- OT Beer - 1 Update
- Ping: Brucers - 3 Updates
- Cucumber sandwich for lunch - 2 Updates
- I get my 100% electric Nissan Leaf back in a few days! - 1 Update
- Recipe calls for 2 quarts of spinach - 1 Update
- A diet to follow between 1 August to 10 August - 1 Update
- Won't be doing much cooking. - 4 Updates
- Sqwertz's Climactic Brownies - 5 Updates
- Just made a batch of my Baked Beans! - 2 Updates
- Got my damaged Leaf back! - 3 Updates
- Yelllow Grits (pic) - 1 Update
- OT: Acting Legend Olivia De Havilland Dies At 104 - 1 Update
| "Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk>: Jul 31 10:06AM +0100 "Julie Bove" wrote in message news:rfu1fm$3mh$1@dont-email.me... "Sqwertz" <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid> wrote in message news:17dao8myowy7k$.dlg@sqwertz.com... >>> who posts under another name. Which brings me back to Dave Smith. >> There was one but I can't remember the name she used here. > Nellie. Yes. Thanks! === She is a very kind lass! She will always help if she can! -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 11:35PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 30, , S Viemeister wrote > I've seen a number of little hills in the Nederlands - they used to be > islands, and are now surrounded by polderland. Little hills in Frisia caused deep concern in Great Britain before WWI. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 05:27PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 23:35:56 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >> I've seen a number of little hills in the Nederlands - they used to be >> islands, and are now surrounded by polderland. >Little hills in Frisia caused deep concern in Great Britain before WWI. Were they German bellies? |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 31 01:56AM -0700 On 2020 Jul 31, , Bruce wrote > On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 23:35:56 -0700, Leo<leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> > > Little hills in Frisia caused deep concern in Great Britain before WWI. > Were they German bellies? They were an invasion point in a novel and greatly influenced strategic British thinking before WWI. Of course, the Germans were the bad guys! I haven't read the novel. Churchill made me aware of the title in his six part biography of WWII. I did read those books more than once. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Riddle_of_the_Sands> |
| "Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk>: Jul 31 09:17AM +0100 "Leo" wrote in message news:0001HW.24D395110100CA677000080C738F@News.Individual.Net... On 2020 Jul 28, , Dave Smith wrote > That grasshopper sounds like a girlie drink. Gimlets aren't bad. Which reminds me of another thread. I'm pretty sure that I couldn't identify "gimlet eyes" behind a mask. ==== When I am wearing my mask, if I smile at someone, they always smile back:) Yes, even when they are not wearing a mask:) -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 06:23PM +1000 On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 09:17:03 +0100, "Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk> wrote: > When I am wearing my mask, if I smile at someone, they always smile >back:) > Yes, even when they are not wearing a mask:) Maybe they think: I don't know what she's doing, better smile at her? |
| "Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk>: Jul 31 09:09AM +0100 "dsi1" wrote in message news:41d5e140-e36e-4c4f-910c-3a56121f2387o@googlegroups.com... On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 10:55:59 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > https://www.japan-talk.com/jt/new/okozukai > ===== > Interesting:) Is your culture more Japanese than Chinese? Hawaiian culture is mostly a mix of Japanese, Chinese, and Hawaiian, cultures. Not that it matters much these days. The younger generation will determine what Hawaiian culture will be in the future. It's going to be different than it is now. We ate at my step-mom's house today. It was not bad. From the spread, we can see that the Swedes are into gravy. She had white, tan, and brown, gravy. She cooked the beef Euro style i.e., well done. My favorite dishes were the bacon wrapped asparagus and the mashed potatoes. https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared/y9UJh1PEQyOrXWNwZSs4Uw.Zerd773lTMwMkcwWbUQ_oS ==== That looks lovely:)) What is the main dish in the middle? I don't know if I have responded to this already but this is first time I have seen the picture. I just got my computer back:) -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
| trpmalone1@gmail.com: Jul 31 12:36AM -0700 After all this could someone conflict please- what is ONE quart of Spinach in pounds, please? Thanks - Terry |
| Confusor <confusor@sincorreos.net>: Jul 31 12:19AM +0200 A diet to follow between the first of August to 10 August. Essays. In search of the best diets. It is suggested to FOLLOW next diet with the relationship of food more convenient to the season. GROUP: (2/6) CARBOHYDRATES. amaranth, buckwheat, quinoa, VEGETABLE PROTEINS. beans, broad bean, carob, chickpea, kudzu, lentil,lupine, peanut, peas, soybean, Adzuki bean, black-eyed pea, moth bean, yardlong bean, winged bean, almond, pumpkin seeds, hemp seeds, watermelon seeds, MEAT. DAIRY. FERMENTED PRODUCTS. honey, miso, tempeh, POULTRY. chicken, eggs, duck, eggs, emu, goose, eggs, ostrich, partridge, quail, eggs, turkey, and so on, FISH AND SEAFOOD: crustaceans: mollusks: fishes: albacore, anchovy, angler, breams, blue whiting, tuna, bonito, cod, conger, groupers, hake, halibut, herring, pollack, salmons, sardine, sea bass, sea trout, skates, sole, turbot, and so on, OILS. coconut, pumpkin seeds, palm, peanut, soybean, LIVE FOOD. asparagus, avocado, bean greens, beet greens, beetroot, cucumber, calabash, fig-leaf gourd, squash, leek, mushrooms, onion, rhubarb, spinach, water chestnut, zucchini, FRUITS. acai berry, apple, apricot, breadfruit, coconut, currants, custard apple, cherry, date, fig, gooseberry, guava, guavasteen, jackfruit, java-plum, jujube, loquat, melons, mulberry, noni, papaya, pawpaw, peach, pear, plum, pomegranate, quince, rowanberry, blackberry, raspberry, strawberry, watermelons, BEVERAGES. almond milk, apple juice, beetroot juice, coffee, pear juice, prune juice, pomegranate juice, rooibos, blackberry juice, soybean milk, SPICES. bay leaf, cinnamon, clove, hives, garlic, nutmeg, saffron, vanilla, ==================================================================== |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Jul 30 10:03PM -0700 <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net> wrote in message news:eccc1164-fa04-4151-bc65-3f74b0564319o@googlegroups.com... >> Aetna Medicare > It must be the Advantage Plan and not Supplemental. You get what you > pay for, Ju-Ju. I have no clue what that is, but.. I have Medicare because I am disabled. I can't get the Medicare for seniors which I've been told is better. This year there were only two plans available to me. One was the free one. I had that last year. I opted for the Platinum plan which I do have to pay for but it covers more. |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Jul 30 10:06PM -0700 <bruce2bowser@gmail.com> wrote in message news:11068889-aa51-4ea7-b7bd-4bcbbde208e5o@googlegroups.com... > Only being Pushed by the FBI. Otherwise, they'd have chosen Hillary. I'd never have chosen her! |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 31 01:19AM -0400 On 7/29/2020 2:33 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > Car crash victims are more likely covered by insurance. > Maybe you can get the shooters to run over their victims instead of > shooting them. They should have to take out insurance policies before they join a gang. ;) Jill |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 03:41PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 22:06:51 -0700, "Julie Bove" >news:11068889-aa51-4ea7-b7bd-4bcbbde208e5o@googlegroups.com... >> Only being Pushed by the FBI. Otherwise, they'd have chosen Hillary. >I'd never have chosen her! If I'd been American, I'd have chosen Hillary Clinton over Trump. But also Sylvester Stallone, Pee-wee Herman, Daffy Duck, Ellen Degenerate, Oprah Winfrey or my local newspaper boy. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 09:31PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 29, , Cindy Hamilton wrote > If I want something cold (e.g., after yard work, for example), I prefer > an Outshine fruit bar. Lime, lemon, raspberry, strawberry. Nah. Tangerine and Pomegranate. I have a partial box of each in the freezer. leo |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 09:43PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 30, , Bruce wrote > Ok. But I wasn't amazed. The masses love crappy food. Look at all the > fast food chains and the prefab supermarket stuff. Correction. The deplorable masses. Get it together! One can't become a #woke pseudo-elitist without a proper message. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 09:49PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 30, , Bruce wrote > But it's not news to me. It's also amazing that Americans can't > organise a decent healthcare system. But I've known it for a long > time. My mouth has stopped dropping. That's called mouth breathing, my boy. We all knew you did it. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 09:58PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 29, , Gary wrote > the chocolate and cocoa powder. I do love the fudge like > brownies but never made my own. > In the past just a Duncan Hines brownie mix. My wife and I eat the same food. I love walnuts in fudge and brownies. My wife hates walnuts. Therefore, we don't eat fudge or brownies. There's a syllogism in there somewhere. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 03:38PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 21:43:05 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >> fast food chains and the prefab supermarket stuff. >Correction. The deplorable masses. Get it together! One can't become a >#woke pseudo-elitist without a proper message. I'm not woke. Says John. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 31 12:02AM -0400 On 7/30/2020 4:59 PM, John Kuthe wrote: > 4+lbs of dried beans, I soak then change water and cook a bit to desired "bean bite" test (I like Al Dente) then strain beans in cook pot and add enough water to make a nice sauce (snippage) Oh Gawd, you're gearing up for another VSTD meal session. Is there never any variety to your meals? (Garlic mashed potatoes in place of baked beans on the plate don't count.) Putting that stuff on a plate under a pile of vegetables isn't appealy and it's not variety. Do you really think this is healthful food? It's not even very *interesting* food. You're stuck in a boring rut. How about you go make some candy. Jill |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 03:37PM +1000 On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 00:02:08 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >under a pile of vegetables isn't appealy and it's not variety. Do you >really think this is healthful food? It's not even very *interesting* >food. You're stuck in a boring rut. Whereas McBiddy's living on the edge! And beyond! |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 02:34PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 22:51:00 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >> Its like a regular college but has a much higher tuition. Few can >> afford it. >LOLOL, Ed! It doesn't take much. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 02:34PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 23:17:41 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >This is about the third time I've seen the word "scofflaws" and the >second time was Ophelia asking what it means. I wondered at the time if >she doesn't own a dictionary. So what does it mean? |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 31 03:36PM +1000 >Used in a sentence: >I have a couple of synonyms for it but to post the names would be to >antagonize. I knew antagonise, but scofflaw is American English only, according to wherever I looked it up. Even though it sounds Dickensian. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 31 12:33AM -0400 On 7/30/2020 8:41 PM, Leo wrote: >> as typical grits, that's for sure. :) > I would love to eat those. I haven't had true grits (wasn't that a > movie?) Was John Wayne was eating grits in that film? ;) > any form, or I shop the wrong aisle where corn meal and flour are and am > missing the proper shelf space. I would love to eat grits again. > leo I don't know a thing about the grits served in New Orleans. I'm not trying to push grits on anyone. I didn't discover these yellow grits until I moved to SC. I've always liked the *idea* of grits. Perhaps because I like corn and things made with cornmeal. Cornbread, cornmeal griddle cakes. But, not much a fan of the grits I'd ever tasted before. I was in the grocery store aisle with things like oatmeal and hot cereal one day and looked up and spotted this brand on a shelf above my head. I'm only 5'3" so sometimes I have to look up to find things. I did look up. Yellow grits? Hmmm, I've never seen yellow grits before. I read the label and bought a 1lb bag of them. I haven't bought another brand of grits since. Much better texture than "white" grits, too. Of course *any* grits need to be cooked in salted water and when cooked adding butter is a given. Jill |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 30 09:11PM -0700 On 2020 Jul 30, , itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net wrote > I liked them both, both were great actresses but still feuded until Joan's > death. Professional jealousy or sibling rivalry that was never resolved? There's a sister biography movie in there somewhere. I had no idea. Old Hollywood actors die in our minds when they leave the industry. I associate Olivia and Joan with Bogart, Gary Cooper, Susan Hayward and Fay Wray. Damn! Fay Wray lived an extended life too. She was pretty in 1930's movies and only passed in 2004. Wray was barely older than Mom. Dad was a bit older than Charles Lindbergh. Now, I feel old :( |
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