Sunday, June 16, 2019

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 9 topics

John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 16 08:16AM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 8:35:52 AM UTC-5, Gary wrote:
 
> > > PS: "glysophate"?
 
> > Besides they are just glorified CANDY BARS!! Poisoned Candy Bars too! MonSATAN Poisoned Candy Bars! :-(
 
> A bit of nonsense this morning, JK?
 
Need Doc?
 
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/318619.php
 
NOT nonsense!! LOOK IT UP, asshole!
 
John Kuthe...
coltwvu@gmail.com: Jun 16 10:20AM -0700

I think corn chex has more lutein and zeaxanthin for our eyes than any other cold cereal; yellow corn meal cooked as hot mush has a whole more more of both tho.
"cshenk" <cshenk1@cox.net>: Jun 16 12:10PM -0500

Gary wrote:
 
 
> Serious marathon runners can need 5000 calories a day or more
> just to stay the same weight.
 
> It all depends on your lifestyle.
 
True.
 
Generally men burn more calories off than women due to natural muscle
amounts being higher.
 
In the end though it's all the same. A person who is overweight, is
eating more than they burn off. Pretty simple stuff.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 16 10:06AM -0700

My SON never calls me anyway!!
 
FUCK Father's Day!! :-(
 
John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Not A Fan Of Hallmark Holidays!! :-(
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Jun 16 11:51AM -0500

On Sat, 15 Jun 2019 15:15:37 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
 
>The Stranger, The Better!
 
>And I made many temporary friends today! How many friends did YOU make today?
 
>John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Maker Of Friends From Strangers!
 
I see dead people, so what is your point?
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Jun 16 11:48AM -0500

On Sat, 15 Jun 2019 06:02:29 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
>to find he's bought flowers for me. But never on Valentine's Day,
>Sweetest Day, or any of those other Days.
 
>Cindy Hamilton
 
Dude whatever, I guess you just can not quite understand what I am
saying.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Jun 16 11:49AM -0500


>> Cindy Hamilton
 
>Bought my wife flowers two days after Valentine's day. On sale for half
>price.
 
 
Yeah but it just did not mean as much did it? That is one of the
reasons and holidays are just incredibly freakin stupid.
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
ChristKiller@deathtochristianity.pl: Jun 16 11:50AM -0500

On Sat, 15 Jun 2019 06:02:37 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe
 
>ALL Holidays can be celebrated withOUT spending any money! But it does NOT do the RICH CAPITALISTS any GOOD then!! And since we ALL want to be Rich Capitalists, WE must SEND ALL OUR MONEY!!
 
>Makes NO sense buy WE BUY INTO IT!!
 
>John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Healer Of The Planet!
 
No I do not buy into it. I just can not force myself to be that stupid
 
--
 
____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____
songbird <songbird@anthive.com>: Jun 16 12:29PM -0400

Gary wrote:
> beans next spring. That way you won't have to buy "mystery
> beans." I think it's "Songbird" here that grows many kinds of
> beans. She could be a good source of info.
 
"he"
 
many this year again. i really went overboard on
fresh beans but someone had a bunch of bush green bean
varieties they were getting rid of so i was glad to
pick them up to grow them this summer so next winter
i will have (i hope) plenty of seeds to give away at
the seed swap. last year i didn't have very many
and for a new gardener to get them going they may not
care about named varieties until after they get some
experience. :)
 
i haven't sorted my list yet so i'm not sure how
many i've planted this year - looks to be about 50
different kinds.
 
 
> You love them and eat often. Sounds like you have the property to
> do this. Actually make a huge many vegetable garden. No odd
> ingredient lists ever.
 
that is what i like the most about growing things.
we know exactly what it is, how it was grown, what was
(or in our case wasn't) sprayed on it, etc.
 
this week the strawberries have been coming in.
 
 
> gardening. Growing a few things in pots on the back balcony in
> high heat is hardly worth the trouble. I miss going out at the
> crack of dawn and tending to the garden each morning.
 
we have about an acre of gardens, that's more than
enough to keep two people busy (along with everything
else). :)
 
 
songbird
songbird <songbird@anthive.com>: Jun 16 12:12PM -0400

Bruce wrote:
...
> That's what I did too. I don't know if soaking them really makes them
> easier to digest, but all help is welcome :) I think we're also
> getting used to them after 2 weeks of having them for breakfast.
 
if you gradually add them to your diet your
body will get used to them. i don't bother to
soak them or pre-soften. just bring them to a
boil and then turn them down to a slight simmer.
stir once in a while to keep them from sticking
and add some water if needed.
 
the problem a lot of people have with smelly
gas involves what else you cook with them.
add onions, meat and garlic and you're asking
for it... we cook them plain in water, i simmer
them until done. that is all. no added salt or
other things until after they are cooked (other-
wise they can get tough skins or not seem cooked
enough).
 
i usually make a few gallons at a time and then
we will drain them and freeze them in quart jars
and eat them for the next month or two.
 
i'm not sure how many we have left from the
last batch so i will probably make some this next
week. i also will make a small batch of fresh
beans of one type instead of a blend of many
kinds that i have for the large batches. just
for something different. like we like lima
beans or yellow eye beans.
 
 
songbird
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 16 09:49AM -0400

Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> mechanical typewriter, my fingers just do better with a mechanical
> keyboard. When I use a chiclet, I'm prone to double-tapping or hitting
> the adjacent key. There's just not enough feedback for me.
 
That's definitely a factor for me too. I also learned on a Smith
Corona electric typewriter. I never took typing in school but
years later bought the typewriter and a "how to type" book.
 
My favorite keyboard came with my first IBM computer. Those keys
clicked every time you used them. I liked that.
 
True though, I like the full press keyboards even though they
don't click. The "Chicklet" laptop keys are weird. Also...on a
regular keyboard, my little finger that sits on the "A" key
rarely moves over to accidently press the "Caps Lock" key but on
a laptop keyboard it happens way too often.
 
This is why I assumed they were smaller but evidently not.
Of course, the right side of keyboard is condensed more.
 
So anyway, once I get this new annoying laptop up and running, it
should replace all my old ones. Would be really nice to have an
"all in one" computer again. But I will add a separate keyboard
and mouse to it.
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 16 07:05AM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 9:49:37 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
 
> That's definitely a factor for me too. I also learned on a Smith
> Corona electric typewriter. I never took typing in school but
> years later bought the typewriter and a "how to type" book.
 
typing is like riding a bike. you retain it. after high school i didn't type again until over 10 years later, and it came back pretty quick like.
 
 
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jun 16 10:18AM -0400

On 2019-06-16 8:31 a.m., Gary wrote:
 
> I sent my father a happy birthday greeting using one of those
> just as a novelty birthday card. I DID have to tell him what it
> said.
 
I remember using those things at university. They were the latest and
greatest in computer technology. The data would be entered on cards and
you would run them through the machine and it would sort them out.
Data for one sample would often take a whole box of cards. You had to be
careful with the cards. It sounds pretty primitive by today's standards
but as far as data processing goes it was then equivalent of advancing
from an abacus to a pocket calculator.
Julian Macassey <julian@tele.com>: Jun 16 02:27PM


> My favorite keyboard came with my first IBM computer. Those keys
> clicked every time you used them. I liked that.
 
That would be an IBM Model M. I own 10 of them.
 
They are a pleasure to use. They are also rugged, so rugged that
after you have beaten someone to death with one, you can wipe it off and
write their obituary wth it.
 
 
--
"We used to quip that "password" is the most common password. Now it's
'password1. ' Who said users haven't learned anything about security?"
-- Bruce Schneier
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 16 10:33AM -0400

Julian Macassey wrote:
 
> They are a pleasure to use. They are also rugged, so rugged that
> after you have beaten someone to death with one, you can wipe it off and
> write their obituary wth it.
 
I wish I had bought several as backups back then. I killed mine
by knocking a tall wine cooler over and right onto it. EOK (end
of keyboard). You can't just wash one off and let it dry totally
like some other electronics. Get a keyboard wet and that's the
end of it.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jun 16 07:44AM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 10:33:14 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
> of keyboard). You can't just wash one off and let it dry totally
> like some other electronics. Get a keyboard wet and that's the
> end of it.
 
Your laptop likely doesn't have a PS/2 port on it. Of course, there
are adapters.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 16 10:47AM -0400

Gary wrote:
> of keyboard). You can't just wash one off and let it dry totally
> like some other electronics. Get a keyboard wet and that's the
> end of it.
 
Here's a Dave-type story from way back.
One sunday, I bought a brand new 19" tv.
The giant ones not the flat new ones.
Worked perfectly, natually.
 
Just a few days later, my very young daughter came home with some
flowers that she picked nearby so I put them in a vase with water
and stupidly set that on top of the new tv.
 
Next morning or so, I got up early morning and was fixing
breakfast for daughter before waking her up for school. Nice
quite place.
 
All of the sudden, my tv came on at FULL VOLUME. WTF? So I ran
into the living room to see my cat running off and saw the vase
knocked over. Cat jumped up to check out the flowers, knocked
over the vase and all the water ran right into the vents of the
tv. Shorted out something and turn it on loud.
 
No controls worked. I had to unplug it. Die, Mr.Kitty but he was
long gone and hiding out. lol
 
After work, I put the tv on a bedroom dresser and put a fan
blowing into the vents. I left it like that for 3 days to
completely dry out. Once I plugged it in again, it worked
perfectly and for about 15 more years. whew!
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jun 16 07:55AM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 7:29:34 AM UTC-4, Bruce wrote:
> >text, it's a little difficult to be sure, but there seemed to be extra space
> >after a period.
 
> Ok, 2 countries.
 
You inspired me to poke around a little bit. Although one space now seems
to be the accepted norm, it might yield lowered readability:
 
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758%2Fs13414-018-1527-6>
 
Cindy Hamilton
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 16 11:05AM -0400

Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> Your laptop likely doesn't have a PS/2 port on it. Of course, there
> are adapters.
 
If you are talking about adding keyboard and mouse. I do have
extra usb ports for usb additions or I could also use wireless
one or the other, or both.
 
This one has 3 usb ports. I only need to keep one free for
various things.
 
Wondering? Here's exactly what I have. A cheap one but it seems
to have all I will need.
 
Hp 15 laptop pc
Windows10 home version
15.6 screen
wifi and bluetooth
intel celeron processor
500 gb hard drive
4 gb system memory
dwd-writer
webcam/camera
 
That my new one that I've avoided since I bought it. Just a pain
to start over learning new op system and other things.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jun 16 08:40AM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 11:05:16 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
 
> If you are talking about adding keyboard and mouse. I do have
> extra usb ports for usb additions or I could also use wireless
> one or the other, or both.
 
I was talking about adding an IBM Model M keyboard, since you posted this:
 
> > > I wish I had bought several as backups back then.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jun 16 12:06PM -0400

Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> I was talking about adding an IBM Model M keyboard, since you posted this:
 
> > > > I wish I had bought several as backups back then.
 
Oh ok. I've never considered that they might still be available
but I haven't looked either. That said, even a new normal
keyboard is fine with me now. I'm long over liking the clicks on
those old ones.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 16 12:17PM -0400

On 6/16/2019 10:47 AM, Gary wrote:
 
> knocked over. Cat jumped up to check out the flowers, knocked
> over the vase and all the water ran right into the vents of the
> tv. Shorted out something and turn it on loud.
 
Ah, the evolution of the TV. With a brand new one, yes, very upsetting.
If it was already 15 years old it would be a good opportunity to trade
up to the latest.
 
When we got married in 1966 we had a 19" portable, black and white as
color was very expensive. Ten years later it dies and we got color.
Wow, that was thrilling. We moved about 6 years later and bought a 27"
consul with a remote. Life sure was good with such luxury. That died
and I bought a 34" HD TV. It had a CRT as flat screen at the time were
too expensive and it weighed 185 pounds! A nearby lightning strike got
me a 47" flat screen. That is now in the bedroom and a 55" is in the
living room.
penmart01@aol.com: Jun 16 11:56AM -0400

>>> gas grill plus a kitchen stove.
 
>>UH... you were talking about a *500* gallon tank, not a 50 gallon tank.
 
>>Jill
 
You neglected to comprehend my first sentence;
"You can still hook it up to gas, a bulk propane tank, a fifty gallon
tank is small and will last all season, maybe two seasons,"
 
Every homeowner has plenty of room for a 50 gallon propane tank, 4'
tall x 3' wide:
https://postimg.cc/JDSqQyPX
The typical grill tank that most people need to have refilled or
exchanged is filled by weight (20 pounds). A 50 gallon tank is filled
by gallons, and its capacity is equal to more than twenty of those 20
pound grill tanks. Also for safety and proper operation all propane
tanks are filled to no more than 80% of their capacity. The 50 gallon
tank is supplied with a gauge so that one will know when to contact
their propane supplier for a refill. A 50 gallon propane tank is very
adequate for smaller restaurants... one or two will be adequate to
heat a small house (1,000 sqft).
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 16 08:15AM -0700

On Saturday, June 15, 2019 at 5:51:15 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
 
> Holy shit.You didn't see any sarcasm in my suggestion that your relative
> in the SS was doing charitable work. Most people would be embarrassed to
> have people know they are that dense.
 
of course i saw sarcasm. and it was as dishonest as shit. that's usual coming from you as usual. you used your sarcastic wit to suggest that i somehow thought that the waffen ss was this glorious outfit that was only there to help the needy. i never came close to suggesting that. how fucked up you are, you filthy bigot. and liar!
 
 
> clause of the Treaty of Versailles after another. Perhaps they should
> have just sent letters to the editor to express outrage over German
> aggression..... that was sarcasm.
 
you're just a bigot. from a long line of bigots. you sat on your daddy's knee and listened to his bullshit about valour, honour, etc. he's a filthy murderer of children since he was in the allied luftwaffe. burning and maiming the innocent. how courageous!
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 16 08:18AM -0700

On Saturday, June 15, 2019 at 9:00:55 PM UTC-4, jmcquown wrote:
> > old Germany.
 
> Yep, he's back to fight WWII all over again.
 
> Jill
 
just after the truth. and fighting with the brainwashed like yourself. and britain did start ww2 by foolishly declaring war on germany. hitler thought that britain would not be so stupid. he overestimated britains intelligence.
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