survivors and neo-nazis. Yeah, that might make some profits for the company. In the end, profits are the only thing that matter.
 
You choice if you want to be a victim.
 
If the family is not offended why should I be? If you want to be
reminded of a bad past that is your choice. I grew up with many black
people over many years. None of the ones I broke bread with ever
complained about Aunt J and it made her family proud. In some respects
Aunt J reminds me of my own grandmother. Comforting is what I see.
 
Hawaiians got nothing to brag about. Maybe you still have a couple
hidden away working for you? You should be ashamed of your ancestors.
http://www.hawaiifreepress.com/ArticlesMain/tabid/56/ID/4473/June-14-1900-The-Abolition-of-Slavery-in-Hawaii.aspx
 
The Organic Act, bringing US law to bear in the newly-annexed Territory
of Hawaii took effect 111 years ago--June 14, 1900. As a result, US
laws prohibiting contracts of indentured servitude replaced the 1850
Masters and Servants Act which had been in effect under the Hawaiian
Kingdom and Hawaii Republic. Tens of thousands of plantation laborers
were freed from contract slavery by the Organic Act.
GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 20 05:50PM -0700

Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
dsi1 wrote:
> Masters and Servants Act which had been in effect under the Hawaiian
> Kingdom and Hawaii Republic. Tens of thousands of plantation laborers
> were freed from contract slavery by the Organic Act.
 
 
A splendid riposte...aka "Ed does his homework"...
 
--
Best
Greg
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jun 20 07:59PM -0500

Sheldon Martin wrote:
 
> Breakfast will never be the same, every morning I looked forward to
> nursing on Aunt Jemimas big brown bosoms, her long thick nipples were
> delish.
 
Popeye, yoose could buy yooself a pcket pussy.
 
https://www.fasttech.com/search?pussy%20sex%20toys
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 20 06:44PM -0700

On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 2:37:05 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> Masters and Servants Act which had been in effect under the Hawaiian
> Kingdom and Hawaii Republic. Tens of thousands of plantation laborers
> were freed from contract slavery by the Organic Act.
 
Cut me a break man. I have often said that we're a rock that is populated by the descendants of slaves. Have you comprehended anything that I've written? That's what makes us different from yoose guys. Most of the locals here are descendants of people that were shipped in to work the fields as cheap, disposable, labor. It is for this reason that social justice/equality is a big deal on this rock. We're not interested in excluding anybody from society - that was your people's goal, not ours.
 
It's fairly obvious that you have no idea what the deal was with the Organic act of 1900. Your link was pretty much a fail. Better luck next time - if there is a next time.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 20 10:28PM -0400

On 6/20/2020 9:44 PM, dsi1 wrote:
 
>> were freed from contract slavery by the Organic Act.
 
> Cut me a break man. I have often said that we're a rock that is populated by the descendants of slaves. Have you comprehended anything that I've written? That's what makes us different from yoose guys. Most of the locals here are descendants of people that were shipped in to work the fields as cheap, disposable, labor. It is for this reason that social justice/equality is a big deal on this rock. We're not interested in excluding anybody from society - that was your people's goal, not ours.
 
> It's fairly obvious that you have no idea what the deal was with the Organic act of 1900. Your link was pretty much a fail. Better luck next time - if there is a next time.
 
You said "your people". Wrong. My people were working hard in Poland
and did not show up here until about 1910. My people had nothing to do
with slavery like YOUR people did.
 
Unlike your people, my people had no slaves and I have no guilt, nor
should I. Meantime, enjoy you plantation and cheap labor.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 20 08:42PM -0400

On 6/20/2020 7:06 PM, dsi1 wrote:
 
>>> Why they changed it, I can't say - people just liked it better that way.
 
>> It means that Americans already had bad taste.
 
> The name change happened over 100 years before Americans/America existed. The English took over and named the place properly. Who can blame them? The Netherlands were pretty much washed up by then. Tulips? Painters? Humbug!
 
Its not like Spreckelsville
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jun 20 08:13PM -0500

Bruce wrote:
 
>> The name change happened over 100 years before Americans/America existed. The English took over and named the place properly. Who can blame them? The Netherlands were pretty much washed up by then. Tulips? Painters? Humbug!
 
> It's funny to see a humble Hawaiian be protective of American
> mainlanders. It's like a tiny dog guarding a huge building :)
 
I's fun to watch an arrogant dutchman sniffing a humble Hawaiian's
rectum, while bitching about USA.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jun 21 11:25AM +1000

On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 20:13:26 -0500, Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>
wrote:
 
>> mainlanders. It's like a tiny dog guarding a huge building :)
 
>I's fun to watch an arrogant dutchman sniffing a humble Hawaiian's
>rectum, while bitching about USA.
 
Because I said Americans have bad taste? That was a joke. You wouldn't
see it that way because your feelings are easily hurt, being the big
patriot that you are :)
Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jun 20 07:25PM -0700

On 2020 Jun 20, , jmcquown wrote
> to kill them. Buffy pays no attention to them. I spray all around the
> doors to keep the bugs out. I'm a firm believer in pesticides when it
> comes to keeping those damned Palmetto bugs out of my house.
 
I bought an anole lizard from a traveling carnival passing through my town
in the Fifties. It lived on the curtains and occasionally changed colors.
The liars at the carnival said it was a chameleon. It died during our
winter or, perhaps, starved or died of thirst.
Once, my mother told our cleaning lady that there was a bullsnake loose in
the house that I seem to have lost. She told Mom that she would come back
when we were snake free. I had other "stuff" go loose too, and often.
My parents were ambivalent to my household menagerie, and that was a good
thing for a lonely, only child. Poisonous animals were forbidden, so I had
to learn what I had beforehand.
Nevertheless, I found a girl to marry me, and it'll be fifty years this
October. Poor thing.
 
leo
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 20 06:47PM -0700

And I can DO THIS JOB! :-)
 
I just wish I had my Leaf back! Awaiting an estimate! :-(
 
John Kuthe...
GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jun 20 07:10PM -0700

John Kuthe wrote:
 
> And I can DO THIS JOB! :-)
 
> I just wish I had my Leaf back! Awaiting an estimate! :-(
 
> John Kuthe...
 
 
Your "career" is declining, $25/hour for an RN is squalid...you should simply drop the farrago of "working" and apply for SSDI...
 
You are unemployable...
 
--
Best
Greg
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 20 07:11PM -0700

On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 8:47:45 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote:
> And I can DO THIS JOB! :-)
 
> I just wish I had my Leaf back! Awaiting an estimate! :-(
 
> John Kuthe...
 
3P-7P passing evening meds, including narcotics.
 
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!
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 20 07:14PM -0700

On Saturday, June 20, 2020 at 9:10:05 PM UTC-5, GM wrote:
 
> --
> Best
> Greg
 
No, I can DO THIS JOB! Everyone's new at first but I did most of the evening meds. This was the first day I felt competent at everything I did. A great feeling too!
 
John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Gainfully Employed!
lenona321@yahoo.com: Jun 20 07:01PM -0700

https://www.uexpress.com/miss-manners/2020/6/19/2/husband-alters-dish-faces-wrath#disqus-comments
 
DEAR MISS MANNERS: I know it is considered impolite to ask for something that is not on the dinner table. I was wondering, however, if it were permitted to ask for routine things, such as salt or water.
 
Is it OK to ask for tea when coffee is offered, or should one just refuse a drink? Cream cheese is routinely offered with bagels, but I prefer butter. Is it acceptable to ask if they have such, or do I eat my bagel dry?
 
GENTLE READER: Naked bagels and beverage abstinence are not required, as long as requests are polite and reasonable. Miss Manners allows one usually available substitution per item, if no more than two words are used to modify it: "I wonder if you might have beer instead of wine" is acceptable. "Something hoppy in a locally sourced, sustainable craft lager" is not.
lenona321@yahoo.com: Jun 20 07:09PM -0700

And two comments that caught my eye:
 
Karen K: "Growing up, we never had drinks with our meals, only after. The reason? My brother "Paul", who, when he was little, managed to spill his freaking milk every. single. night. Our kitchen table was one of those that you could extend by pulling out and putting in an extra "leaf" to make it bigger, and the milk would always go right into/through the damn gap in the middle. Mom got sick of it and so we got our milk or whatever after dinner."
 
JC77: "My mother had the odd belief that you should be able to chew and swallow your food without ever taking a drink. She must have had higher saliva levels than I do. Most of the time, she didn't make an issue of it, but when she did, I struggled."
 
 
MY late mother had a similar rule, that I'm pretty sure I've seen MIss Manners advocate as well. That is, no sipping from any beverage until one's mouth was empty. The idea was to promote slow, genteel chewing - and the preventing of choking, of course. It also happened to be a practice within the macrobiotic diet, so the saying was "chew your soup and drink your food."
 
 
 
Lenona.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jun 21 10:17AM +1000

On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 18:45:57 -0500, Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>An 18" Italian sub with capicollo, pepperoni, salami, provolone, 2
>kinds of giardiniera, lettuce, tomato, fried sweet Aloha peppers,
>Italian seasoning, and EVOO.
 
If you were as rich as your food, you'd be a billionaire.
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Jun 20 10:29PM -0300

On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 14:35:07 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
 
>Some of the Knorr/Lipton side dishes are quite good and others are just
>a waste of money. I don't understand how one flavor can be so good and
>another just bland as cardboard. But your dinner looks good to me.
 
I had lobster last night and scallops again tonight. I feel I must
support the fishermen who have problems selling their haul these days
:)
Barney Cloggenstein <barneycloggenstein@invalid.net>: Jun 21 10:13AM +1000

On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 20:03:16 -0400, Dave Smith
 
>I thought a lame duck was a politician sitting out the last few weeks of
>his term after being voted out. There was a more apt description back in
>the 50's... lame brain.
 
It must be a special day today. All the cowards are coming out to
play.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 20 08:18PM -0400

On 2020-06-20 6:17 p.m., cshenk wrote:
> recommend it when you need to get dinner on the table within 1 hour of
> start time to serve. Oh the soup would be ready, but not in time to
> add to other things.
 
I should try making it some time. I was fed a lot of Campbells' Cream
of Mushroom soup when I was a kid. I ate it, but I was never a big fan
of it. Years later I worked in a camp where the cook was pretty good at
making soups to use up leftovers. One day he made cream of mushroom soup
and it was amazing. I have since had it in a few restaurants and liked
it. Now there is just the little problem of my wife not being interested
in mushrooms.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jun 21 10:40AM +1000

On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 20:18:00 -0400, Dave Smith
>and it was amazing. I have since had it in a few restaurants and liked
>it. Now there is just the little problem of my wife not being interested
>in mushrooms.
 
Yet she married one.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jun 20 08:08PM -0500

Barney Cloggenstein wrote:
>> the 50's... lame brain.
 
> It must be a special day today. All the cowards are coming out to
> play.
 
Clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop clop.
 
Bye Barney.
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