Friday, July 31, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 4 topics

John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 01:37PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 2:29:49 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote:
> ...to beat the hit fender back a bit so as to not slice into the tire when traversing speed bumps:
 
> https://i.postimg.cc/FzQcc5Vf/Dead-Leaf-1.jpg
 
> John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian
 
Got INF-MPG back! :-)
 
I SO MUCH like buying/burning ZERO gasoline! :-)
 
John Kuthe...
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 06:41AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 13:37:47 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
 
>> John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian
 
>Got INF-MPG back! :-)
 
>I SO MUCH like buying/burning ZERO gasoline! :-)
 
John's the puppet master of RFC :)
Thomas <canope234@gmail.com>: Jul 31 02:59PM -0700

No hammer in da lou?
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 03:03PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 3:41:28 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
 
> >Got INF-MPG back! :-)
 
> >I SO MUCH like buying/burning ZERO gasoline! :-)
 
> John's the puppet master of RFC :)
 
Nope!
 
 
Just got Carson's to beat back the fender a bit:
 
https://i.postimg.cc/KzpV8RRg/7-30-2020-My-less-damaged-Leaf.jpg
 
Now I can hit the speed bumps at speed! :-)
 
John Kuthe...
GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jul 31 03:12PM -0700

John Kuthe wrote:
 
 
> > John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian
 
> Got INF-MPG back! :-)
 
> I SO MUCH like buying/burning ZERO gasoline! :-)
 
 
You should have left the dents in, it fits well with your Hoosier white trash ethos...
 
--
Best
Greg
Jeßus <j@j.net>: Aug 01 08:24AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 15:03:27 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
 
>Just got Carson's to beat back the fender a bit:
 
>https://i.postimg.cc/KzpV8RRg/7-30-2020-My-less-damaged-Leaf.jpg
 
Did you pay them to do that?
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 08:25AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 15:03:27 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
 
>> >I SO MUCH like buying/burning ZERO gasoline! :-)
 
>> John's the puppet master of RFC :)
 
>Nope!
 
Yes. Each time you say "zero gasoline" or something similar, the
puppets start yelling that your electricity isn't clean either. This
has been going on for years now. You get a kick out of it.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 03:45PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 5:25:05 PM UTC-5, Jeßus wrote:
 
> >Just got Carson's to beat back the fender a bit:
 
> >https://i.postimg.cc/KzpV8RRg/7-30-2020-My-less-damaged-Leaf.jpg
 
> Did you pay them to do that?
 
Nope! They did it gratis!
 
John Kuthe...
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 03:46PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 5:25:08 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
 
> Yes. Each time you say "zero gasoline" or something similar, the
> puppets start yelling that your electricity isn't clean either. This
> has been going on for years now. You get a kick out of it.
 
I can go back to buying/burning ZERO gasoline! And hit the speed bumps at speed! :-)
 
John Kuthe...
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 03:49PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 5:12:23 PM UTC-5, GM wrote:
 
> --
> Best
> Greg
 
Of course! It's a badge of honor well earned!
 
https://i.postimg.cc/KzpV8RRg/7-30-2020-My-less-damaged-Leaf.jpg
 
And I can hit the speed bumps at speed! :-)
 
John Kuthe...
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 31 06:20PM -0500

Bruce wrote:
 
> Yes. Each time you say "zero gasoline" or something similar, the
> puppets start yelling that your electricity isn't clean either. This
> has been going on for years now. You get a kick out of it.
 
Provides lots of sphincters for yoose to sniff too!
azazello@koroviev.de (Victor Sack): Aug 01 12:47AM +0200

This is a weekly pointer to the rec.food.cooking FAQ and conversion
file. If you do not want to see it every week, you should put the
title, which will not change, into your killfile.
 
The rec.food.cooking FAQ and conversion file is posted monthly to
rec.food.cooking, rec.food.recipes, rec.answers and news.answers. It is
also available as an easy-to-navigate frames version at
 
<http://vsack.homepage.t-online.de/rfc_faq.html>.
 
There is both a link to a no-frames version and a built-in no-frames
content for older or text-only browsers.
 
The rec.food.cooking FAQ and conversion file has two parts. The first
part covers conversion and equivalence. Tables are given for conversion
of oven temperatures, food names, weights and measures. Some useful
substitutions for unavailable ingredients are suggested.
 
The second part is more descriptive. It outlines some of the commonly
discussed topics of rec.food.cooking and explains a number of food
terms. It also lists other food-related newsgroups and mailing lists,
as well as food-related FAQs, recipe archives and other food/cooking
sites.
Jeßus <j@j.net>: Aug 01 06:09AM +1000

>> of my vehicle... <roll eyes>.
 
>Sounds like kangaroos are just as stupid as moose when it comes
>to avoiding cars.
 
They have that stupid tendency to run in front of you, rather than run
away from you. Especially at night when they get dazzled by lights. A
lot of animals do this, I'm curious to know the reason behind it.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 01:41PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 3:09:19 PM UTC-5, Jeßus wrote:
 
> They have that stupid tendency to run in front of you, rather than run
> away from you. Especially at night when they get dazzled by lights. A
> lot of animals do this, I'm curious to know the reason behind it.
 
"Deer In The Headlights" phenomenon.
 
John Kuthe...
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 06:51AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 06:18:15 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
>> president, so the bar is low.
 
>Not the same Americans in the two cases. Two almost entirely
>separate groups.
 
I realise that. There are lots of Americans with at least basic
intelligence.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jul 31 05:11PM -0400

On 2020-07-31 4:09 p.m., Je�us wrote:
 
 
> They have that stupid tendency to run in front of you, rather than run
> away from you. Especially at night when they get dazzled by lights. A
> lot of animals do this, I'm curious to know the reason behind it.
 
I almost hit an oppossum with my motorcycle one night about a year ago,
and then a couple nights later I almost hit another one. In the first
case my friend and I were travelling at about 50 mph. I spotted the
critter on the far shoulder and thought nothing of it because they are
usually so slow moving I would be long gone before he got to my lane.
How wrong I was. That guy was really moving. I ended up going horse back
mode, squeezed for a good grip and cranked the throttle. I think I
screamed some blue language too. I don't know how I missed him, and
hitting him could have been the end of me.
 
The next one I encountered was on a narrow road with no shoulder, but a
30 mph zone. He was moving fast too but I deked around him.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 31 04:32PM -0500

Dave Smith wrote:
> end of me.
 
> The next one I encountered was on a narrow road with no shoulder,
> but a 30 mph zone.  He was moving fast too but I deked around him.
 
Hitting armadillo is much worse. And they can move damn fast too,
when they want to. They haven't gotten as far north as you, but who
knows when/if they do.
Jeßus <j@j.net>: Aug 01 08:14AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 13:41:40 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
>> away from you. Especially at night when they get dazzled by lights. A
>> lot of animals do this, I'm curious to know the reason behind it.
 
>"Deer In The Headlights" phenomenon.
 
Same thing, yes.
Jeßus <j@j.net>: Aug 01 08:16AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 17:11:44 -0400, Dave Smith
>hitting him could have been the end of me.
 
>The next one I encountered was on a narrow road with no shoulder, but a
>30 mph zone. He was moving fast too but I deked around him.
 
This is why I don't have a road bike in Australia, or at least at home
in Tasmania. There's just too much wildlife on the roads at night.
Even in the middle of the day there's no guarantee you might not come
across something.
Jeßus <j@j.net>: Aug 01 08:17AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 16:32:06 -0500, Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>
wrote:
 
 
>Hitting armadillo is much worse. And they can move damn fast too,
>when they want to. They haven't gotten as far north as you, but who
>knows when/if they do.
 
Try hitting a wombat, or at least wait until one goes under your
wheel. They're built extremely solid and it's like hitting a small
boulder.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jul 31 06:26PM -0400

On 2020-07-31 6:16 p.m., Je�us wrote:
> in Tasmania. There's just too much wildlife on the roads at night.
> Even in the middle of the day there's no guarantee you might not come
> across something.
 
When I ride at night with my friend we take turns leading, or as he
calls it.... deer bait. There is no really safe time of day. A few
years ago I was almost hit by a deer while riding my bicycle. There had
been a number of deer crossing. Three stayed behind and then two of them
went for it. The last one was frantic about catching up to her friends.
She finally took a run through some snow, leapt over a ditch, and her
snow covered little hooves hit the pavement and she skittered across
and came within a foot of me.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jul 31 12:58PM -0700

On Friday, July 31, 2020 at 8:38:05 AM UTC-4, Sqwertz wrote:
> in the field while still on the stalks, and then harvested from
> that. You'd get quicker turnaround on your land rotating in
> something else in the meantime.
 
Where are the beans shipped from? India? Brazil? China? Tanzania?
 
It might not be practical to ship fresh beans.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jul 31 03:05PM -0500

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 10:29:58 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe wrote:
 
> Part of the human food chain!
 
> That's led to overpopulation of Homo Sapiens and our Sixth Extinction Event!
 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWrPo02e4f
 
66 million years ago? And the previous 5 took place over the course
of 550 million years? That means we're about due for one in another
40 million years.
 
How may of those previous 5 extinction events were related to
fartmobiles? And hasn't each extinction event been a huge boon to
lifeforms on earth?
 
Yeah, I know , these are all rhetorical questions. But it seems
another extinction event would be to Earth's best advantage. There
would be no more fartmobiles and women might finally be able to pee
standing up.
 
-sw
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jul 31 03:12PM -0500

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 12:58:35 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
 
> Where are the beans shipped from? India? Brazil? China? Tanzania?
 
> It might not be practical to ship fresh beans.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
They mostly come from Texas and northern Mexico. But that's beside
the point. Even we U.S. beaners use dry beans and rehydrate them.
 
BTW, water comprises only about 11% of the fresh raw bean weight
according to the USDA database.
 
-sw
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 31 03:12PM -0500

Sqwertz wrote:
> (powered) indoor antenna when I need to watch live broadcasts.
 
> I'm in no hurry to experience cable TV again.
 
> -sw
 
If you paid your bill, they'd probably come out and fix the cable
connection for you.
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