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I like cucumbers, I really do

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Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 6:41:18 PM7/7/11
to
But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!

I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

nancy

Julie Bove

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Jul 7, 2011, 6:51:42 PM7/7/11
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"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message
news:4e1636d8$0$29538$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...

That was the problem the year I grew the lemon cucumbers. That is after I
replaced the plants many, many times! Apparently the slugs really like
them. Everyone I know got a ton of those things. One can only eat so many.
I don't know if those work for pickles or not but we're not big pickle
eaters.


Dora

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:01:27 PM7/7/11
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It's good that you didn't plant zucchini!
Dora

Jim Elbrecht

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:02:34 PM7/7/11
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I hope I have that problem in a month or so.<g>

I'm almost out of my Cinnamon Cucumber rings.
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~bcohen/cucumbers/recipes/pickles/rings.html

They are the consistency of apple & so far nobody has guessed cucumber
when I asked them to name the fruit/vegetable. Most say 'Apple?' -
but I've had some pretty exotic guesses.

I'm not sure if they should be called pickle or candy. But they are
yummy-- and use up a lot of cukes.

[Those red hots are hard to find-- but I stock up when the dollar
stores have them]

Jim

M. JL Esq.

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:24:25 PM7/7/11
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Nancy Young wrote:

How do you feel about pickle making:
--
JL

Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:33:00 PM7/7/11
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On 7/7/2011 7:02 PM, Jim Elbrecht wrote:
> On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 18:41:18 -0400, Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:
>
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>>
>
> I hope I have that problem in a month or so.<g>

(laugh) I know, I'm not really complaining, I'd be sad if no cukes
came up. It's fun to watch those seeds I planted turn into monsters,
but I'll probably yank at least one of the 4 plants. They're taking
over.

> I'm almost out of my Cinnamon Cucumber rings.
> http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~bcohen/cucumbers/recipes/pickles/rings.html

I am trying to picture them!

> They are the consistency of apple& so far nobody has guessed cucumber


> when I asked them to name the fruit/vegetable. Most say 'Apple?' -
> but I've had some pretty exotic guesses.
>
> I'm not sure if they should be called pickle or candy. But they are
> yummy-- and use up a lot of cukes.
>
> [Those red hots are hard to find-- but I stock up when the dollar
> stores have them]

Sounds like a fun project, maybe I'll give them a try. Thanks.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:34:48 PM7/7/11
to
On 7/7/2011 7:01 PM, Dora wrote:
> Nancy Young wrote:
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

> It's good that you didn't plant zucchini!

Heh, I tried one year and I got one zucchini. I'm not crazy about
them so maybe I got justice.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:41:42 PM7/7/11
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On 7/7/2011 6:51 PM, Julie Bove wrote:
> "Nancy Young"<email@replyto> wrote

>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!

> That was the problem the year I grew the lemon cucumbers. That is after I


> replaced the plants many, many times! Apparently the slugs really like
> them. Everyone I know got a ton of those things. One can only eat so many.
> I don't know if those work for pickles or not but we're not big pickle
> eaters.

I usually cut one up into spears and snack on them or have them with
lunch/whatever. It's not a tough problem to have, if nothing else,
the compost bin will welcome them.

Funny story. The other day I went to the supermarket and as I was
returning to my car I hear the cashier chasing me down, Miss!! Miss!!
(I guess Old Lady! Old Lady! didn't sound right). Oh, no, what did
I leave behind now, I *hate* when I do that. I turn around, she's got
a plastic bag full of cucumbers. Are these yours?

I'd brought my own bags so I didn't notice someone left them behind.
But I was able so say No. Thank you, but those are *not* my cucumbers.
(laugh)

nancy

Pico Rico

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Jul 7, 2011, 7:55:39 PM7/7/11
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"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message
news:4e1636d8$0$29538$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...


Greek salad, with mint and yogurt dressing. something along those lines . .
.


Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 8:16:33 PM7/7/11
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On 7/7/2011 7:55 PM, Pico Rico wrote:
> "Nancy Young"<email@replyto> wrote in message
> news:4e1636d8$0$29538$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

> Greek salad, with mint and yogurt dressing. something along those lines . .

Oh, that sounds good, thanks. I have plenty of mint and yogurt, too.

nancy

Boron Elgar

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Jul 7, 2011, 8:51:44 PM7/7/11
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On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 18:41:18 -0400, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:

I have one word....

...pickles.

Nancy Young

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Jul 7, 2011, 8:55:36 PM7/7/11
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On 7/7/2011 7:24 PM, M. JL Esq. wrote:
> Nancy Young wrote:
>
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

> How do you feel about pickle making:

It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
take up canning, I should put up pickles.

nancy

Nad R

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Jul 7, 2011, 9:19:16 PM7/7/11
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Sounds like you have the larger slicing cucumbers. For canning I prefer the
smaller pickling cucumbers. Like most fat people, I like the bread and
butter pickles. However, their is nothing saying that you cannot pickle the
larger slicing pickles also. Then there is the almighty homemade relish...

--
Enjoy Life... Nad R (Garden in zone 5a Michigan)

Paul M. Cook

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Jul 7, 2011, 9:52:07 PM7/7/11
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"Julie Bove" <juli...@frontier.com> wrote in message
news:iv5da0$92g$1...@dont-email.me...

I grow them every year. They make great pickles. I use Alton Brown's
infused pickle recipes. I love making "stackers" with the lemon yellow
cukes. I also make bread and butter pickles with them.

Oh, I am on my third seedlings. First the weather, then the leaf miners
wiped out my crop. Hopefully this one takes or I am without cukes this
year.

Paul
>


M. JL Esq.

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Jul 7, 2011, 9:56:14 PM7/7/11
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Reading some of the other responses (the greek salad suggestion) made
me wonder if that cucumber sauce "Tzatziki" would freeze well if made in
quantity?

Great sauce and even if not made up in hugh quantities and frozen one
could, with an excess of cucumbers, make up an extra large amount as a
personal indulgence:)

http://www.tzatzikisauce.net/
--
JL

Mike

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:02:52 PM7/7/11
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"Julie Bove" <juli...@frontier.com> wrote in message
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>
Someone must have told you that ,they were good for you


Ranée at Arabian Knits

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:13:16 PM7/7/11
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In article <4e165653$0$29590$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com>,
Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:

> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
> take up canning, I should put up pickles.

I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
I'll pass on the recipe.

Regards,
Ranee @ Arabian Knits

"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13

http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/

Pico Rico

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:30:45 PM7/7/11
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"Ranée at Arabian Knits" <arabia...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:arabianknits-1E43...@news.eternal-september.org...

> In article <4e165653$0$29590$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com>,
> Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:
>
>> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
>> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
>> take up canning, I should put up pickles.
>
> I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
> aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
> a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
> I'll pass on the recipe.


"if you are interested". On this group? Come on - give!


Bob Terwilliger

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:40:57 PM7/7/11
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Nancy wrote:

A couple summers ago I made some interesting salads using an equal volume of
chopped cucumbers and chopped melon. Add some red onion, herbs (basil, mint,
cilantro, whatever...), bell pepper if you want, and dress with rice vinegar
and salt (add sugar if needed). I sometimes also added oil, but it depends
on what the salad is accompanying.

Another nice simple summertime cucumber-melon salad is this, which I
invented last year: Watermelon, tomatoes, cucumber, onion, salt, and
champagne vinegar. You might like to add feta cheese, but I didn't.

Cucumber salads are a staple with Vietnamese or Thai food. Peel and slice
the cucumbers and dress them with fish sauce, lime juice, sugar, Fresno
chile rings, and scallion rings. You might need to add some water to temper
the fish sauce.

Another Southeast Asian salad I made contained cucumber, jícama, carrots,
and spring onion all placed into a ziploc bag and marinated with white
vinegar, sugar, salt, Maggi sauce, and sriracha.

If you're having Mexican food, try this side salad: Cucumber, jícama, orange
segments, and onion. Sprinkle with lime juice, salt, and powdered chile.

Most people are familiar with the simple dish of cucumbers in vinegar and
sugar. Bon Appétit printed a "Japanese cucumber salad" once in which you
slice the cucumbers and then *massage* them in the sweetened vinegar. This
gives them a different texture and allows them to absorb the flavorings more
quickly.

Here's a salad I came up with in 2009: "Thinly slice a couple fennel bulbs
crosswise and soak in water with a bit of lime juice. Cut half a pineapple
into thin chunks and put them into a salad bowl. Peel and seed a cucumber,
then cut it into chunks about the same size as the pineapple chunks; add to
the salad bowl. Finely mince a serrano chile and add it to the salad bowl.
Shake the water out of the fennel shreds and add to the salad bowl. Sprinkle
with salt and freshly-ground black pepper. Pour rice vinegar over the salad,
toss well, and allow to sit, tossing occasionally, for at least half an hour
(so that it becomes a bit pickled).

Cucumbers are an important ingredient in many banh mi.

Marcus Samuelsson's Cucumber-Melon Soup:
Message-ID: <4c590bdc$0$28670$c3e...@news.astraweb.com>

Iced Korean Cucumber Soup:
Message-ID: <4c590eff$0$28704$c3e...@news.astraweb.com>

Honeydew-Cucumber Salad with Lemon-Mint Vinaigrette
Message-ID: <4c591c8e$0$28721$c3e...@news.astraweb.com>

Rojak can be a great use for cucumbers, and koko posted a pretty good recipe
for it on her blog. Just increase the proportion of cucumbers you use.
http://www.kokoscornerblog.com/mycorner/rojak-pineapple-and-jicam.html

The only time I saw a cooked cucumber dish was in a discussion about
Hungarian cuisine. I don't have that recipe with me, but you can surely
Google for it if that kind of thing interests you.

Finally, a *great* use for cucumber is using them to infuse vodka. Iced tea
with cucumber-flavored vodka is a wonderful summertime cooler.

Bob


Christine Dabney

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:49:25 PM7/7/11
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On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 19:13:16 -0700, Ranée at Arabian Knits
<arabia...@gmail.com> wrote:

>I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
>aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
>a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
>I'll pass on the recipe.

Can you post it? I had some a few years ago, that had a real zing to
them, and I loved them.

Christine
--
http://nightstirrings.blogspot.com

Mike

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Jul 7, 2011, 10:02:52 PM7/7/11
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"Julie Bove" <juli...@frontier.com> wrote in message
news:iv5da0$92g$1...@dont-email.me...
>

Jerry Avins

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Jul 7, 2011, 11:43:40 PM7/7/11
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You can peel, deseed, then grate them and freeze portions for making
tzatziki sauce. That is wonderful with krbabs and as a salad dressing.

Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.

Jerry Avins

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Jul 7, 2011, 11:50:24 PM7/7/11
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A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
you come back to find the car full of zucchini."

Jerry Avins

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Jul 7, 2011, 11:53:35 PM7/7/11
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Freeze the grated cuke and add the (Greek) yogurt after thawing.

Terry Pulliam Burd

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Jul 8, 2011, 1:06:14 AM7/8/11
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On Thu, 7 Jul 2011 20:50:24 -0700 (PDT), Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org>
arranged random neurons and said:

>A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
>Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
>never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
>town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
>car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
>you come back to find the car full of zucchini."

You really need to identify that as a very old joke, which it is, and
the vegetable varies by season and part of the country. Just sayin'.

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd

--

To reply, remove "spambot" and replace it with "cox"

Ophelia

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Jul 8, 2011, 4:48:20 AM7/8/11
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"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message

news:4e164505$0$29548$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...

<suspicious look> are you sure you didn't dump them there just to get rid of
some... ?

Ed Pawlowski

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:57:29 AM7/8/11
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"Jerry Avins" <j...@ieee.org> wrote

> A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
> Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
> never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
> town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
> car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
> you come back to find the car full of zucchini."
>
> Jerry

Two women were shopping in the produce aisle and saw cucumbers on sale, 3
for $1. The first woman says, "what would we do with 3 cucumbers." . The
second replied, "we can always eat one."

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 6:50:30 AM7/8/11
to
On 7/8/2011 4:48 AM, Ophelia wrote:
>
>
> "Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote

>> Funny story. The other day I went to the supermarket and as I was


>> returning to my car I hear the cashier chasing me down, Miss!! Miss!!
>> (I guess Old Lady! Old Lady! didn't sound right). Oh, no, what did
>> I leave behind now, I *hate* when I do that. I turn around, she's got
>> a plastic bag full of cucumbers. Are these yours?
>>
>> I'd brought my own bags so I didn't notice someone left them behind.
>> But I was able so say No. Thank you, but those are *not* my cucumbers.
>> (laugh)
>
> <suspicious look> are you sure you didn't dump them there just to get
> rid of some... ?

OMG, the first big laugh of the day, Ophelia. And you've given me and
idea for the farmer's market on Sunday ... those people are always
distracted by other customers, I could totally slip a bunch of cukes
onto their table ...

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 7:21:00 AM7/8/11
to
On 7/7/2011 11:53 PM, Jerry Avins wrote:

>>> On 7/7/2011 7:24 PM, M. JL Esq. wrote:

>> Reading some of the other responses (the greek salad suggestion) made
>> me wonder if that cucumber sauce "Tzatziki" would freeze well if made in
>> quantity?
>>
>> Great sauce and even if not made up in hugh quantities and frozen one
>> could, with an excess of cucumbers, make up an extra large amount as a
>> personal indulgence:)
>>
>> http://www.tzatzikisauce.net/
>
> Freeze the grated cuke and add the (Greek) yogurt after thawing.

Thanks to both of you for that excellent suggestion. Will do. I
love that stuff.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:02:58 AM7/8/11
to
On 7/7/2011 10:40 PM, Bob Terwilliger wrote:
> Nancy wrote:
>
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!

> A couple summers ago I made some interesting salads using an equal volume of


> chopped cucumbers and chopped melon. Add some red onion, herbs (basil, mint,
> cilantro, whatever...), bell pepper if you want, and dress with rice vinegar
> and salt (add sugar if needed). I sometimes also added oil, but it depends
> on what the salad is accompanying.

That sounds delicious and different.

> Another nice simple summertime cucumber-melon salad is this, which I
> invented last year: Watermelon, tomatoes, cucumber, onion, salt, and
> champagne vinegar. You might like to add feta cheese, but I didn't.
>
> Cucumber salads are a staple with Vietnamese or Thai food. Peel and slice
> the cucumbers and dress them with fish sauce, lime juice, sugar, Fresno
> chile rings, and scallion rings. You might need to add some water to temper
> the fish sauce.
>

> Another Southeast Asian salad I made contained cucumber, j�cama, carrots,


> and spring onion all placed into a ziploc bag and marinated with white
> vinegar, sugar, salt, Maggi sauce, and sriracha.
>

> If you're having Mexican food, try this side salad: Cucumber, j�cama, orange


> segments, and onion. Sprinkle with lime juice, salt, and powdered chile.
>
> Most people are familiar with the simple dish of cucumbers in vinegar and

> sugar. Bon App�tit printed a "Japanese cucumber salad" once in which you

Thanks for all of those great ideas. I will be trying some of them
for sure.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:04:16 AM7/8/11
to
On 7/7/2011 10:13 PM, Ranée at Arabian Knits wrote:
> In article<4e165653$0$29590$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com>,
> Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:
>
>> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
>> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
>> take up canning, I should put up pickles.
>
> I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
> aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
> a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
> I'll pass on the recipe.

I'd appreciate it! Thanks, Ranée.

nancy

Goomba

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:22:05 AM7/8/11
to

> On Jul 7, 6:41 pm, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

I peel and seed them, then cube them to add to potato salad. Wonderful
addition, IMO. Way better than gaggy hard boiled eggs in potato salad
<pfttttuey!>

Bob Terwilliger

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:27:19 AM7/8/11
to
Goomba wrote:

> I peel and seed them, then cube them to add to potato salad. Wonderful
> addition, IMO. Way better than gaggy hard boiled eggs in potato salad
> <pfttttuey!>

Almost exactly a year ago I recommended using cucumbers in a salad with
chayote and Asian pear. I'm not fond of cucumbers in potato salad, but I
*do* sometimes add cucumber to egg salad.

Bob

Goomba

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:44:22 AM7/8/11
to

When waxing poetic about airline food (funny, no?) I often rave about a
KLM flight I took between Amsterdam and London. It was such a short
flight, US air carriers wouldn't even have had time to snarl at you
while tossing out a bag of nuts or pretzels. Yet those gorgeous well
coiffed and dressed KLM goddesses (no other way to describe those 6'
tall blond beauties) passed out a soda/water and a small paper wrapped
tray with your choice of either egg salad or a seafood salad sandwich.
That egg salad possibly contained small minced bits of cucumber and
chives or something in a creamy dressing. I don't eat much egg salad but
this stuff was wonderful!
How KLM managed it when Delta can't is beyond me?
<recalls that sf will snarl that no one ever needs to eat while on a
flight, but knows that is unrealistic as well as often unpleasant>

Janet Bostwick

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Jul 8, 2011, 8:44:34 AM7/8/11
to
On Fri, 08 Jul 2011 08:22:05 -0400, Goomba <Goom...@comcast.net>
wrote:

>
>> On Jul 7, 6:41 pm, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:
>>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>>

snip


>
>I peel and seed them, then cube them to add to potato salad. Wonderful
>addition, IMO. Way better than gaggy hard boiled eggs in potato salad
><pfttttuey!>

Peel, seed and cubed, I add them to tuna pasta salad.
Cucumber sandwiches.
Sour cream cucumber salad.
Give a bag full to the mail man :o)
Janet US

Kalmia

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Jul 8, 2011, 10:17:40 AM7/8/11
to
On Jul 7, 6:41 pm, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:
> But not that much!  I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there.  Yikes!
>
> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen.  I wonder how
> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>
> nancy

Just put em out by the side of your street with a big FREE TO A GOOD
HOME sign and I bet they go. No sweat-ski. Share the wealth-ski.

Tyson

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Jul 8, 2011, 10:27:21 AM7/8/11
to

I also like the cucumber most, because it is very healthy for health
and it contains 97% of water in it and i also mostly used in salad and
without salad with salt. It's taste is really good to eat.


--
Tyson

Ophelia

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Jul 8, 2011, 11:06:52 AM7/8/11
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"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message

news:4e16e1c3$0$29590$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...

OI! Don't you blame me!!!!

The Cook

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Jul 8, 2011, 11:13:07 AM7/8/11
to
On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 18:41:18 -0400, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:

>But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>
>I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>
>nancy

After two or three days of little picking, today I picked over 20
pounds from my 8 plants. The baseball bats are going into the compost
pile. If I were not staring at so many (some in the refrigerator) I
might try to come up with ideas to use them.

Renee, any new recipe for B&B pickles much appreciated.

I also have several zucchini to use up. Just remember the zucchini
bread. It is a nice whole wheat yeast bread.
--
Susan N.

"Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral,
48 percent indignation, and 50 percent envy."
Vittorio De Sica, Italian movie director (1901-1974)

Janet Bostwick

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Jul 8, 2011, 12:06:12 PM7/8/11
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I've done that and it works.
Janet US

blake murphy

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Jul 8, 2011, 12:39:25 PM7/8/11
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On Thu, 7 Jul 2011 20:50:24 -0700 (PDT), Jerry Avins wrote:

> A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
> Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
> never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
> town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
> car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
> you come back to find the car full of zucchini."

<snort>

your pal,
blake

blake murphy

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Jul 8, 2011, 12:40:20 PM7/8/11
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it's new to me. must be because i'm a city boy.

your pal,
blake

blake murphy

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Jul 8, 2011, 12:51:27 PM7/8/11
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On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 20:55:36 -0400, Nancy Young wrote:

> On 7/7/2011 7:24 PM, M. JL Esq. wrote:

>> Nancy Young wrote:
>>
>>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>>
>>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>

>> How do you feel about pickle making:
>

> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
> take up canning, I should put up pickles.
>

> nancy

"When Ben Bradlee, former Managing Editor of the Washington Post retired,
he related a story about headlines and their creators. Bradlee always kept
his eyes on the headlines to keep the pranksters at bay. He apparently did
not scrutinize the "Food" section, or they never would have gotten away
with "Putting Pickles Up Yourself" (an actual headline)."

<http://talk.baltimoresun.com/showthread.php?t=270901>

your pal,
blake

Cindy Hamilton

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Jul 8, 2011, 1:06:25 PM7/8/11
to
On Jul 7, 6:41 pm, Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:
> But not that much!  I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there.  Yikes!
>
> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen.  I wonder how
> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>
> nancy

Pick them when they're smaller. Nothing says you have
to wait until they look like a grocery store cuke.

Cindy Hamilton

Ophelia

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Jul 8, 2011, 1:00:44 PM7/8/11
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"blake murphy" <blakepm...@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:18kh9fcn73x05$.irehf0ghxoof.dlg@40tude.net...

It was new to me too:) It made me laugh:)

Jerry Avins

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Jul 8, 2011, 1:20:49 PM7/8/11
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On Jul 8, 1:06 am, Terry Pulliam Burd <ntpull...@spambot.net> wrote:
> On Thu, 7 Jul 2011 20:50:24 -0700 (PDT), Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org>
> arranged random neurons and said:
>
> >A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
> >Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
> >never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
> >town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
> >car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
> >you come back to find the car full of zucchini."
>
> You really need to identify that as a very old joke, which it is, and
> the vegetable varies by season and part of the country. Just sayin'.

I read it in the 50s in Reader's Digest. Supposedly true, I thought it
appropriate to the thread.

Storrmmee

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Jul 8, 2011, 3:13:55 PM7/8/11
to
and besides, if i have to fly i think i am entitled to a last meal that is
more than a bag of nuts, Lee


"Goomba" <Goom...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:97ocdh...@mid.individual.net...

Nad R

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Jul 8, 2011, 3:26:35 PM7/8/11
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The Cook <susan_...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> After two or three days of little picking, today I picked over 20
> pounds from my 8 plants. The baseball bats are going into the compost
> pile. If I were not staring at so many (some in the refrigerator) I
> might try to come up with ideas to use them.

Twenty pounds of cucumbers from eight plants... Am I going to have fun this
fall. I have twenty four pickling cucumbers plants. My plants are around
one foot high on trellises, no fruits yet. Late planting due heavy rains
last may.

I will try make different kinds of relishes this year from the Holy Book of
Canning from Ball. I tend use a lot relishes for sandwich spreads, hotdogs
and tarter sauce.

So how many quarts or pints did you get from twenty pounds of cucumbers?
I just want know what I am getting my self into :)

--
Enjoy Life... Nad R (Garden in zone 5a Michigan)

Janet Wilder

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Jul 8, 2011, 3:54:34 PM7/8/11
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On 7/8/2011 7:44 AM, Goomba wrote:

> When waxing poetic about airline food (funny, no?) I often rave about a
> KLM flight I took between Amsterdam and London. It was such a short
> flight, US air carriers wouldn't even have had time to snarl at you
> while tossing out a bag of nuts or pretzels. Yet those gorgeous well
> coiffed and dressed KLM goddesses (no other way to describe those 6'
> tall blond beauties) passed out a soda/water and a small paper wrapped
> tray with your choice of either egg salad or a seafood salad sandwich.
> That egg salad possibly contained small minced bits of cucumber and
> chives or something in a creamy dressing. I don't eat much egg salad but
> this stuff was wonderful!
> How KLM managed it when Delta can't is beyond me?
> <recalls that sf will snarl that no one ever needs to eat while on a
> flight, but knows that is unrealistic as well as often unpleasant>

We had a 3 hour fight between Frankfort and Moscow and Lufthansa fed us
dinner. Lufthansa has free wine and it's pretty good stuff.

--
Janet Wilder
Way-the-heck-south Texas
Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does.

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:28:43 PM7/8/11
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On 7/8/2011 12:51 PM, blake murphy wrote:
> On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 20:55:36 -0400, Nancy Young wrote:

>> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
>> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
>> take up canning, I should put up pickles.

> "When Ben Bradlee, former Managing Editor of the Washington Post retired,


> he related a story about headlines and their creators. Bradlee always kept
> his eyes on the headlines to keep the pranksters at bay. He apparently did
> not scrutinize the "Food" section, or they never would have gotten away
> with "Putting Pickles Up Yourself" (an actual headline)."
>
> <http://talk.baltimoresun.com/showthread.php?t=270901>

(laughing) Sometimes I think editors print some headlines hoping to
wind up on Leno. That's funny.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:32:11 PM7/8/11
to
On 7/8/2011 1:06 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Jul 7, 6:41 pm, Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

> Pick them when they're smaller. Nothing says you have


> to wait until they look like a grocery store cuke.

True. However, they are the sneakiest vegetable I've ever seen.
They hide, and they seem to go from tiny to huge overnight.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:36:17 PM7/8/11
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On 7/8/2011 11:13 AM, The Cook wrote:
> On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 18:41:18 -0400, Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:
>
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!

> After two or three days of little picking, today I picked over 20


> pounds from my 8 plants.

Holy crow. I haven't gone out to look today, I'm sure I have
some bats out there of my own.

Too bad I've had zero success with green beans the last couple
of years, I wouldn't mind a bunch of those.

> The baseball bats are going into the compost
> pile. If I were not staring at so many (some in the refrigerator) I
> might try to come up with ideas to use them.
>
> Renee, any new recipe for B&B pickles much appreciated.
>
> I also have several zucchini to use up. Just remember the zucchini
> bread. It is a nice whole wheat yeast bread.

If you have the freezer space, that's a good way to use up some
zucchini.

nancy

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:43:57 PM7/8/11
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It's very refreshing.

Last year I made something similar to the vodka Bob T mentioned, I
made cucumber water. A number of slices of cucumber in a container of
water in the refrigerator. Tasty.

nancy


Tara

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Jul 8, 2011, 5:45:22 PM7/8/11
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Slice some cucumbers and add them to a pitcher of ice water. The
water will have the most refreshing fragrance and flavor.

Tara

Nancy Young

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Jul 8, 2011, 9:44:20 PM7/8/11
to
On 7/8/2011 5:45 PM, Tara wrote:

> Slice some cucumbers and add them to a pitcher of ice water. The
> water will have the most refreshing fragrance and flavor.

Thanks! I did that last year. I will be making some this weekend
as I have some weeding to do and it will be nice in the heat.

I appreciate all the ideas everyone posted, I apologize if I missed
responding to anyone. Been a lot going on here not cucumber related.

And I'm thinking the construction workers across the street ... they
probably don't lock their trucks ....

nancy

Terry Pulliam Burd

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Jul 8, 2011, 11:25:01 PM7/8/11
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On Fri, 8 Jul 2011 10:20:49 -0700 (PDT), Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org>

arranged random neurons and said:

>On Jul 8, 1:06 am, Terry Pulliam Burd <ntpull...@spambot.net> wrote:
>> On Thu, 7 Jul 2011 20:50:24 -0700 (PDT), Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org>
>> arranged random neurons and said:
>>
>> >A New York couple went to Vermont to visit former neighbors near St.
>> >Johnsbury. The refugees enthused about relaxed country living: "We
>> >never have to lock our doors around here." The four of them drove into
>> >town to stock up on a few staples, and the hosts carefully locked the
>> >car doors. They explained, "This time of year, if you don't do that,
>> >you come back to find the car full of zucchini."
>>
>> You really need to identify that as a very old joke, which it is, and
>> the vegetable varies by season and part of the country. Just sayin'.
>
>I read it in the 50s in Reader's Digest. Supposedly true, I thought it
>appropriate to the thread.

Didn't say it wasn't.

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd

--

To reply, remove "spambot" and replace it with "cox"

news

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Jul 9, 2011, 7:24:09 AM7/9/11
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On 7/8/2011 8:02 AM, Nancy Young wrote:
> On 7/7/2011 10:40 PM, Bob Terwilliger wrote:
>
>>
>> Finally, a *great* use for cucumber is using them to infuse vodka.
>> Iced tea
>> with cucumber-flavored vodka is a wonderful summertime cooler.
>
> Thanks for all of those great ideas. I will be trying some of them
> for sure.
>
> nancy

The last episode of "Drinking Made Easy" had the host visiting a bar
where they made this:


Q Bar Sparkling Wine Cocktail:
Muddle sliced cucumber, a squeeze of lime and simple syrup
Add Pomegranate Liqueur and Agave Nectar
Shake and strain, add Sparkling Wine and serve.

It sure looked good!

Ophelia

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Jul 9, 2011, 8:35:38 AM7/9/11
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"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message

news:4e177827$0$25786$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...

Time to install cameras and do a stake out...

Ophelia

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Jul 9, 2011, 8:37:08 AM7/9/11
to

"Nancy Young" <email@replyto> wrote in message

news:4e17b341$0$25826$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com...

lol

Giusi

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Jul 9, 2011, 9:37:35 AM7/9/11
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"Ophelia" <Oph...@Elsinore.me.uk> ha scritto nel messaggio

> Time to install cameras and do a stake out...

I just sent you a thoughtful email. It's safe and really from me.


Ophelia

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Jul 9, 2011, 12:59:20 PM7/9/11
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"Giusi" <deco...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:97r3t4...@mid.individual.net...


>
> "Ophelia" <Oph...@Elsinore.me.uk> ha scritto nel messaggio
>
>> Time to install cameras and do a stake out...
> I just sent you a thoughtful email. It's safe and really from me.

If it was the song then I am singing along...

notbob

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Jul 9, 2011, 1:31:06 PM7/9/11
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On 2011-07-08, Tara <jarv...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> Slice some cucumbers and add them to a pitcher of ice water. The
> water will have the most refreshing fragrance and flavor.

That's a new one on me.

I'm a long time fresh-lemon-in-my-water fan. Drinking some now.
Never heard of using a cucumber. Outta cukes, as I used 'em up in my
gazpacho, but as soon as get a couple more, I'll definitely give it a
shot. Thnx fer the tip. ;)

nb

Ed Pawlowski

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Jul 9, 2011, 2:15:25 PM7/9/11
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"notbob" <not...@notbob.invalid> wrote in message
news:97rhi...@mid.individual.net...

If you drink gin, try Hendricks. Cucumber infused.

George

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Jul 9, 2011, 2:23:33 PM7/9/11
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blake murphy

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Jul 9, 2011, 3:07:49 PM7/9/11
to

i thought the head published somewhere was 'you can put pickles up
yourself,' but i couldn't really verify that.

your pal,
blake

blake murphy

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Jul 9, 2011, 3:11:40 PM7/9/11
to

i would think a metric shitload.

your pal,
blake

Ranée at Arabian Knits

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Jul 10, 2011, 11:29:42 PM7/10/11
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In article <4e16f314$0$29463$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com>,
Nancy Young <email@replyto> wrote:

> On 7/7/2011 10:13 PM, Ranée at Arabian Knits wrote:
> > In article<4e165653$0$29590$a826...@newsreader.readnews.com>,


> > Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:
> >
> >> It's a good idea, though these would have to be cut up. I'm fond of
> >> half sour type of pickles, but they don't keep long. I never did
> >> take up canning, I should put up pickles.
> >

> > I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
> > aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
> > a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
> > I'll pass on the recipe.
>
> I'd appreciate it! Thanks, Ranée.

I'll type it up soon, I promise. Life has been hectic here.

Regards,
Ranee @ Arabian Knits

"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13

http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/

Ranée at Arabian Knits

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Jul 10, 2011, 11:43:58 PM7/10/11
to
In article <p0sc17hodl4lgasjl...@4ax.com>,
Christine Dabney <arti...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

> On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 19:13:16 -0700, Ranée at Arabian Knits
> <arabia...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >I have a really good recipe for bread and butter type pickles. They
> >aren't truly bread and butters, because they are a little less sweet and
> >a little more hot, but they are a close cousin. If you are interested,
> >I'll pass on the recipe.
>

> Can you post it? I had some a few years ago, that had a real zing to
> them, and I loved them.

I will see if I've already typed it somewhere. I'll post this week.

Kate Connally

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Jul 13, 2011, 1:08:18 PM7/13/11
to
On 7/7/2011 6:41 PM, Nancy Young wrote:
> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>
> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.
>
> nancy

I love cukes. Send them to me! Want my address? ;-)

Kate

--
Kate Connally
�If I were as old as I feel, I�d be dead already.�
Goldfish: �The wholesome snack that smiles back,
Until you bite their heads off.�
What if the hokey pokey really *is* what it's all about?
mailto:conn...@pitt.edu

Nancy Young

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Jul 13, 2011, 4:04:27 PM7/13/11
to
On 7/13/2011 1:08 PM, Kate Connally wrote:
> On 7/7/2011 6:41 PM, Nancy Young wrote:
>> But not that much! I'm pulling in 8-10 of them a day, and I am
>> not looking very hard, I'm sure there are more under there. Yikes!
>>
>> I might have to foist them off on the soup kitchen. I wonder how
>> long before they start closing the gates when they see me coming.

> I love cukes. Send them to me! Want my address? ;-)

For you Kate, I'd be happy to! (laugh) Watch for the UPS guy.

nancy


Lou Decruss

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Jul 13, 2011, 4:44:35 PM7/13/11
to

Would that be the same UPS guy that wouldn't give you your package
because he was on lunch?

Lou

Nancy Young

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Jul 13, 2011, 5:52:02 PM7/13/11
to
On 7/13/2011 4:44 PM, Lou Decruss wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Jul 2011 16:04:27 -0400, Nancy Young<email@replyto> wrote:

>> For you Kate, I'd be happy to! (laugh) Watch for the UPS guy.

> Would that be the same UPS guy that wouldn't give you your package


> because he was on lunch?

What a memory! That was the Fedex guy, I waited all day for the
rfc cookbooks, couldn't wait to start getting them out ... and
he parks in front of my house and goes on break. (laugh) I
went out to get the box, no, I'm on break.

nancy

Kate Connally

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Jul 14, 2011, 10:08:40 AM7/14/11
to

Yeah, but, but, you didn't get my address? How's he gonna
know where to bring them? :-(

Lou Decruss

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Jul 14, 2011, 1:16:00 PM7/14/11
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I got the fed ex part wrong but I knew all that. I have no memory and
can't remember what I had for dinner last night but I've been
watching Medium on netflix and I've started having dreams and visions.

Lou

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