- This is the perfect weekend if you suffer dementia - 4 Updates
- Mushroomiest soup - 1 Update
- Porkchop Perfection! Friday, April 07, 2023 🐷 - 9 Updates
- Easter Ham - 2 Updates
- The Best Creamy Peanut Butter...??? - 6 Updates
- Dinner, 5April - 3 Updates
| Judith Latham <judithlatham@gmx.com>: Apr 07 08:45PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 10:04:37 PM UTC-4, GM wrote: > B-) > -- > GM He was right, more idiots were invited. Witness your troll, Trew |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 11:00PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 3:58:19 PM UTC-10, Michael Trew wrote: > Somewhere, I have a voltage variac, a tube tester, isolation > transformer, bin of resistors/capacitors, and a number of other odds and > ends. Vacuum tubes, including picture tubes, did indeed evolve from the light bulb. They both heat up a filament in a vacuum. Instead of producing light, the electron tube heats up one or more filaments to produce a stream of electrons to do useful things. The electron tube and incandescent light bulb made modern life possible but they're pretty much in the scrap heap of technology these days. Time marches on! |
| Thomas Joseph <jazeev1234@gmail.com>: Apr 08 12:07AM -0700 Ed P wrote: Graham wrote: udith Latham wrote: > > My neighbour has just died of/with dementia. > > Thank you for your tasteless post. > Also cross posted to invite more idiots. Like you, Ed? |
| Thomas Joseph <jazeev1234@gmail.com>: Apr 08 12:11AM -0700 Bryan Simmons wrote: > I wish that John Kuthe would die of dementia. > Instead, he keeps living with it. I have wished death on people. Not many though. I know what you mean, how people who are supposed to be dead just keep on ticking. I feel the same about a few relatives and friends with cancer. I'm talking ten years or more. I don't wish death on these people, but when I hear them talking about 'their' disease as if it's their own personal pet I do sometimes find myself asking, "When are these people going to die?" |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 08 12:06AM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 3:07:12 PM UTC-10, Thomas wrote: > I have never picked those but would. In Pa we pick papinkies. > I was violently ill last year for 3 days and suspected my shrooms. No one else has ill effects so I tried again. > On my death bed. I really want to try again... My sister-in-law gave me some morels that she had picked. I'm a little frightened of them. What if she made a mistake? |
| Ed P <esp@snet.xxx>: Apr 07 11:23PM -0400 On 4/7/2023 10:39 PM, bruce bowser wrote: >>> You can and will fail, and perhaps suffer, but your knowing is your guide. >> I have my own beliefs. Plenty of Christians are pure hypocrites too. > And I suppose that plenty of un-Christians are not? Didn't say that. But they don't tell you how good a person they are and then stab you in the back. Protestants don't recognize the Pope as the head of the church Baptists don't recognize each other in the liquor store. >> I won't belong to a church. > Why should you? "'My house shall be called a house of prayer,' but you make it a den of robbers." - Matthew 21:13 Yes, Joel Olsteen needs a new airplane. |
| Michael Trew <michael.trew@att.net>: Apr 07 11:54PM -0400 > What are you having for dinner this Good Friday?? Cooking at home or > eating out tonight? Local fish fry! I was working on a water pump replacement most of the day, which was not a fun job. There's a coolant leak to find somewhere tomorrow. :/ Anyway, my mother was kind enough to deliver the fish fry to me, but unfortunately, the fries were fairly soggy and cold by that point. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 08:59PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 3:28:38 PM UTC-10, Bruce wrote: > >Being a good person is not the way. > That sounds like gloomy, fundamentalist Dutch Protestantism. Its > closest Anglo relative is Presbyterianism, or so I was told. Welcome to the grim reality. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 09:06PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 4:16:19 PM UTC-10, Thomas wrote: > > I have my own beliefs. Plenty of Christians are pure hypocrites too. I > > won't belong to a church. > I am not a believer. I do however know the rules of the game. It's good to know what's going on. It's even better to know what's really going on. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 07 09:13PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 10:59:38 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote: > > That sounds like gloomy, fundamentalist Dutch Protestantism. Its > > closest Anglo relative is Presbyterianism, or so I was told. > Welcome to the grim reality. Well, it beats worshipping rocks, as you do, David... -- GM |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Apr 07 09:30PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 7:37:35 PM UTC-5, Thomas wrote: > it is a day to remember the day Jesus was tortured and died for you. > You can both celebrate what he did for you and grieve his death at > the same time. Is today just Friday? I already said it was Good Friday, what are you not understanding? |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 09:51PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 6:13:54 PM UTC-10, GM wrote: > Well, it beats worshipping rocks, as you do, David... > -- > GM Actually, you're wrong about that. The Hawaiians worship nature. Yoose guys worship yourselves. https://greenglobaltravel.com/hawaiian-mythology-gods-goddesses-legends/ |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 07 09:55PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 11:51:33 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote: > > GM > Actually, you're wrong about that. The Hawaiians worship nature. Yoose guys worship yourselves. > https://greenglobaltravel.com/hawaiian-mythology-gods-goddesses-legends/ " rocks " = " nature " 😎 -- GM |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 11:21PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 6:55:24 PM UTC-10, GM wrote: > 😎 > -- > GM Of course rocks are nature. What you're wrong about is that man worshiping himself is superior to man worshiping and respecting nature. It does not. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Apr 07 10:06PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 9:04:49 PM UTC-5, Michael Trew wrote: > > time." > I think he was asking you to post the recipe. I'd be interested as > well, unless mayonnaise is involved. Mayonnaise is involved. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 11:05PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 2:08:39 PM UTC-10, songbird wrote: > dishes we like but i have to be careful about how much of it i > eat. > songbird My guess is that salt or peanut butter is more harmful to humans than MSG. But of course, I could be wrong. |
| "cshenk" <cshenk@virginia-beach.net>: Apr 08 03:10AM Bruce wrote: > > Each year they gave me a paper grocery bag full and always included > > the instructions of how to roast them. > So peanut butter's made from roasted peanuts, not from raw. Jif is. Not sure on Skippy. The only time I made it, it was from raw. It was fine. |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 08 01:15PM +1000 On Sat, 08 Apr 2023 03:10:30 +0000, "cshenk" >> So peanut butter's made from roasted peanuts, not from raw. >Jif is. Not sure on Skippy. >The only time I made it, it was from raw. It was fine. I've never had it raw. I think all commercially sold peanut butter is made from roasted peanuts: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peanut_butter |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Apr 07 09:18PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 9:57:39 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote: > What kind of oatmeal are you using that you have to add sugar? Quick > cooking oatmeal is pretty bland and instant oatmeal is even worse. Get > the large flake or steel cut. It is much tastier. I agree, instant oatmeal is awful. But I've had quick cooking, old fashioned, and steel cut and every one has to have sugar added as they're quite bland. My dad said when he was a young man he spent the night at his brother-in-law's parents house. Oatmeal was baked in an oblong cake pan, sliced, and served as breakfast the next morning. Nothing was offered such as butter, sugar, or honey to accompany it. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 09:33PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 2:08:40 PM UTC-10, songbird wrote: > before scientists knew what it was. > good strawberries are divine. :) > songbird I think you're probably right about the mystery disease being HIV. I used to make biscuits to eat with the freezer strawberry jam. If I didn't make that strawberry jam, I probably wouldn't have learned to make biscuits or hot milk sponge cake. https://bakeschool.com/hot-milk-cake/ |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 09:43PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 4:46:33 PM UTC-10, Michael Trew wrote: > fair point. He just took him to renew his driver's license recently, > and the clerk at the DMV told him that she'll see him back for renewal > next when he's 100. :) You sound like you have a weak stomach. My guess is that you'd be repulsed by the foods we ate in the 60's. I sure as hell wouldn't want to go back to those days. Mostly, you have a romantic notion of the foods that Americans ate in the first part of the 20th century. That's fine - you got the right to do that, being young and all. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 07 10:04PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 11:43:46 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote: > > and the clerk at the DMV told him that she'll see him back for renewal > > next when he's 100. :) > You sound like you have a weak stomach. My guess is that you'd be repulsed by the foods we ate in the 60's. I sure as hell wouldn't want to go back to those days. Mostly, you have a romantic notion of the foods that Americans ate in the first part of the 20th century. That's fine - you got the right to do that, being young and all. Here we agree - the vast majority of the food I grew up with sucked, it was plain as hell and tasteless... veg and meat cooked to death, no spices... Everyone did have big gardens, at least... so fresh stuff in season... It's not as if peeps were "bad cooks" - they just didn't know any better... -- GM |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 08 01:17PM +1000 On Fri, 07 Apr 2023 23:11:49 -0400, Michael Trew >knowledge, Italians use little sauce over their pasta; perhaps even less >than in David's photo. I prefer it that way, myself, with just enough >sauce to flavor it; never covering all of the pasta. Same with pizza. When Americans make a pizza, they could lose entire household items under the cheese layer. |
| Michael Trew <michael.trew@att.net>: Apr 07 11:59PM -0400 On 4/6/2023 16:03, % wrote: >> Yes, some contain a little bit of carbs, but they're not carbs. > Carrots actually do contain a fair amount of carbs, they're > best in moderation if you're on the keto diet. Keto is horrible for your body, and most people gain the weight right back once they get off of it. The best way to diet is to consume fewer calories and increase exercise -- there's no fad diet that comes close. Due to inflation, I'm now too cheap to eat out, save rare occasions, or buy much of any kind of junk food. That's probably a good thing, but most of my pants are 3 sizes too large now, and that's becoming fairly annoying. |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 07 09:19PM -0700 On Friday, April 7, 2023 at 4:13:43 PM UTC-10, cshenk wrote: > the best match. > Other than ketchup (assuming tomato based), I have none, but have > powder that can make tomato paste to match texture. I like the idea of using the same pan to steam and finish. I used to fry the eggplant and then realized it would be better to just steam the eggplant. It's actually kind of difficult to fry eggplant - it tends to absorb oil. I suppose that I could coat the eggplant with cornstarch - that would help some. Steaming or boiling the eggplant mostly reduces the amount of oil in the dish. I like to use balsamic vinegar in this dish. If you don't have ketchup, I'd just add a little sugar instead. |
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