- Know who invented high heels? - 2 Updates
- Painting the PINK and Purple Deck BROWN - 3 Updates
- Olive oil dispenser - 2 Updates
- My ongoing pizza trouble - 3 Updates
- Tiles back on! - 2 Updates
- FINISHED painting interior of front door! - 8 Updates
- Ungraded steaks - 1 Update
- Just a test - 1 Update
- Making my Baked Beans now! - 2 Updates
- Breakfast 13/07/2020 - 1 Update
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 06:08PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 4:57:28 PM UTC-5, Jeßus wrote: > >pink and purple. ;) > If such fashion became another form of virtue-sigalling, John would > look like Louis XIV... aside from the purple pants. Nahh, I went through my flamboyant phase when I was 19 and still youthfully cute. Even painted my fingernails Slut Red for a while. When a friend asked me if I painted my nails to shock people or feel pretty I immediately said "Both!" John Kuthe... |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 06:11PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 4:47:33 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: > high heels. I'll bet he'd love to wear some of those fashions. Lots of > pink and purple. ;) > Jill Bryan and I outran some Lindbergh Football players across The Browns and I was wearing ladies size 7 open toed High Heel Sneakers! :-) John Kuthe... |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 18 10:08AM +1000 On Fri, 17 Jul 2020 16:44:08 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe >> Wouldn't it be a good idea to paint the underside of the stairs first? >> Also, I thought you now had a job? What happened? >I saw my contact Nurse Kathy and she said because the facility A/C was out the Residents were all moved to other facilities but now that the home building's A/C is back on the Residernts would be moving back in and she would call me soon. Alex will be disappointed. |
| jay <jay@mail.com>: Jul 17 06:48PM -0600 On 7/17/20 3:58 PM, Je�us wrote: >> I kinda like it! New Paint! :-) Just got wet today too, spot Summer showers! > Wouldn't it be a good idea to paint the underside of the stairs first? > Also, I thought you now had a job? What happened? I would paint the underside last due to drip downs. My steps to the area above my garage are almost the exact baby shit brown color and I am repainting them. That color is really ugly. John is colored blind. He's desperately looking for a B-Job and of course can't find one even after all of these years. (: |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 06:02PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 7:48:17 PM UTC-5, jay wrote: > repainting them. That color is really ugly. John is colored blind. > He's desperately looking for a B-Job and of course can't find one even > after all of these years. (: I LIKE this brown, I consider it a chocolate brown. Not Dark Chocolate. John Kuthe... |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 17 04:50PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 5:44:38 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > If you need a glug or two to fry something, stick with a bottle but to > drizzle bread or the like this is nice. > https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B072C3YPK2?psc=1&ref=ppx_pop_dt_b_product_details I use this one and it actually says Oil on it. Duh, like they didn't know that's what's for. https://www.amazon.com/eHomeA2Z-Italian-Vinegar-Dispenser-Stainless/dp/B079MFWRZC/ref=sr_1_8?dchild=1&keywords=oil+dispenser&qid=1595029700&sr=8-8 |
| jay <jay@mail.com>: Jul 17 06:49PM -0600 On 7/17/20 5:10 PM, Sheldon Martin wrote: >> https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B072C3YPK2?psc=1&ref=ppx_pop_dt_b_product_details > I've been using a bar keeps pourer on a wine bottle for more than 50 > years, nothing better. I just pour mine out of the bottle it came in and it works perfectly every time. |
| Pamela <pamela.poster@gmail.com>: Jul 18 12:45AM +0100 On 13:38 5 Jul 2020, Janet said: > example archived by google > https://preview.tinyurl.com/y7lymcs5 > Janet UK Oh wow. I've just caught up with that link! What on earth was that all about? |
| Mike Duffy <bogus@nosuch.com>: Jul 18 12:27AM On Sat, 18 Jul 2020 00:36:20 +0100, Pamela wrote: > [...] pide or lahmacun rather than a pizza? Thanks for the two culinary terms. Pizza appears to be a lot of overlap with respect to the primary ingredients of both. |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jul 17 06:48PM -0600 On 2020-07-17 6:27 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote: >> [...] pide or lahmacun rather than a pizza? > Thanks for the two culinary terms. Pizza appears to be a lot of overlap > with respect to the primary ingredients of both. I received an e-mail from "Bake From Scratch" today with pizza recipes. Here they are: https://tinyurl.com/y3r6yblb https://tinyurl.com/y4cm49l8 https://tinyurl.com/y5wutggg https://tinyurl.com/y695nm96 https://tinyurl.com/y3nzfx5g https://tinyurl.com/y533ztmx https://tinyurl.com/yyfnkvmw |
| Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jul 17 08:44PM -0400 Sqwertz wrote: > hail and moisture contraction/expansion. They won't last another 20 > years without replacing them all. > -sw His contractors are depending on that but they don't know he's broke and underemployed. |
| Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jul 17 08:46PM -0400 Janet wrote: > and replacements for the rest of your life. > The roofing company must be laughing all the way to the bank. > Janet UK They started laughing when they saw his porch, I'm sure. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 17 04:52PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 4:52:54 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote: > > Your electricity is still being generated by COAL, John. > > Jill > I know, but electricity CAN be generated many ways! But 'yours' isn't, it's still generated by coal. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 04:52PM -0700 On Wednesday, July 15, 2020 at 10:44:47 PM UTC-5, Hank Rogers wrote: > > Have some paint cleaning uop to do first, on the stained glass! Sloppy painting on my part! :-( I will get it cleaned off! I have wire brushes! > > John Kuthe... > Won't wire brushes scratch the stained glass and ruin it? No the glass of the stained glass is not harmed at all with a wire brush. But a wire brush does clean the finish off the veinage which is made to look like vines. John Kuthe... |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 17 04:53PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 4:59:07 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote: > I see the coal cars on the trains, I'm not stupid! We still do a LOT of STUPID 19th Century things! > John Kuthe... Why didn't you install solar panels on your roof? You could have generated your own electricity and probably sold some back to your local power company. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 05:03PM -0700 On Thursday, July 16, 2020 at 12:59:39 AM UTC-5, Hank Rogers wrote: > > Shh. > Might be better to get the stained glass art company to come out. > They might be able to clean it much cheaper than having to replace it. I'm NOT replacing it, and I discovered today that a small rag soaked well with lacquer thinner works well to remove even dried on latex paint with a little gentle scrubbing. Certainly softens it up and then I can use a razor knife blade tip to gently scrape it off. Lacquer thinner removes a lot of stuff! John Kuthe... |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 05:12PM -0700 On Thursday, July 16, 2020 at 5:01:38 AM UTC-5, Gary wrote: > You need to consider your color combination. > A red door surrounded by that nice blue sounds bad. > You need some white to go with that blue, imo. Yep, I saw one of the houses on Bellerive with as red door with a white screen door so I will paint mine white. > The nice "accent" doors you've seen were not with blue frames. Who said anything about a blue frame? > edges but it will scratch the hell out your stained glass. > Main use for a wire brush is to clean the stock of your > paint brushes. The glass in thew stained glass is GLASS, an d a razor is fine. > Opps...that's stained glass not smooth glass. This will be a > very time consuming job to remove that paint. Nope, it's flat glass. Razor worked fine! :-) And lacquer thinner. John Kuthe... |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 17 05:16PM -0700 On Thursday, July 16, 2020 at 5:15:55 AM UTC-5, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > Don't forget the look of the exterior of the red door up against > the "Grandma lavender" porch. > Cindy Hamilton The "Grandma's Lavender" paint on the front porch is being power washed off this weekend and it's going to be painted Shit Brown: https://i.postimg.cc/FHFDw0Wq/Shit-BROWN.jpg John Kuthe... |
| Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jul 17 08:35PM -0400 John Kuthe wrote: >> John Kuthe wrote: > No the glass of the stained glass is not harmed at all with a wire brush. But a wire brush does clean the finish off the veinage which is made to look like vines. > John Kuthe... What? |
| Alex <Xela777@gmail.com>: Jul 17 08:39PM -0400 John Kuthe wrote: > The "Grandma's Lavender" paint on the front porch is being power washed off this weekend and it's going to be painted Shit Brown: > https://i.postimg.cc/FHFDw0Wq/Shit-BROWN.jpg > John Kuthe... Are those LED strips? |
| Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Jul 17 05:17PM -0700 I bought a tray of ungraded boneless ribeyes at Save-a-Lot. There can be a great amount of variation in the marbling. Every once in a while you'll get ones that look like USDA Prime, and these did. Usually they're closer to Select. The ones I cooked this evening weren't the best I've ever gotten, but they were really nice. I grilled them over a very hot fire, using hickory bark as fuel, mine med rare, and the others on the rare side of medium. They were the best steaks I've had in at least 2 or 3 years, and they were $5.99/#. We had an iceberg salad with homegrown cherry tomatoes, and I made fresh dressing with Asiago cheese, egg yolk, peanut oil, fresh squeezed Key lime juice, EVOO, balsamic vinegar, anchovy paste, fresh garlic, cracked black pepper and just a little Dijon mustard. The dressing was good, not great. The Asiago was pretty moist, and truth be told, I just whipped it up sloppily in the mini food processor, so it was runnier than ideal, and could have used a pinch of salt. I microwaved russet potatoes, then finished them in the oven, so they weren't the perfect texture either--again, good but not great. In my defense, I worked a long shift at work today. The steaks were close to perfect, and the tomatoes were perfect. We have so many of them that I'll be donating tomatoes to the free food tables a neighbor set up a few months ago in her front yard. She had family members who died from Covid-19 in that small town, I think it was in Alabama, where all those folks died after attending a funeral, and that inspired her to set up the free food tables. We've also donated some canned goods, but I also picked bags of peaches for a few weeks from the peach trees in the park next to our community garden for her tables. They're never empty. --Bryan |
| jazeev1234@gmail.com: Jul 17 05:17PM -0700 jay wrote: > True and his post is way more interesting than 80% of the posts here. lol It's true, I did use your group to test google because my posts were not going through on my regular group. But I have posted here in the past - and furthermore, this is MY thread and I don't like seeing people use it as a forum for their petty disputes under the banner of my good name. It is funny - and interesting. There are many in this group, and other groups I have seen, who claim to be against arguing or going off topic, but the truth is known to all who are loyal to it. I know the truth. The truth is most people like conflict of some kind. My innocent test post only proves it. I expected a response or two but got more. I'm happy about that. I enjoy the conflict, especially knowing I did not start it directly. Also, of all the posts my initial post 'inspired' I like yours the best. Very profound and very true. I was going to argue the 80% you gave me, that it was not high enough. But that would not have been true. There are some here whose posts, especially related to food, are more interesting than mine - and you hit it right on the head, about 20%. Nice work, Jay. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 17 05:01PM -0700 On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 6:06:31 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote: > >Also gave the old as Methuselah tomcat napping on my front porch some > >fresh water. > 96F is where I want the airco on. Below that, I'm fine. My house isn't shaded so a/c is a must at about 80° and above. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 18 10:04AM +1000 On Fri, 17 Jul 2020 17:01:56 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" >> >fresh water. >> 96F is where I want the airco on. Below that, I'm fine. >My house isn't shaded so a/c is a must at about 80° and above. I was referring to the temperature inside the house. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 17 06:56PM -0500 Am Cindy Hamilton wrote: > silent during discussions of crabcakes, etc. Unless you count pakoras, which > I don't eat very often. > Cindy Hamilton Makes sense. I noticed Popeye sometimes slacked off his homo rants. I just thought he was off eating new penis. There's lots of knobs to gobble in Brooklyn. A military navy hero like Popeye could gobble up lots of weenies. |
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