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A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 10 05:45AM -0700 On Sunday, June 9, 2019 at 2:13:56 AM UTC-4, Julie Bove wrote: > immersion blender then cooked it down a little. Tuna from a pouch, peas and > some brown rice macaroni. Baked through with some potato chips on top for > serving. Yummy! i've only had tuna casserole once at a friends place. it was good. we just never made it in our family. your version sounds good. except for the potato chips. |
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 10 05:46AM -0700 On Sunday, June 9, 2019 at 1:20:55 PM UTC-4, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > How is that crap? It might not be to your taste, but it's not crap. > Although I think the quantity of mushrooms is so small as to be pointless. > Cindy Hamilton i'd like some hunks of mushroom in there and not blended. |
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Jun 10 07:56AM -0600 On Mon, 10 Jun 2019 05:45:30 -0700 (PDT), A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com> wrote: snip >i've only had tuna casserole once at a friends place. it was good. we just never made it in our family. your version sounds good. except for the potato chips. That is the original 50s recipe. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuna_casserole |
lucretiaborgia@fl.it: Jun 10 09:22AM -0300 >Heroes, imo, are ones that actually put their own lives at risk >to save someone else. In all my cases, my life was never at >risk. I just happened to be there at the right time. Good on you! I don't feel it is any difficulty for me to pay attention to an Amber Alert, register what the child looks like, the memory will be triggered if you happened to see them. |
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jun 10 06:02AM -0700 > >Jill > So when you are out you never notice other people/children, your eyes > are blind to them? How very self-centred! Children all look pretty much the same to me. Since I never had any, the fine distinctions between one little, round, big-eyed face and another elude me. Adults are much more distinctive, since the mileage of living shows on their faces. Cindy Hamilton |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:22AM -0400 >> Jill > So when you are out you never notice other people/children, your eyes > are blind to them? How very self-centred! Try not to be such an idiot. |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:33AM -0400 On 2019-06-10 8:03 a.m., Gary wrote: > blocks away). Sure enough, there was the missing kid with a few > friends just playing in the woods. Problem solved. These days, I > would be named in the news as a hero. lol Lucky for you that the kid was okay. A lot of people have the good sense to avoid getting involved. A unfortunate aspect to finding a body is that you are likely to end up as a person of interest. They want to know how you knew the body was there, how much time you spend watching those kids...... |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:47AM -0400 > Children all look pretty much the same to me. Since I never > had any, the fine distinctions between one little, round, > big-eyed face and another elude me. I don't pay much attention to kids, certainly not enough that I am likely to remember having seen a particular kid. I had to laugh on year when my wife volunteered me to chaperone a class trip for one of the teachers in her school. She was teaching in a farm community and they were going to the Winter Fair. My charge consisted of close to 30 kids, all white and most fair haired, all wearing blue jeans and most in blue parkas. We got to the fair and there are about 1,000 other kids, mostly in blue jeans and similar jackets. Lucky for my one of the kids was a hyperactive kiss-up, so I used him to run around keeping tabs on the others. |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:41AM -0400 Bruce wrote: > It depends how badly I let it go before I mow it again. I don't need > to do much from May until November. The other half of the year, every > 6 weeks or so. You only have to mow every 6 weeks? Must be very dry in your area. How about a pic of your yard, B. That would be cool.. :) |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:42AM -0400 Bruce wrote: > 12 mandarin trees. And producing many oranges? That would be more than you could eat. Do you sell them as a side income? |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:26AM -0400 On 2019-06-10 7:55 a.m., Pamela wrote: > I am not talking about meadow but cultivated grass lawns. Here we see > sprinklers and hosepipes for watering lawns and they consume vast amounts > of drinking water over a growing season. It is not all being wasted. It is being used to feed that grass, and the grass is sucking CO2 out of the air and releasing oxygen. Some of it is absorbed into the ground and returning directly to the water table, or it evaporates and returns as rain. |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:28AM -0400 On 2019-06-10 8:00 a.m., Pamela wrote: > national pastime -- until the officials declare a ban. > At several gallons gallons a minute from one single hose pipe, that ends up > being a lot of water. Some people are obsessive about green lawns. Grass is hard to kill. No matter how brown it turns it is likely to spring right back as soon as it gets a little rain. |
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 10 09:41AM -0400 On 2019-06-10 8:41 a.m., Gary wrote: >> 6 weeks or so. > You only have to mow every 6 weeks? Must be very dry in your > area. How about a pic of your yard, B. That would be cool.. :) At this time of year I have to mow twice a week. I could let it go a little more but I would have to slow down to less than half the speed and I would be leaving big clumps. It is much easier to trim less more often. |
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 10 06:31AM -0700 On Monday, June 10, 2019 at 5:58:43 AM UTC-4, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > Whenever you see "Dutch" in American cookery, it's probably a corruption > of "Deutsch". > Cindy Hamilton like the pennsylvania dutch aka mennonites, amish these people came up to my area from pennsylvania. following the black walnut trail, or so they say. i've never knowingly seen a black walnut tree. |
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 10 06:25AM -0700 Cooler, WINDY, Sunny and BEAUTIFUL!! And so is my Chiffarobe, and my beloved HOUSEMATES! :-) John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Building Bridges and Tearing Down Fences! |
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 10 06:17AM -0700 pork goulash. i purchased a couple of boneless pork chops; sirloin end. sauteed cooking onion, green bell pepper and garlic in a bit of canola oil. until soft. added one ripe roma, cut into 1/4 rounds. let them get soft. added paprika, and a cheat: a chicken cube. i purchase the stuff that's imported from poland, i find those cubes to be more flavourful and not as artificial tasting. stir the mess around for a few minutes, add a few dashes of hot sauce, and water. then add the pork. simmer until almost tender, then add diced potatoes. cook till done. add salt if needed. i don't use a thickener, so is it a soup or stew? it's a main course. |
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 10 06:11AM -0700 On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 11:11:23 PM UTC-4, John Kuthe wrote: > A 10-12 hour LSD experience just sounds exhausting to me right now! > But everything DOES anyway, as I mowed some serious LAWN today!! I'm gonna sleep WELL tonight! :-) > John Kuthe... windowpane, orange sunshine, green frog blotter etc. some pretty strong stuff. |
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Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:41AM -0400 Ed Pawlowski wrote: > Yeah, but do you grow the mushrooms? Only then can you claim it is home > made. That's why Sheldon insists on having a basement, he made it into > a mushroom cave. Can't grow them here in the goat barn. LOL. How's your new goat barn doing, Ed? Sheldon also eats mystery meat as he doesn't raise his own cattle. |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:17AM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > cooking to use very little salt because my mother was on a low-sodium > diet. Less salt might have been good for her but it sure wasn't good > for me. I spent the summer of 72 with a family that used NO salt ever for health reasons. Woman was a great cook but with absolutely no salt or substitute, her meals were so bland to me at first. I never snuck in salt I just ate as they did. By end of summer, I was cured of the salt thing and all food tasted great. When I moved back home I rarely used salt but slowly it all came back after several months and eventually I was salt-boy again. ;) |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:41AM -0400 Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > much are chicken thighs where you live? > I don't know. Maybe $1.79 per pound, on average? I don't very often > buy thighs. I only buy them when on sale for about 79 cents per pound and often less. Bruce think these are mistreated chickens sold so cheap. He doesn't understand about grocery sales and loss leaders. I know a grocery store butcher. She told me that those cheap sales are sold at a loss of profit, (sold at cost or even less than cost) just to bring people in then they buy other profitable things while there. |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:18AM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > Since when is John Kuthe a "victim"? Every single post he makes, many here dump down on whatever he says. He can say he met a new girl and immediately the select few critisize him. This is group bullying. Same thing with Julie. And to be honest, Jill. Your bulling both is exactly why I pick on you too. It's your Karma coming back to haunt you. :-D This recent Va.Beach mass killing is turning out to be due to workplace bullying. That guy passed and smiled to certain people even while he was killing others. He had a hit list. Certain ppl here in RFC should keep this in mind. Be nice to your friends. Be nicer to strangers. |
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 10 08:16AM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > turned the dining room into their daughter's bedroom with curtains to > separate it exactly as you say. She did have a chest of drawers in the > room. That roommate also had a chest of drawers in his dining room bedroom, just no closet to hang clothes. He used the small front hallway closet for that. |
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