Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 8 topics

Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 11:48AM -0500

On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 12:02:35 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> half a dozen houses around a circle of asphalt.
 
> There's barely enough room to turn around if cars are parked on
> the street in one. As they usually are.
 
6 houses, nobody parks in it. Their outside tries often go 40-45MPH.
20-40 cars and trucks a day (100 if it's bulk trash pickup week -
scavengers).
 
-sw
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Aug 11 10:03AM -0700

On Tuesday, August 11, 2020 at 12:48:05 PM UTC-4, Sqwertz wrote:
> 20-40 cars and trucks a day (100 if it's bulk trash pickup week -
> scavengers).
 
> -sw
 
Here's a cul de sac:
 
<https://www.realtor.com/advice/buy/why-do-we-have-cul-de-sacs/>
 
You'd have to be insane to go 40 in that little circle.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Aug 11 01:20PM -0400


>> Cindy Hamilton
 
>10 houses on my street and none on the actual circular portion. I'd
>guess at 4 to 6 cars a day pass my house at the end.
 
I live on a County Road that's about 2 miles long that connects two
other longer county roads. During the morning and evening hours
essentially only the people living on this road are going to or coming
from work, about half the people living on this road are farmers who
rarely go anywhere, like me they rarely leave their property. During
the day perhaps one vehicle per hour passes and usually delivery vans
and small school buses, at night a few drunks, sober people don't
drive around here between dusk and dawn... way too many critters
roaming about... most nights it's pitch black and there are zero
street lights... and these are very winding narrow roads... I've been
told that they only paved where the livestock walked.
 
This area is as rural as rural gets, this is not like some new
subdivision, this area was new during Revolutionary times.... many of
the churches here are some 300+ years old.
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 12 04:23AM +1000

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 13:20:10 -0400, Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>
wrote:
 
>street lights... and these are very winding narrow roads... I've been
>told that they only paved where the livestock walked.
 
>This area is as rural as rural gets
 
I beat you when it comes to rurality. But we are on the electricity
net and on the outer reaches of garbage retrieval. You can do a lot
more "bush" still.
bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Aug 11 11:30AM -0700

On Monday, August 10, 2020 at 9:49AM -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> 1. It's a cul-de-sac. People aren't bombing through it at 90 mph.
 
Nowadays, the kids can do that and faster with their new e-bikes, scooters, e-ekates, etc.. and they can all tell each other to flash mob certain places at certain times. Imagine if we had all that back in the 70's ! !
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 02:08PM -0500

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 10:03:03 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
 
>> -sw
 
> Here's a cul de sac:
 
> <https://www./>
 
Uh, I know what one looks like.
 
> You'd have to be insane to go 40 in that little circle.
 
Delivery drivers are especially good at it.
 
-sw
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 02:09PM -0500

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 09:00:12 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
> 10 houses on my street and none on the actual circular portion. I'd
> guess at 4 to 6 cars a day pass my house at the end.
 
Doesn't Florida have like 10X the number of culdesacs of any other
state ? :-)
 
-sw
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Aug 11 10:51AM -0600

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 03:05:14 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
>have a recipe that uses none (but less vinegar, IIRC). I posted
>it on RFC a couple of weeks ago.
 
>Cindy Hamilton
 
This is a mild sweet/sour sauce. The vinegar and sugar are equal.
(4Tbsp. equals 1/4 cup) The potatoes absorb the flavors, that's why
it is good to leave the pot on the heat at low simmer for awhile to
allow the flavors to marry.
Janet US
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Aug 11 10:05AM -0700

On Tuesday, August 11, 2020 at 12:51:53 PM UTC-4, U.S. Janet B. wrote:
> it is good to leave the pot on the heat at low simmer for awhile to
> allow the flavors to marry.
> Janet US
 
To my taste buds, it's gack-worthy sweet. I hate sweet-and-sour. I
was pointing out that if that seems like too much sugar, it can be
reduced according to taste.
 
I might use 1 tablespoon of sugar or none and substitute something
else for some of the vinegar.
 
Cindy Hamilton
GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Aug 11 10:07AM -0700

U.S. Janet B. wrote:
 
> stick together.
> Stir in the bacon.
> Keep warm until service
 
 
Thank you, will use when it cools down this autumn...
 
--
Best
Greg
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Aug 11 11:49AM -0600

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 10:05:08 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
 
>I might use 1 tablespoon of sugar or none and substitute something
>else for some of the vinegar.
 
>Cindy Hamilton
 
I was just explaining the dish to others. No gack necessary.
Janet US
bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Aug 11 12:09PM -0700

Also Janet at the end, please say 'serving' instead of 'service', next time.
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 12:33PM -0500

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 09:06:01 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
 
>> Mine spies on me and tells the utility what I'm wearing.
 
>> Cindy Hamilton
 
> Crap, I have one of those too. Should I start wearing Jammies to bed?
 
Those new-fangled water meters energize the dormant nano-bots
flowing through the city water mains and into your house. Then they
evaporate up into the air from your sinks and showers and infest
every nook and cranny - spying on you. And the ones you drink spy on
the organs inside your body - especially your brain - using all
those tiny centipede-like nano-feelers and antennas.
 
Outside the home they rely on water sprinklers. And when the
Government needs really deep coverage, they often stage water main
breaks and structure fires.
 
All those nano-bots report back to the meters on the side of the
house VIA wi-fi, and then the meters transmit to the hubs mounted on
the light and telephone poles in the neighborhood. And then from
there to the electrical grid and substations where The Government
has installed taps and filters to suck out all that data. All this
data is being transmitted in mere microseconds.
 
The nano-bots typically only live for a few days on their tiny
little semiconductor capacitors and get vacuumed up with the dead
skin cells or washed away by rains. Most of them get picked by up
via runoff in streams in rivers, or VIA household wastewater where
they travel back though the water treatment plants end up back in
the water supply again, ready to be reactivated/recharged VIA your
wi-fi water meters. There's always a constant stream of dormant
nano-bots traveling through the city water mains AND in your body!
 
There have been unconfirmed reports that this "Coronavirus" is
actually cased by rogue or compromised nano-bots.
 
-sw
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Aug 11 11:04AM -0700

On Tuesday, August 11, 2020 at 1:34:01 PM UTC-4, Sqwertz wrote:
 
> There have been unconfirmed reports that this "Coronavirus" is
> actually cased by rogue or compromised nano-bots.
 
> -sw
 
Heh. Good one.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 01:44PM -0500

(Slightly modified ansd spell-checked)
 
All those new-fangled wi-fi water meters energize and flash
nano-code to dormant nano-bots flowing through the city water mains
and into your homes and businesses. Then they evaporate up into the
air from your sinks and showers and infest every nook and cranny -
spying on you. And the ones you drink spy on the organs inside your
body - especially your brain - using all those tiny centipede-like
nano-feelers and nano-antennas.
 
Outside the home they rely on water sprinklers. And when the
Government needs really deep coverage, they often stage water main
breaks, structure fires, and rely on rioters to start fires
requiring the fire hoses which dispense the energized nano-bots.
 
All those nano-bots report back to the meters on the side of the
homes and buildings VIA wi-fi. Then the meters transmit to the hubs
mounted on the light and telephone poles in the area. And from there
to the electrical grid and substations where The Government has
installed Brita taps and filters to suck out all that data. All this
data is being transmitted in mere microseconds.
 
The nano-bots typically only live for a couple days on their tiny
little semiconductor capacitors and get vacuumed up with the dead
skin cells and washed away by rains. Most of them get picked by up
via runoff in streams in rivers, or VIA household wastewater where
they travel back though the water treatment plants end eventually
end up back in the water supply again, ready to be
reactivated/re-coded VIA your wi-fi water meters. There's always a
constant stream of dormant nano-bots traveling through the city
water mains and into your home and body!
 
There have been unconfirmed reports that this "Coronavirus" is
actually caused by rogue or compromised nano-bots, but that is still
under investigation and not to be misconstrued as fact.
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 02:07PM -0500

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 11:04:49 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
>> actually cased by rogue or compromised nano-bots.
 
> Heh. Good one.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
I hope that wasn't meant to be patronizing :-P
 
-sw
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Aug 11 01:04PM -0500

On Mon, 10 Aug 2020 11:41:03 -0700 (PDT), "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net"
 
>Fo
 
I am so so sorry something must have happened in the transmission
between your computer and everyone else that does not give a fuck.
 
oh yeah I have said this before in other newsgroups but I will say
this again just for you because I know you surely need a little help.
Usenet is an informal area for posting. Sentences do not matter, caps
do not matter. nothing matters
It is as if you were posting on a bulletin board.
 
And yes I know you will disagree with me, but please go ahead so
everyone in here will look up the information and make you once again
look like a complete ass that has very little scents.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Aug 11 01:07PM -0500

>>be in awe of your super-brain,
 
>He said his IQ was 120 or something. That's alright, but not super
>intelligent.
 
yeah see the thing about me being smart and how I talk or type here
really does not matter whatsoever. The thing about our resident
internet cop is ALL cops are fucking retarded!
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Aug 11 11:42AM -0700

> Usenet is an informal area for posting. Sentences do not matter, caps
> do not matter. nothing matters
> It is as if you were posting on a bulletin board.
 
You're not wrong, but you're not right, either.
 
As you have seen, you are judged on the quality of your writing just
as people are judged on the basis of their appearance, their car's
appearance, or a host of other factors.
 
For the most part, I cannot be bothered to correct grammar and spelling
on Usenet (unless it's a funny typo), because I used to get paid
to copy edit and proofread technical manuals.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Aug 11 11:49AM -0500

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 06:44:17 -0400, Gary wrote:
 
>>> Still one question: live or frozen?
 
>> Neither.
 
> Please do explain.
 
Do I really have to? <sigh>
 
-sw
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 12 04:16AM +1000

On Tue, 11 Aug 2020 11:49:53 -0500, Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>
wrote:
 
 
>>> Neither.
 
>> Please do explain.
 
>Do I really have to? <sigh>
 
See Gary, you wouldn't get this kind of snootiness from me :)
 
(Re: the "always needs to win" personality)
bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Aug 11 11:36AM -0700

U.S. Janet B. wrote:
> So, I believe Steve's lobster price. It all depends on your market
> area.
> Janet US
 
I always thought she was the next Julia Child. If only she could manage to finally stop all of the bumps and scrapes outside of the
studio ! !
Bruce <bruce@null.null>: Aug 12 04:15AM +1000

>> https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/boardwalk
 
>I think most boardwalks along the ocean were originally
>made of board planking, hence the name.
 
Yes, that sounds plausible.
>the strong wind. Often just a few skating motions to get
>moving and the wind will push you all the way to the other end.
>Fun to do.
 
I'd break something. Skating and roller skating are not for me. The
last time I ice skated, I raced my brother. Except he can skate and I
had to use willpower. I ended up with a concussion.
Hank Rogers <Nospam@invalid.com>: Aug 11 12:02PM -0500

Sheldon Martin wrote:
> style/age house... and of the right wood could last 100s of years...
> years ago gutters and down spouts were made of the same oak used for
> sailing ships and wine barrels.
 
And pegs for prothetics on crusty old sailors.
Taxed and Spent <nospamplease@nonospam.com>: Aug 11 09:40AM -0700

On 8/11/2020 7:22 AM, Sheldon Martin wrote:
 
>>> He's not in prison or a mental hospital, he's not homeless. As far as I know, he hasn't killed anybody. It sounds like he's doing better than a lot of folks - plus, he has central air conditioning.
 
>> He is in a prison of his own making.
 
> Everyone is.
 
There are prisons, and then there is the Black Hole of Calcutta.
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