Monday, January 11, 2021

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 10 topics

Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 11 10:41AM -0500


>> Sabbath is Jewish. As long as the cows don't have an on/off button, it
>> should be ok.
 
> Who told you only Jews observe the Sabbath?
 
I had some Dutch neighbhours for a while. Actually it was a case of
dutch brothers..... two houses side by side. They had a flower shipping
business and were up and out working usually by 5 am Monday to Saturday.
You never heard a peep from them on Sundays.
Janet <nobody@home.org>: Jan 11 04:43PM

In article <551b89a3-6517-46d9-83f7-ef21b98ff9aen@googlegroups.com>,
angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com says...
 
> No. Many Christians refer to Sunday as the Sabbath.
 
> Seventh-Day Adventists are a Christian sect that observe Saturday
> as the Sabbath.
 
Sabbath is still observed by many church-going Scots, especially on
the West Coast.
 
https://www.fpchurch.org.uk/about-us/what-we-contend-for/the-
sabbath/how-the-sabbath-should-be-kept/
 
quote
 
"There are two simple rules for Sabbath observance.
 
Ask, Is it necessary? If not, then do not offend God by doing it. If
it is necessary and cannot be done before the Sabbath comes or after it
is over ? feeding animals, for instance ? then it ought of course to be
done.
Ask, Is it an act of mercy? If it does relieve the miserable, then
could it be done as effectively on some other day?"
 

 
Janet UK
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jan 11 11:56AM -0500

On 1/11/2021 9:11 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> the day the housecleaner comes, if we have company, and on the day I
> wash the sheets.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
When my house cleaner comes I take off the sheets and launder them, put
the folded new sheets on the bed and she does the rest. When the
laundry is done, she folds it all and puts the sheets and pillow cases
together in a bundle for the next use.
 
I start the laundry early and she is here four hours so it is done
before she leaves. I do the whites a day before and fold that myself.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jan 11 11:57AM -0500


>> On the day of the Lord?
 
> There are still chores do to on the day of the Lord. Do you think dairy
> farmers don't milk their cows on the Sabbath?
 
Of course not, that is where sour cream comes from.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jan 11 12:15PM -0500

On 1/11/2021 6:54 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
 
> It's a little fancy for me. I prefer a plain recessed panel, stained and
> polyurethaned. If you paint wood, you might as well use MDF.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Probably why white had become so popular, they can use MDF. I like
wood. My cabinets are cherry. Stained though, darker than natural
cherry.
 
I've seen a couple of episodes of House Hunters where a couple of houses
were nixed because the kitchen did not have white cabinets. Maybe some
towns have laws against refinishing them.
Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 12 04:23AM +1100

>the morning can make your whole bedroom look nicer and more organized.
 
>I tried it and it's true.
 
>(I still rarely do it though)
 
I never spend much time looking at the bedroom during the day.
Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 12 04:26AM +1100


>Your last thing, "Sunday = Sunday = Christian,"
>actually applies to all religions and atheists too.
 
> :)
 
I do a lot of work on Sundays. I'm not interrupted by annoying work
emails.
Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 12 04:28AM +1100

On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 06:04:39 -0800 (PST), Cindy Hamilton
>> Sunday = Sunday = Christian
 
>> No?
 
>No. Many Christians refer to Sunday as the Sabbath.
 
In English, probably.
 
>Seventh-Day Adventists are a Christian sect that observe Saturday
>as the Sabbath.
 
They don't count. The worshippers of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
probably revere the Tuesday. There's always something.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 11 10:45AM -0500

On 2021-01-11 7:10 a.m., S Viemeister wrote:
> stuff to make breakfast for the lazy bunch of people we'd been partying
> with - my friend managed to persuade the bakery boy to let her take the
> reins for a while.
 
For a while I lived in St.Catharines and had a summer job in Welland in
1971-72 When I worked the day shift I often saw the horse drawn milk
cart on my way to work.
Janet <nobody@home.org>: Jan 11 04:14PM

In article <i61610FdmatU1@mid.individual.net>, firstname@lastname.oc.ku
says...
> > horse-drawn carts.
 
> Horse drawn carts? I remember them from my childhood - which was a
> _long_ time ago.
 
When I was in primary school, our milk man, the local rag and bone man
and several brewers delivering to pubs, still used horse drawn carts.
In my teens, a local GP still did all his city rounds (home visits to
patients) in a horse and trap. Here he is
 
https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-hereford-doctor-1965-online
 

I also remember that whenever horses dropped manure on the road, it
never stayed there long; some keen gardener would rush out to collect
it.
 
Janet UK
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jan 11 08:30AM -0800

On Sunday, January 10, 2021 at 3:23:01 PM UTC-5, S Viemeister wrote:
> > horse-drawn carts.
 
> Horse drawn carts? I remember them from my childhood - which was a
> _long_ time ago.
 
By the time I was born in 1957, horse-drawn carts had pretty much
disappeared. In fact, Detroit banned them from the main thoroughfares
in 1922 (IIRC) in favor of motorized vehicles. They lingered on the
side streets for a couple of decades. Apparently there were one or
two still operating in the 1960s.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 11 11:46AM -0500

On 2021-01-11 11:30 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> in 1922 (IIRC) in favor of motorized vehicles. They lingered on the
> side streets for a couple of decades. Apparently there were one or
> two still operating in the 1960s.
 
We had them when I was a kid in Toronto in the early 50s. Then we moved
to a small town and had milk and bread delivered by truck. Then in 1971
and 72 I saw them in Welland.I think they were phased out shortly
after that.
 
We had milk delivery for a while when we moved out here in 1977. I don't
remember if we cancelled or if milk delivery was phased out, but I have
not seen a milk delivery truck in decades.
Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 12 04:20AM +1100

On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 14:40:21 -0000, "Ophelia" <ophelia@elsinore.me.uk>
wrote:
 
>bags, for xx dollar per bag.
 
>====
 
> Hmmm think not <g>
 
Maybe you weren't waiting for a career change :)
Master Bruce <masterbruce@null.null>: Jan 12 04:19AM +1100

On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 06:13:31 -0800 (PST), Cindy Hamilton
>> i's that should be upper case is a PIA.
 
>Your posts that are a wall of text are a PIA, too. Probably more so
>than songbird's lowercase i's.
 
Yes, not to mention the racist, homophobe and obscene content of
Sheldon's posts. I prefer small i's.
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Jan 11 11:53AM -0500

> their accomplishments. It's not about the nurse, it's about the patient.
> Would you want to be a bedridden patient of John's and be regaled with
> daily bulletins about his NordicTrack or his stereo speakers?
 
If I ever become a bedridden Grandpa patient of a nurse, I would hope
for a nice looking young female nurse. Not some old guy that looks just
like Mr.Burns on the Simpsons cartoons.
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 11 10:46AM -0500

On 2021-01-11 7:51 a.m., songbird wrote:
> or other fruit so it will get closer to room temperature before
> eating and i've microwaved some to warm it up a bit. i also do
> that with salads here or there if i don't want a cold meal.
 
I eat a lot of fruit and most of it is eaten warm.... especially melon.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jan 11 08:06AM -0800

On Monday, January 11, 2021 at 9:44:17 AM UTC-6, Dave Smith wrote:
> > eating and i've microwaved some to warm it up a bit. i also do
> > that with salads here or there if i don't want a cold meal.
> I eat a lot of fruit and most of it is eaten warm.... especially melon.
 
Warmed is best! Like on a sunny Summer Day!
 
John Kuthe, RN, BSN...
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jan 11 08:26AM -0800

On Monday, January 11, 2021 at 10:44:17 AM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote:
> > eating and i've microwaved some to warm it up a bit. i also do
> > that with salads here or there if i don't want a cold meal.
> I eat a lot of fruit and most of it is eaten warm.... especially melon.
 
I don't eat much fruit. Raisins in my oatmeal are warm. Prunes are room temp.
Apples are room temp on weekdays and fridge temp on weekends.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jan 11 11:48AM -0500

On 1/11/2021 7:51 AM, songbird wrote:
> which is perhaps why i like cold pizza or other similar dishes
> more than i like them hot.
 
> songbird
 
Most cheese have more flavor as they near room temperature, Watermelon
aside, room temperature fruit is good.
 
Warmed strawberries may be OK with a chocolate sauce or the like.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jan 11 08:25AM -0800

On Monday, January 11, 2021 at 7:15:49 AM UTC-6, Gary wrote:
...
> Without a job, I doubt he'll wait that long. Once he turns 62, that
> lower monthly amount will get mighty tempting.
 
> PS - don't do that, John.
 
I just GOT A JOB! :-)
 
 
John Kuthe, RN, BSN...
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Jan 11 11:43AM -0500

On 2021-01-11 11:25 a.m., John Kuthe wrote:
>> lower monthly amount will get mighty tempting.
 
>> PS - don't do that, John.
 
> I just GOT A JOB! :-)
 
Congratulations. That is what? .... four jobs in a month and a half?
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jan 11 08:23AM -0800

...they LOVE THE COLD! No warmup necessary! Turn them on and GO!
 
John Kuthe, RN, BSN...
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Graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jan 11 08:52AM -0700

On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 06:41:44 -0800 (PST), Lenona wrote:
 
 
> This recipe is for a large amount, so if you can't resist the temptation to eat some right away, chances are there will still be some left to store.
 
> It includes vanilla. I wonder, though - is the parchment paper really necessary? Or the butter for the pans?
 
> Lenona.
 
If I were to follow her recipe (which I won't) I would use cake flour
rather than AP.
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jan 11 07:49AM -0800

Had to drive my 100% Electric Leaf down to Schnucks to get Fresh Peppers for my Rice, Beans, chopped Pepper, Garlic Potatoes and spices and wine for Flavor and Moisture and a Mango for Dessert!
 
I learned as a child what all those TV commercials meant by "part of this complete breakfast" meant. Yeah, that sugary cereal was DESSERT!
 
John Kuthe, RN, BSN...
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