Saturday, August 8, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 11 topics

Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Aug 08 01:10PM -0500

Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
>> <sigh>
 
> I'm not sure we've seen him _out_ of a manic stage for several years.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Better than the maniac stage.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:14AM +1000

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 09:04:14 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
 
>> He's obviously in a "manic" stage...and we are his "audience"...
 
>> <sigh>
 
>I'm not sure we've seen him _out_ of a manic stage for several years.
 
If someone's always manic, can you still call them bipolar?
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:11AM +1000

>many will do it this year.
 
>Only bikers I can think of here are Snag and Dave. Have
>either of you ever attended?
 
Don't bikers tend to be Amendment Preachers, Face Mask Refusers,
Freedom Dudes, Covid Spreaders and all-round retards?
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:12AM +1000


>That sounds like an interesting race. I guess the slowest
>to reach the finish line without having to put feet on the
>ground is the winner?
 
Sounds riveting...
Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Aug 08 11:14AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 1:11:30 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote:
> >either of you ever attended?
 
> Don't bikers tend to be Amendment Preachers, Face Mask Refusers,
> Freedom Dudes, Covid Spreaders and all-round retards?
 
And smelly ones I bet.
 
--Bryan https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/bryan-simmons/winters-present/ebook/product-176j5weg.html
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Aug 08 10:40AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 12:27:28 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> school when he is 72. Then it would hit university when Joe was 75,
> graduating at 78 or so. Give him or her a couple years to settle down
> and start raising a family and Joe would be in his 80s.
 
My brother is 73 and has two little boys age 9 and 11.
Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Aug 08 10:46AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 12:27:28 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> school when he is 72. Then it would hit university when Joe was 75,
> graduating at 78 or so. Give him or her a couple years to settle down
> and start raising a family and Joe would be in his 80s.
 
The premise of my novel is that an older, recent widower (exact age not specified) wins the lottery, and offers a young woman a lot of money to be his paid GF. Everyone gets more than they bargained for.
 
--Bryan https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/bryan-simmons/winters-present/ebook/product-176j5weg.html
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 03:52AM +1000


>I remember when I was 17, I couldn't imagine living to
>age 25. My parents were in their mid-30s then and seemed
>so OLD.
 
Some people actually are older than their age. Look at McBiddy. She's
as old as the mountains.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Aug 08 01:07PM -0500

Bruce wrote:
>> so OLD.
 
> Some people actually are older than their age. Look at McBiddy. She's
> as old as the mountains.
 
Analysis by Druce Van de Buttsniff , Phd and world's foremost biddy
expert.
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Aug 08 02:09PM -0400

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 10:13:17 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
>> age 25. My parents were in their mid-30s then and seemed
>> so OLD.
 
>When I was 17 my mom was 55 and my dad was 65.
 
When I was 18 I fathered twin girls. Turned out she was 15 and
portrayed herself as 18 and aborted them while I was at sea... when I
returned is when her father brought me to the sleezey MD who did the
deed and I got a lecture. I never forgave her. Her mom was a saint
and divorced the evil bastard. Marilyn had four older sisters who all
had children while unmarried and underage. Turkish woman matured
early. Turkish men were A-holes.
Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Aug 08 11:11AM -0700

> chartreuse Dodge Super Bee. My 20-year-old cousin wanted to what an
> old wanted with such a snazzy car?
 
> https://i.postimg.cc/xCDTSWtY/Super-Bee.jpg
 
Tell you what car I'd like to drive is a https://www.idealclassiccars.net/vehicles/371/2003-ford-thunderbird Doesn't matter if you're 16 or 69, that's just a good looking car. What I do drive is a cheap, low end Chevy, but my retirement car, which is now my son's car, is a https://www.autoevolution.com/reviews/hyundai-sonata-hybrid-review-2015.html It gets 40 city / 44 highway, and once my son can afford a more hot shit car, I'll just take over the payments, as my name is on the title too.
 
Six years and we're getting the heck out of St. Louis and "Going Mobile" for a few years, wandering, following the nice weather, not driving over a few hours a day for the most part.
 
--Bryan https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/bryan-simmons/winters-present/ebook/product-176j5weg.html
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:05AM +1000

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 09:46:26 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>
wrote:
 
 
>> There's a difference between being intelligent and being smart.
 
>> Cindy Hamilton
 
>You're saying that some people are intelligent but not smart but you're smart - not intelligent? My guess is that intelligent people are not interested in talking about other people. Stupid people are.
 
My guess is that the two things have nothing to do with each other.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:09AM +1000

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 09:57:10 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
 
>I'm older than both of you and I have no degree and I figured out the first
>2 minutes when they introduced the new groups how to get back to the old
>format. All without cussing somebody out!
 
You post with Google Groups? But your (and Cindy's) posts look
civilised compared to the other Google Groupers.
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 08 01:01PM -0500

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 07:12:20 -0700 (PDT), Silvar Beitel wrote:
 
> That's right! Today is ...
 
> National Sneak Some Zucchini onto Your Neighbor's Porch Day!
 
> (Don't believe me? Look it up!)
 
I can attest to this. The Great Pumpkin knows I don't like zucchini
(or pumpkin, for that matter) so I got a different kind of
cucurbitaceae on my doorstep this morning:
 
https://i.postimg.cc/QNcHmxVq/Porch-Watermelon.jpg
 
Suckers and your zucchini! Hah!
 
-sw
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Aug 08 02:39PM -0300

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 13:07:44 +0100, S Viemeister
>> the font size.
 
>Even better, a waterproof e-reader with built-in light. |Good for beach
>or pool, and excellent for bubble baths...
 
True enough! Recently read two paper books, argghgh, couldn't wait to
finish them. I will never go back to paper again.
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Aug 08 02:41PM -0300

On Sat, 8 Aug 2020 09:19:32 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>
wrote:
 
>booklight or candles or a flashlight) how do you keep the e-reader
>charged during an extended power outage?
 
>Jill
 
I have a gizmo that charges all sorts of tech things, that's more than
enough for two weeks with an e-reader, I had no power for two weeks
and reader did not expire. I just make sure things like that are
charged to the hilt when I know a hurricane is heading my way.
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Aug 08 10:51AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 12:42:00 PM UTC-5, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
> enough for two weeks with an e-reader, I had no power for two weeks
> and reader did not expire. I just make sure things like that are
> charged to the hilt when I know a hurricane is heading my way.
 
When the March tornado hit here I had to charge my cell phone using my
car. It also has an electrical 110-volt plug.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 04:01AM +1000

On Sat, 08 Aug 2020 14:41:56 -0300, Lucretia Borgia
 
>I have a gizmo that charges all sorts of tech things, that's more than
>enough for two weeks with an e-reader, I had no power for two weeks
>and reader did not expire.
 
For two weeks? I'd have emigrated. I find 2 hours of no power
extremely long! And this is the sticks!
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 03:56AM +1000

On Sat, 08 Aug 2020 17:13:52 +0100, Pamela <pamela.poster@gmail.com>
wrote:
 
>sounds even more impressive if you paid $2 for fifty chiken pieces. For top
>marks you have to fight off a dog from a carrier bag of chicken parts in a
>back street.
 
And then run to RFC to brag about your bargain.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 03:57AM +1000


>> Didn't you stop to think it wasn't going to be top quality chicken?
 
>I often buy the 10lb bags (labeled leg quarters here) for
>between $3.90 and $5.90. Top quality taste always.
 
Because you've never had decent quality. You always buy tortured
industry chicken.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 09 03:58AM +1000

On Sat, 08 Aug 2020 17:15:48 +0100, Pamela <pamela.poster@gmail.com>
wrote:
 
>>> It gives processed food an new meaning.
 
>> You don't brine and smoke chicken?
 
>When I eat chicken I like to taste chicken.
 
Smoking meat is a lower socio-economic American hobby. They have
endless discussions about how they do it.
Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Aug 08 10:49AM -0700

On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 9:13:03 AM UTC-5, Sheldon wrote:
 
> April, with all your fishtailing, spasming, and gripping it sounds
> like you had a fantastic orgasmic experience. ;)
 
I try to not let a day go by w/o at least one fantastic orgasmic experience.
 
--Bryan https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/bryan-simmons/winters-present/ebook/product-176j5weg.html
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Aug 08 10:47AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 12:01:31 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
 
> > Cindy Hamilton
 
> Most people carry security cards on a lanyard around their neck or attached to their purse or some other place on their body. A security card that doesn't have to be pulled out would be a good thing.
 
> If you ask me, your security card should be your cell phone. For added security, your location would be tracked at all times when in the building or when you're out.
 
When I worked my security card was attached to one of the retractable
clips. Some folks did wear theirs on a lanyard, though, and we were
tracked to any secure area in the building.
 
https://i.postimg.cc/rF8cw0s3/Security-Clip.jpg
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 08 12:34PM -0500

On Sat, 08 Aug 2020 11:54:18 -0400, Gary wrote:
 
> Finally, take off the lid and let some of the liquid
> evaporate but still leave it very moist.
 
> Good to add to almost any food.
 
You can slop it over some of your home made baked beans and make
VSTD breakfasts all week! Don't forget the cashews.
 
-sw
"itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Aug 08 10:32AM -0700

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 10:02:21 AM UTC-5, GM wrote:
 
> --
> Best
> Greg
 
He can thank the overloaded garlic potatoes for having no job. And the
fact that he's computer illiterate when it comes to coding in medications.
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