- Picked tomatoes today ! - 2 Updates
- VSTD Meal 7-19-2020 - 2 Updates
- The WHOLE Front Porch is BROWN NOW! - 4 Updates
- Making my Baked Beans now! - 3 Updates
- Sesame Tofu, dinner 7/13/20 - 3 Updates
- Cicchetti and Tapas w/French Bread - 3 Updates
- Just a test - 6 Updates
- Know who invented high heels? - 1 Update
- I can DO THIS! Little bits at a time! - 1 Update
| Snag <Snag_one@msn.com>: Jul 19 07:35PM -0500 On 7/19/2020 12:36 PM, Black Thumb Martin wrote: >> citric acid . No added salt , no preservatives . Frozen is even better , >> nothing but tomato . > A total waste of labor growing tomatoes. I think you're just jealous because you can't grow anything . Current count of house plants here is around 60 or so , the damn things just keep on multiplying . ONE of my Roma tomato plants has around 40 tomatoes on it right now . I don't call getting that much food from a single plant a waste of time . Them that can , do . Them that can't criticize . -- Snag Illegitimi non carborundum |
| Snag <Snag_one@msn.com>: Jul 19 07:40PM -0500 On 7/19/2020 1:48 PM, Hank Rogers wrote: >> A total waste of labor growing tomatoes. > Good thing it's not yoose labor Popeye. I suggest you change his nickname to "Black Thumb Martin" since he's obviously horticulturally impaired . -- Snag Illegitimi non carborundum |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 19 05:15PM -0700 On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 6:18:23 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote: > >YUM-O! :-) > >The 'V' is for Vegetarian. STD = Standard. > No dead animal. Better brace yourself for the feedback! John cannot afford to buy meat now; he's taken up the vegetarian lifestyle to save money. |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jul 19 07:40PM -0500 On Sun, 19 Jul 2020 16:05:42 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe wrote: > YUM-O! :-) > The 'V' is for Vegetarian. STD = Standard. > John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian That's not a picture from somebody "who likes to cook". What's under there, baked beans? I had a CCCP (carnivore chicken, cow, pig) sandwich. https://i.postimg.cc/qRVcJ3sF/Sandwich-Fried-Chicken-Bacon-Pepper-Jack.jpg -sw |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 19 06:45PM -0500 Bruce wrote: > Yes, he can develop diabetes on his own front porch. >> or adult beverage while watching the world go by. > Yes, that sounds more like it. Just noticed the porch is the same color as yoose nose Druce. |
| jay <jay@mail.com>: Jul 19 06:17PM -0600 On 7/19/20 3:41 PM, John Kuthe wrote: > :-) > One OFF the Occupancy Permit FAIL list! > John Kuthe... Nice! The homes on your street look well kept and very cool classic bungalows. If they were in Austin, TX they would be over a million dollars. Location, location, location. |
| jay <jay@mail.com>: Jul 19 06:21PM -0600 On 7/19/20 3:55 PM, Bruce wrote: >> https://i.postimg.cc/N0KDCcyN/Front-Porch-is-BROWN-at-5-PMish.jpg >> :-) > Nothing wrong with that. Of course the RFC busybodies There are none more busy than you Bruce! |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 19 05:34PM -0700 On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 7:17:51 PM UTC-5, jay wrote: > Nice! The homes on your street look well kept and very cool classic > bungalows. If they were in Austin, TX they would be over a million > dollars. Location, location, location. 3068 Bellerive HAS the three most important things about real estate: location, location and location! 5min walk to UMSL one way, 5min walk to the Metrolink Sooth UMSL station the other, ands a 5min drive to/from STL International Airport! THE perfect Shared International Student House! John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jul 19 07:28PM -0400 >> https://i.pinimg.com/originals/71/47/c6/7147c60c342631029c4aacc37fda7eeb.jpg > It's your culture, it's not the culture here on the mainland unless you are > a crossdresser. We are a bit narrow minded though. You can bring some bits of your culture, your German beer, Polish pierogies, Italian cheeses, but leave your island skirts at home. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 20 09:52AM +1000 >We are a bit narrow minded though. You can bring some bits of your >culture, your German beer, Polish pierogies, Italian cheeses, but leave >your island skirts at home. Maybe you'll be ok if you're clearly an islander who came to the mainland, but a bit less ok if you look like Ed in a skirt, with a man bun. |
| Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Jul 19 07:27PM -0500 Bruce wrote: > Maybe you'll be ok if you're clearly an islander who came to the > mainland, but a bit less ok if you look like Ed in a skirt, with a man > bun. Damn, Druce, I bet you love those grass skirts. |
| Rachel Phillips <rmaniacnyc@gmail.com>: Jul 19 05:09PM -0700 do you dredge the tufo? On Saturday, July 18, 2020 at 5:09:15 PM UTC-4, Silvar Beitel wrote: |
| jay <jay@mail.com>: Jul 19 06:18PM -0600 On 7/18/20 3:09 PM, Silvar Beitel wrote: > Just trying out adding text to pictures. > (But I gotta say, it was a pretty good dinner too. :-) ) > https://photos.app.goo.gl/GyXqfjpPxkRrTcCu6 Nice job! Looks terrific. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 19 05:19PM -0700 On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 7:09:58 PM UTC-5, rmpbklyn wrote: > > https://photos.app.goo.gl/GyXqfjpPxkRrTcCu6 > > -- > > Silvar Beitel Not since he quit top-posting. |
| Rachel Phillips <rmaniacnyc@gmail.com>: Jul 19 04:23PM -0700 made from scraps, but meatloaf tend to be ground meats , spices and minced veg/olive. the scaps are marinaded then put in refigrator to make solid(due to the fats), they slice then fry. meatloaf typically oven baked On Saturday, July 18, 2020 at 6:51:09 PM UTC-4, Bruce wrote: |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 20 10:07AM +1000 On Sun, 19 Jul 2020 16:23:49 -0700 (PDT), Rachel Phillips >> American-English and means meatloaf. >made from scraps, but meatloaf tend to be ground meats , spices and minced veg/olive. >the scaps are marinaded then put in refigrator to make solid(due to the fats), they slice then fry. meatloaf typically oven baked Ok, so it's meat and it has the shape of a loaf, but it's not a meatloaf. It's a fried loaf of scrap meat. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jul 19 05:13PM -0700 On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 6:23:52 PM UTC-5, Rachel Phillips wrote: > > >Costco store in Spain.* > > I had to look up scrapple. If my dictionary's correct, it's > > American-English and means meatloaf. Still top-posting, I see. |
| jazeev1234@gmail.com: Jul 19 04:24PM -0700 On Saturday, July 18, 2020 at 7:49:02 PM UTC-4, jay wrote: > with "I'm not clicking on that link." If you don't want to click just > don't ..but it must be fun to make a formal announcement about what you > are not about to do. I am guilty of similar stuff like watching TV shows and bitching about how horrible they are. What a luxury that is, to sit around all day watching stuff you claim to hate. "A formal announcement about what you are not about to do", LOL. |
| jazeev1234@gmail.com: Jul 19 04:27PM -0700 On Saturday, July 18, 2020 at 7:09:13 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote: > People here love people testing posts. They can then dust off the old "test post" shtick and give it yet another rerun. Mostly, people here are just rerunning their shticks and routines. Funny and true. I enjoy it. The bickering can be fun. When it ceases to be fun I can always bolt. Yes, I believe there is snobbery in all groups. Even the snobs have their place. Same as bullies. They must have a place too, otherwise the victims of bullies would have no platform for their selfish crybabyism. I enjoy even the seemingly hateful posts sometimes, like where someone posts a recipe and another person says, "How can you eat trash like that?" See, I can enjoy that, especially if I believe the person actually believes what they are saying. But if they are doing it just to create chaos then it is not as good although that too can have it's own form of entertainment. It is funny how words can be used. Like asking a question. Like when someone uses a word some don't understand. Now they can ask one way, "What does that word mean?", or they can put a more snide attitude behind it, like, "What does that word even mean?", or then mentioning the word in a derisive way followed by, "What the heck does that even mean?" I enjoy the various techniques, the way comments are placed into question form to make them seem less threatening, to engulf the reader, because it's a question and it means they will have an opportunity to respond - it appeals to their ego. But sometimes the questions are really not questions at all, just comments, usually snide and final - and sometimes funny. It's just a bunch of words. I am capable of enjoying it. |
| jazeev1234@gmail.com: Jul 19 04:31PM -0700 Bruce wrote: > Yes. I only read manuals if all else fails and the house is > practically on fire. How about a manifesto? How long does it have to be? Do you have to be a mass murderer to qualify? How about boardgame instructions? Or how to set a wrist watch. Some of them are really poorly written. Or maybe it's impossible to write them otherwise. Manuals are funny. I used to drive cab and had a personal who'd have me drive her around in her own car. She let me take it home some nights. But I was on a leash, of course. Anyway, one night I parked outside her place waiting for her to come out, going to the hospital. It was cold out. I wanted to keep the car running for heat but also wanted to turn off the exterior lights so they wouldn't shine into people's windows. But it wouldn't let me do it. I tried all kinds of stuff and could not keep the lights off without keeping the car turned off. I thought I tried everything. She had a manual in the glove compartment. I looked under lights. Finally I got to the part where it said if you want to keep the lights off and the car running you will need to turn off the car and then restart it with your foot on the brake. Something really simple that never entered my mind. So that was a case where the manual came in handy. But it was a good manual. Mostly I prefer to avoid them, or to open them up and study them in a relaxed environment when time is not an issue. Patience is required, no doubt about it. It says so in the manual. |
| jazeev1234@gmail.com: Jul 19 04:33PM -0700 > http://www.enjoysudoku.com > You can pick your level. Check it out and see if it underwhelms your > ability. I like the ritual of the puzzle more than the puzzle itself. I used to do them while having hot coffee downtown, drinking it through a straw and taking about an hour. I like puzzles out of the paper. I try to do the easier ones fast. The hard ones take some time. There is a weekly mag here with the toughest Sudoko I've ever seen. Every week it is tough. And funny thing about it is there are lots of numbers on the grid, the high 20s usually. It gives you a head start and everything seems like it's falling into place before suddenly the challenge begins and my brain is challenged in such a way that sometimes bugs me. I usually get 3 or so of the mag out of the box because I know the first attempt probably won't work. And I use a pen and usually don't put in numbers unless I'm sure. That's how tough it is. I don't like them in magazines. I have tried them. I don't like having the answers available to me. Although, in case you are interesting - it is interesting actually - there is a site called sudoko something or other, can't recall what exactly, but just sudoko alone can take you to it - that will take you to a blank sudoko grid asking you to pump the bold original letters from your puzzle into the appropriate spots. And when you do that and hit 'continue' the whole grid fills in showing you the results. I used it only once on a puzzle I had given up on. It was interesting. Imagine making up a puzzle. I could never do it. Even though I myself am a puzzle of sorts like most. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 20 10:01AM +1000 >> Yes. I only read manuals if all else fails and the house is >> practically on fire. >How about a manifesto? How long does it have to be? I could handle one page in big letters. >Do you have to be a mass murderer to qualify? Uhm... I don't think that matters in this particular case. >How about boardgame instructions? Or how to set a wrist watch. I have a wrist watch that came with a tiny book. I ended up buying another wrist watch that came without a book. >Some of them are really poorly written. Or maybe it's impossible to write them otherwise. It was also very small print. Reading that felt like work. Also, not many pictures. >Manuals are funny. I used to drive cab and had a personal who'd have me drive her around in her own car. She let me take it home some nights. But I was on a leash, of course. Anyway, one night I parked outside her place waiting for her to come out, going to the hospital. It was cold out. I wanted to keep the car running for heat but also wanted to turn off the exterior lights so they wouldn't shine into people's windows. But it wouldn't let me do it. I tried all kinds of stuff and could not keep the lights off without keeping the car turned off. I thought I tried everything. >She had a manual in the glove compartment. I looked under lights. Finally I got to the part where it said if you want to keep the lights off and the car running you will need to turn off the car and then restart it with your foot on the brake. Something really simple that never entered my mind. So that was a case where the manual came in handy. But it was a good manual. Mostly I prefer to avoid them, or to open them up and study them in a relaxed environment when time is not an issue. Patience is required, no doubt about it. It says so in the manual. Yes, you really need the manual if what you have to do isn't intuitive. Hopefully, you don't have to read half the manual before you find what you need. Long live the index. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Jul 20 10:04AM +1000 >> They like to show us all how clued in they are. They're the same >> people who flaunt their killfile. >I know. I enjoy it. It makes me feel superior. I guess in that way I am like them. Sort of. Well not quite but sort of almost - like on the verge but not quite there. I am better than they are. In time you and others will know that. But for now let's live in peace and harmony, two things to which I am strongly devoted forever. How about you? Do you feel the same? Well do ya punk? Well, I do like to annoy people who take themselves too seriously. Of course, they're also the ones who'll killfile me. I'd call that a catch 22, but I forgot what that is. |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jul 19 07:49PM -0400 On 2020-07-19 6:10 p.m., Je�us wrote: >> I'm glad that fad ended too. Stupid looking things. > Has it ended now? Maybe it ended because they can't run away fast > enough during the rioting. They are the same guys who wear baseball caps crooked. When I was a kid we used to wear caps crooked if we wanted to look stupid. It ranks up there will nose rings. I have spend enough time around farms and agricultural fairs that I just can't take anyone seriously if they have a ring in their nose, especially if they are through the middle. There is too much temptation to run a string through the loop and lead them around. ... and what could they do but follow if I did ? |
| "cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Jul 19 06:40PM -0500 Alex wrote: > > Natural Bridge! Yellow, green, blue, fuschia! :-) > > John Kuthe... > Did a nice gray ever come to mind? Why should it? I know his house isn't like this but it's something that makes me smile. https://www.pinterest.com/pin/533113674622037708/ |
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