Friday, July 31, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 11 updates in 5 topics

Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jul 31 01:25PM -0400

On 7/31/2020 8:38 AM, Sqwertz wrote:
> through the same grown-dry-rehydrate process. I'd be curious what a
> fresh pinto tastes like when cooked to the same state as previously
> dried.
 
Near as I can tell, they have a shorter shelf life and would have to be
processed in a short time. Shipping would be riskier
 
 
 
 
> https://thepiratebay.org/description.php?id=36334436
 
> Downloading now....
 
> -sw
 
Can't just splice in or connect a fitting and go from there?
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 10:29AM -0700

On Thursday, July 30, 2020 at 9:08:04 PM UTC-5, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> but not wasted. They become fertilizer.
 
> Tomato paste comes from Spain, Italy, California Same spices since 1892
> are added. Beans are cooked in the can using rotary steam cookers.
...
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=kWrPo02e4fo
 
 
John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jul 31 02:05PM -0500

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 13:25:47 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
>> dried.
 
> Near as I can tell, they have a shorter shelf life and would have to be
> processed in a short time. Shipping would be riskier
 
Sure. But look at all the other canned goods - especially
vegetables. Almost everything except beans are processed fresh and
have much shorter shelf life. Peaches, pears, beets, corn. Peas,
green beans, soybeans, asparagus <gag>, etc.....

> Can't just splice in or connect a fitting and go from there?
 
Yeah, I need a commercial crimper and connectors. I have screw on
connectors but they're too big for the commercial grade co-ax
running underground. They cut off 2 feet of cable at the pylon
leaving me only 2" of cable left before dirt. And then it goes
underground, not in a conduit, to the side of the house 40+ feet.
I'd still only get basic cable which is about 80 channels, 60 of
which are probably useless.
 
But I'm pretty happy with just PlutoTV streaming natively on my POS
Vizio, which I won in a raffle I didn't even know I entered (blood
donation). And the occasional Chromecast from the PC for Steelers
games or things like the short show above. I also have an active
(powered) indoor antenna when I need to watch live broadcasts.
 
I'm in no hurry to experience cable TV again.
 
-sw
Bob <fokker45@hotmail.com>: Jul 31 03:45PM -0400

On 7/31/2020 1:29 PM, John Kuthe wrote:
 
> That's led to overpopulation of Homo Sapiens and our Sixth Extinction Event!
 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWrPo02e4fo
 
> John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian
 
The way things are going, yes, it can happen. Plenty of starvation in
the world already. Too many babies
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 04:40AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 09:34:22 -0300, Lucretia Borgia
 
>>I would take her book with "a grain of salt."
 
>I don't think she is cashing in particularly, more that she has long
>had resentment for the treatment of her father, which was abysmal.
 
Fred Trump was a cold sociopath, his wife was weak, sickly and mainly
absent, so the sons were screwed in the head during their upbringing,
especially Donald. He was part born moron and part made moron.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 04:42AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 09:33:01 -0300, Lucretia Borgia
 
>I am reading it at the moment. Just got past Trump senior but found
>it interesting that it was such a disfunctional household, it
>certainly explains Donald.
 
Yes it does.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 01 04:45AM +1000

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 06:18:15 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
>> sociopath and bad business man he is. That's the halfway point.
 
>Trump will win those debates only in the minds of his most partisan
>supporters.
 
Biden can keep doing what he already seems to be doing. Keep a
relatively low profile and let Trump dig his own grave each time he
opens his mouth and lets the retarded words flow out.
bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Jul 31 12:37PM -0700

Mary Trump's tell-all book about Donald Trump likely outsold his 'Art of the Deal' in just a week
Business Insider - July 24, 2020
-- https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/mary-trumps-tell-all-book-about-donald-trump-likely-outsold-his-art-of-the-deal-in-just-a-week/ar-BB179CBq
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 12:29PM -0700

...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
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 31 02:11PM -0400

On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 12:11:42 -0400, Dave Smith
>and to the far end. By the time we were done we had muscles in our turds.
 
>So much easier now. Even the smallest farms have big bales and front end
>loads so they never have to chunk a bale by hand.
 
My neighbors have the machinery that makes those round bales. Those
round bales weigh about one ton each, they pick them up by stabbing
them with a fork on the tractor's front loader. Most feeding hay
today is made into square bales, those are light enough to toss by
hand. Which bale shape depends on the type of hay, low quality hay is
made into round bales because that's bedding hay, mostly weeds,
whatever is growing naturally in the fields... might say that's goat
hay. Feeding hay is made into square bales, and there are several
types of hay specially grown for feeding... a lot more expensive to
buy because it's a lot more expensive to grow.
 
Since living here I've learned a lot about haying but this year since
my neighbor is using my barn to store his equipment and bales and
haying some of my fields I'm learning a lot more about hay. More and
more I'm learning that hay is a big business in agricultural country,
probably one of the more important crops as it's needed for live
stock... really can't raise beef without hay... and bedding hay is
very important too, for all kinds of animals, can't keep beef and
horses without bedding hay. There are several cattle farms and horse
ranches within a 15 minute walk from my front door The horses here
are those used by the police departments and the NYC race horses. And
people raise all sorts of live stock, including those for their
fleece; llamas, alpacas, and all kinds of sheep... fiber art is a very
big business.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 31 07:00AM -0700

On Thursday, July 30, 2020 at 11:02:17 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote:
> 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
 
With this cooler weather, I AM gonna make another batch of English Toffee! I'm almost OUT! I need CREAM! Just wrote
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