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Free turkey

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iDRMRSR

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Dec 24, 2006, 12:51:01 PM12/24/06
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I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
$0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative. Under this new plan,
you could just get a free turkey, or rather, a type of species very close to
a real turkey, equal in nutrition and almost exactly the same in every other
regard. Rather than raising them on the farm, small hobbyists all over the
world raise their own turkey-like birds and exchange them for free with each
other, hoping that one day all the inbreeding will produce a species much
tastier than the usual mechafarm produced crap.

So I opted for the free turkey! The butcher gave me this carcass with all
the dark meat but no white meat.

I asked, "What good is this?". The butcher said, well, most of the FLAVOR
of the turkey is in the DARK MEAT. Due to a legal issue with the
HunnySuckel corporation, he couldn't just give me a whole turkey. However,
he said his brother was in the parking lot out back, and had the white meat
in his trunk for all the free turkeys. He explained to me that it was up to
me, if I wanted white meat, I could go out to the back and get it. He said
a lot of the free turkey people simply content themselves with the dark
meat. "The Free Turkey people are believers in CHOICE", he intoned.

But I would not be so content.

So I went out back, and sure enough, there was his brother, and he pulled
from the trunk a nice set of breasts and wings, and even gave me a little
handy sewing thing so I could sew them back on myself.

I got it home, sewed it back together, and put it into the roaster pan.
Unfortunately, the free turkey was too oddly shaped to fit in the pan. So I
ended up having to buy a FOIL pan and kind of mashing it into the right
shape for my free turkey.

It suddenly occurred to me, I didn't remember exactly how to cook a turkey.
So I searched the internet all over and found a nice recipe to cook my free
turkey. The recipe went something like this:

1. Slice and serve the meat but not until you have read the full cooking
instructions (unless you have done this before and know exactly what you are
doing, and realize that some people have no business trying to cook a turkey
unless they know avian anatomy and physiology and food science cold like us,
in which case they should stick to eating at McDonald's).

2. Before you do that, you must thaw the turkey, unless the turkey is
already thawed, but do not skip step 3 below, EXCEPT when the turkey is
already cooked. However, if you want it warm, prior to eating, do not do
step 1 first! Instead, heat the turkey and then do step 1. THIS IS NOT
ROCKET SCIENCE! Do we make ourselves CLEAR?

3. Bake the free turkey for 250 * 10^6 microseconds per kilogram at a
temperature of 449.816667 kelvin. IMPORTANT: if you pierce the breast with
a sharp knife, and the juices are still running pink, the turkey may not be
fully cooked and you risk intestinal disease if you eat it at this stage.
To prevent this {TODO list - insert additional cooking instructions in next
build along with documentation referring to desired final temperature of
cooked meat}.

So I got out my slide rule and computed the cooking time, popped the bird in
the oven and turned it on. I crossed my fingers and presumed the juices
wouldn't run pink and all that. Then I noticed the very strangest thing.

With this open source turkey in the oven, I went to set the oven timer.
It's a digital timer on a Westinghouse oven. Every time I set it, it
displayed 88:88. I could set the timer OK with the free turkey OUT of the
oven, but every time I put it in, the display read 88:88. After a while, I
simply decided to use my pocket watch to do the timing.

While the free open source turkey was cooking, I did some more GOOGLING and
found out that if I had used a KENMORE oven instead, the timer would set
properly. Since the turkey was free, I decided it wasn't such a big problem
to do without the little timer, especially since I had this nice little
pocket watch around.

After about two hours, the smell of turkey began to fill the room and it was
heavenly! I could see through the oven window, the skin was browning and
crisping nicely. I could hardly wait until the cooking period was over.

That's when, all of a sudden the light in the oven blew out. I could not
see inside at all! Panicking, I reached for my oven mitts and opened up the
oven door to peer inside.

I discovered that somehow the free turkey in my oven had completely locked
up the oven door latch! I could not get inside the oven. The timer still
read 88:88 and I had no idea what was going on inside. Normally, I'd just
flip the little safety lever and the door would open, but with the free
turkey inside, it was frozen shut.

To get it out, I finally had to break through the glass in the oven door.
This is not a simple thing because it's tempered glass. Shards of glass got
into the turkey, and I then knew I couldn't eat the thing. It was corrupted
totally in the process of finalizing the cooking. The smell of the house
was very enticing, I must admit, and the parts of the free turkey that
weren't full of broken glass were very nicely browned.

I ended up going to Denny's for a turkey dinner. They're open 24 hours,
even on Xistlessmass. That dinner cost me $14 including the tip. It wasn't
the best turkey around, but the stuffing was pretty tasty and it filled me
up. Even though I kind of resented throwing more of my money at a big
corporate food place like that.

The day after Xistlessmas I'm going to go out and buy a new oven door, and
see if that butcher has any free, open source FILET MIGNON around, just to
give that a try. Maybe if I try a different SPECIES this time, I can find a
free food alternative that is ready for my kitchen!

[*]
-----


just john

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Dec 24, 2006, 1:02:51 PM12/24/06
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iDRMRSR wrote:
> I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
> $0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
> in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative.


Meanwhile, I bought one of those new "Vista" turkeys. It worked okay
until the phone rang and some funny noise happened. Now it refuses to
cook any further unless I connect it to its home office to see if I'm
authorized.

Hilbert Hooper Aspaspia

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Dec 24, 2006, 1:05:50 PM12/24/06
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"iDRMRSR" <idr...@sssssubgenius.com> wrote in
news:4pKdnTNV-YybIxPY...@giganews.com:

Oddly enough, this story reminds me of your struggle(s) with linux.

Message has been deleted

Artemia Salina

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Dec 24, 2006, 1:32:53 PM12/24/06
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On Sun, 24 Dec 2006 12:51:01 -0500, iDRMRSR wrote:

> I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
> $0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
> in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative.

Sounds like that version of OpenTurkey has bugs in it. Eeeewwww.

Just don't let the people on rec.food.open-source.turkey.advocacy hear you
or they'll brow beat you about trying to eat an Alpha version OpenTurkey
and tell you that you'll have to debug it yourself.

--
""Without hesitation I would wrench a chewy toy
out of God's mouth and give it to a dog."
- Artemia Salina" -- IMBJR

The Rev. Dr. Lt. Chaos Israel

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Dec 24, 2006, 2:14:52 PM12/24/06
to

iDRMRSR wrote:
> I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
> $0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
> in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative. Under this new plan,
> you could just get a free turkey, or rather, a type of species very close to
> a real turkey, equal in nutrition and almost exactly the same in every other
> regard.

PLONK.

Zapanaz

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Dec 24, 2006, 2:25:09 PM12/24/06
to
On Sun, 24 Dec 2006 12:51:01 -0500, "iDRMRSR"
<idr...@sssssubgenius.com> wrote:

>I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
>$0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
>in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative.

>The day after Xistlessmas I'm going to go out and buy a new oven door, and
>see if that butcher has any free, open source FILET MIGNON around, just to
>give that a try. Maybe if I try a different SPECIES this time, I can find a
>free food alternative that is ready for my kitchen!
>
>[*]
>-----
>

On the plus side though, those open source turkeys will fart MIDIs
right out of the box.


--
Zapanaz
International Satanic Conspiracy
Customer Support Specialist
http://joecosby.com/
Another day the King read a poem he had composed and asked for Nasarudin's opinion. "I don't like it," said the Mulla.

The king became angry and ordered Nasarudin to be put in prison.

The following week the King summoned Nasarudin and read him another poem. "What do you think of this one?" he asked.

Nasarudin got to his feet.

"Where are you going?" asked the King.

"To the prison," answered Nasarudin.

just john

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Dec 24, 2006, 2:31:05 PM12/24/06
to

Zapanaz wrote:
> On Sun, 24 Dec 2006 12:51:01 -0500, "iDRMRSR"
> <idr...@sssssubgenius.com> wrote:
>
> >I went to the butcher shop yesterday to buy a turkey. I could have paid
> >$0.89 a pound for one, but instead the butcher told me about a new movement
> >in the meat industry, the open source meat initiative.
>
>
> >The day after Xistlessmas I'm going to go out and buy a new oven door, and
> >see if that butcher has any free, open source FILET MIGNON around, just to
> >give that a try. Maybe if I try a different SPECIES this time, I can find a
> >free food alternative that is ready for my kitchen!
> >
> >[*]
> >-----
> >
>
> On the plus side though, those open source turkeys will fart MIDIs
> right out of the box.
>

So you have to pack the MIDIs separately?

What have you got against MIDIs?

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