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Leftovers , glorious leftovers

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Terry Coombs

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Apr 17, 2020, 8:24:23 PM4/17/20
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  Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !

--
Snag
Yes , I'm old
and crochety - and armed .
Get outta my woods !

itsjoan...@webtv.net

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Apr 17, 2020, 9:40:19 PM4/17/20
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On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 7:24:23 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
>
>   Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
> slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
> made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
> potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
> happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
>
Sounds dang good to me!

dsi1

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Apr 18, 2020, 2:13:35 AM4/18/20
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I made some spaghetti and meatballs. I sprinkled some green can cheese on it but the cheese came out clumpy. It was weird. After staring at it for a while, I realized it was mini-marshmallows bits. Kraft will put those things in the same container as their cheese. I found a big container of grated cheese that was better than green can cheese. Unfortunately, it was moldy.

https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared/sys8JGTlQCOqfD2lqy0bOw.bxaUe6cwrIivXPqZZVELOK

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 3:32:19 AM4/18/20
to
Were they Kraft Jet-Puffed Miniature Marshmallows?
"corn syrup, sugar, modified cornstarch, dextrose, water, contains
less than 2% of gelatin, tetrasodium pyrophosphate (whipping aid),
natural and artificial flavor, blue 1"

The blue 1 is a nice touch.
Message has been deleted

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 5:02:41 AM4/18/20
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On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 01:53:50 -0700 (PDT), maryell...@gmail.com
wrote:
>It was Mallow Bits - a totally different product. They're quite good - if you like that sort of stuff. The funny part is that Kraft uses the same container for their powder cheese. They just use a blue plastic cap.
>
>https://kissmyglutenfreebuns.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/img_2347.jpg

Ok, Mrs I, here comes the Kraft Jet-Puffed Mallow Bits, Vanilla:
"sugar, corn syrup, water, modified contains less than 2% of gelatin,
sodium phosphate, natural and artificial flavor, blue 1."

No whipping aid! But it has the blue 1. All is good.

Gary

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Apr 18, 2020, 8:12:39 AM4/18/20
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"itsjoan...@webtv.net" wrote:
>
> On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 7:24:23 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
> >
> > Ā Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
> > slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
> > made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
> > potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
> > happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
> >
> Sounds dang good to me!

Sounds like the old traditional, "Shit on shingles"
meal. Good stuff.

Dave Smith

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:45:22 AM4/18/20
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We went to the Legion to get take out fish and chips. Glad I got there
early because there was a huge line of cars. You have to drive around
the back, someone comes out to take your order and then brings it out.
It was pretty good.

Terry Coombs

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:50:11 AM4/18/20
to
On 4/18/2020 7:12 AM, Gary wrote:
> "itsjoan...@webtv.net" wrote:
>> On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 7:24:23 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
>>> Â Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
>>> slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
>>> made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
>>> potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
>>> happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
>>>
>> Sounds dang good to me!
> Sounds like the old traditional, "Shit on shingles"
> meal. Good stuff.

  Not really ... SOS is usually either chipped beef or ground beef in a
white sauce/gravy , served over toast made from stale bread . Shoot , by
your definition Bisquits and gravy would be SOS ... There's a truck stop
restaurant (well , useta be , dunno now) that was called the Cross X
Cafe , one mile east and one mile south of Tremonton Utah . One of the
favorites was hot ham/beef/pork open faced sandwich . Sliced meat on
white bread , with a nugget of sage dressing under the meat . A pile of
mashed potatoes at one end , salad at the other . Meat and taters
covered with brown gravy , and it was cheap . My first job was pearl
diving in that place , it's where I met my wife , lots of memories there .

Ophelia

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:56:52 AM4/18/20
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"Terry Coombs" wrote in message news:r7f0ig$5j9$1...@dont-email.me...
Snag

=====

Great memories eh?:))))))))



--
This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
https://www.avg.com

Sheldon Martin

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Apr 18, 2020, 12:43:04 PM4/18/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 14:56:36 +0100, "Ophelia" <oph...@elsinore.me.uk>
wrote:

>"Terry Coombs" wrote in message news:r7f0ig$5j9$1...@dont-email.me...
>
>On 4/18/2020 7:12 AM, Gary wrote:
>> "itsjoan...@webtv.net" wrote:
>>> On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 7:24:23 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
>>>> Ā Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
>>>> slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
>>>> made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
>>>> potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
>>>> happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
>>>>
>>> Sounds dang good to me!
>> Sounds like the old traditional, "Shit on shingles"
>> meal. Good stuff.
>
> Not really ... SOS is usually either chipped beef or ground beef in a
>white sauce/gravy , served over toast made from stale bread . Shoot , by
>your definition Bisquits and gravy would be SOS ... There's a truck stop
>restaurant (well , useta be , dunno now) that was called the Cross X
>Cafe , one mile east and one mile south of Tremonton Utah . One of the
>favorites was hot ham/beef/pork open faced sandwich . Sliced meat on
>white bread , with a nugget of sage dressing under the meat . A pile of
>mashed potatoes at one end , salad at the other . Meat and taters
>covered with brown gravy , and it was cheap . My first job was pearl
>diving in that place , it's where I met my wife , lots of memories there .
>
> Snag
>
>=====
>
> Great memories eh?:))))))))

SOS, chipped beef in cream sauce on toast is the most expensive meal
the US Navy serves... chipped beef is quite pricey... why they often
use ground beef.

Sheldon Martin

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Apr 18, 2020, 1:30:24 PM4/18/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 08:50:18 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag...@msn.com>
wrote:

>On 4/18/2020 7:12 AM, Gary wrote:
>> "itsjoan...@webtv.net" wrote:
>>> On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 7:24:23 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
>>>> Â Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in the
>>>> slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in gravy
>>>> made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread . Mashed
>>>> potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly is
>>>> happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
>>>>
>>> Sounds dang good to me!
>> Sounds like the old traditional, "Shit on shingles"
>> meal. Good stuff.
>
>   Not really ... SOS is usually either chipped beef or ground beef in a
>white sauce/gravy , served over toast made from stale bread .

I prepared enough SOS to fill an oil tanker, never served on stale
bread, always served over fresh white bread toasted. I baked bread
every night, no preservatives were used... all was eaten the next day
and that night I started over. There were no bakeries at sea so the
only packaged bread aboard was from the day we left our US port...
there's isn't space to store much food aboard ship. The supply ships
high-lined foods at sea but never any baked goods, only baking
ingredients like flour... was in 60 pound paper sacks, each contained
six ten pound bags... flour was stored in the same compartment with
sugar, salt, rice, beans, other dry ingredients, and some canned
goods, like coffee; cases of 20 pound rectangular cans to save space,
very likely why SPAM is in rectangular tins, only thing is I never saw
any SPAM aboard ship, we had very good quality 10 pound canned hams
(Armour Gold Star), stored in the reefer... I think only the US Army
was fed SPAM. The US Navy was the best fed on the planet, and the
enlisted men ate much better than the officers, because the officers
had to pay for their meals and they were all cheapskates when they
made up their menus... they had their own cooks too,
pineapples/stewards.

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 4:46:07 PM4/18/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 08:50:18 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag...@msn.com>
wrote:

What's that? Unclogging the sewer pipes?

Leo

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Apr 18, 2020, 8:04:34 PM4/18/20
to
On 2020 Apr 17, , dsi1 wrote
(in article<85035201-2ecc-4d10...@googlegroups.com>):

> I made some spaghetti and meatballs. I sprinkled some green can cheese on it
> but the cheese came out clumpy. It was weird. After staring at it for a
> while, I realized it was mini-marshmallows bits. Kraft will put those things
> in the same container as their cheese. I found a big container of grated
> cheese that was better than green can cheese. Unfortunately, it was moldy.

I don’t serve pasta often. A few days ago, I made stewing-beef
stroganoff, and I made mostaccioli and meatballs today with green can
parmesan. Neither were photo-worthy. Hmm...I must be serving pasta more
than I thought.

leo


dsi1

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Apr 18, 2020, 8:57:09 PM4/18/20
to
Green can cheese is good. I call it "Italian MSG." I don't care much for pasta dishes but I'm going nuts with coming up with new dishes. The family likes it though. Perhaps lasagna would be okay. I kinda like this guy's prep. He's the most fearless of cooks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nev0w5Q15c

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:05:09 PM4/18/20
to
Even your lasagna cook is an Asian. You guys are such copycats! Go
think of your own cuisine!

dsi1

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:21:30 PM4/18/20
to
That guy is can cook hardcore anything. You is wrong. Please investigate before spewing forth words.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chmevSdKFmc

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 9:34:17 PM4/18/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 18:21:23 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
See? You guys have even copied sauerkraut!

dsi1

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Apr 18, 2020, 10:41:03 PM4/18/20
to
The Asians invented noodles and fermented cabbage. Do your research before spewing forth ignorance.

Bruce

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Apr 18, 2020, 10:47:13 PM4/18/20
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On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 19:40:59 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
Stop making pasta dishes then. That's Italian. And stop making
sauerkraut. That's German. Copycats!

dsi1

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Apr 19, 2020, 2:52:17 AM4/19/20
to
My guess is that the Chinese invented ketchup. I love that stuff!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IL1tDfWDbsA

Bruce

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Apr 19, 2020, 3:21:33 AM4/19/20
to
I don't trust it because it never goes off.

Ophelia

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Apr 19, 2020, 4:42:34 AM4/19/20
to
"dsi1" wrote in message
news:1d4cb108-6087-4ee8...@googlegroups.com...
====

I enjoyed watching that:))) If only my cooking was so fast and
simple:)))

dsi1

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Apr 19, 2020, 5:55:24 AM4/19/20
to
There is some mystery about how Li Ziqi makes these videos. She says that she does it all on her own. My guess is she's got a full production crew. The fantasy that she does it all by herself is a very good fantasy. People would like to believe that it's true.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jUJrIWp2I4

Sheldon Martin

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Apr 19, 2020, 9:24:25 AM4/19/20
to
But they call it kim chee... I find kim chee disgusting, once tryed it
on a frankfurter, ruined that dog.


Sheldon Martin

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Apr 19, 2020, 9:50:50 AM4/19/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 19:40:59 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
Actually you're wrong, the Mayans invented noodles, made from corn
tortias. And the Jews invented fermented veggies, as in pickles, my
favorite being pickled green tomatoes, another New World dish. If not
for the foods from the New World the Asians would have starved...
seafood can get boring. Asians have never been inventive, Asians are
good at copying/stealing. If Asians were inventive they would have
beat the Wright brothers to air travel, if they had motorized their
kites.

Taxed and Spent

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Apr 19, 2020, 9:56:15 AM4/19/20
to
Hey, the Chinese invented COVID-19, didn't they?

Sheldon Martin

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Apr 19, 2020, 10:00:35 AM4/19/20
to
On Sat, 18 Apr 2020 23:52:13 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
Not tomato ketchup, tomatoes are a New World food... as are pineapple
and chocolate.

graham

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Apr 19, 2020, 11:00:44 AM4/19/20
to
Well the word is derived from one of the Chinese languages.

Dave Smith

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Apr 19, 2020, 12:25:53 PM4/19/20
to
The Chinese has a sauce made of fermented fish and salt and it had a
name that was anglicized to ketchup, got modified and evolved into a
tomato based product. They get credit for the name, but tomato ketchup
is a condiment that is nothing like the Chinese condiment from which it
got its name.

Cindy Hamilton

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Apr 19, 2020, 12:39:17 PM4/19/20
to
On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 9:50:50 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:

> Actually you're wrong, the Mayans invented noodles, made from corn
> tortias.

Actually, you are wrong. Noodles were invented independently in
several cultures.

> And the Jews invented fermented veggies,

Fermented vegetables were invented independently in several cultures.

Cindy Hamilton

Bruce

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Apr 19, 2020, 2:44:16 PM4/19/20
to
You're undoubtedly right, but you're also making things complicated.
Sheldon doesn't do complicated.

Bruce

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Apr 19, 2020, 2:44:57 PM4/19/20
to
On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 09:24:20 -0400, Sheldon Martin <penm...@aol.com>
wrote:
Frankfurters are mystery meat? You eat that?

Hank Rogers

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Apr 19, 2020, 3:52:46 PM4/19/20
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I thought Popeye grinds his own meat ... he has the finest meat
grinder in the galaxy. Makes his own saw-seege too!




Sheldon Martin

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Apr 19, 2020, 4:21:23 PM4/19/20
to
On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 09:39:11 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
<angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:

NO EXAMPLES, JUST BLOWING WIND AND WHOMEVER.

Cindy Hamilton

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Apr 19, 2020, 4:36:09 PM4/19/20
to

Hank Rogers

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Apr 19, 2020, 5:33:53 PM4/19/20
to
When did Popeye learn to read?


Sheldon Martin

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Apr 19, 2020, 6:13:22 PM4/19/20
to
On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 13:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
<angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:

>On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 4:21:23 PM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
>> On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 09:39:11 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
>> <angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>> >On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 9:50:50 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
>> >
>> >> Actually you're wrong, the Mayans invented noodles, made from corn
>> >> tortias.
>> >
>> >Actually, you are wrong. Noodles were invented independently in
>> >several cultures.
>> >
>> >> And the Jews invented fermented veggies,
>> >
>> >Fermented vegetables were invented independently in several cultures.
>> >
>> >Cindy Hamilton
>>
>> NO EXAMPLES, JUST BLOWING WIND AND WHOMEVER.
>
>Ah. I thought you might ask for citations:
>
><https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasta#History>
>
><https://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitchen/history-pickles/>
>
>Cindy Hamilton

Your citations are absolute nonsense, based soley on modern
expectations... like claiming egg noodles are pasta. Different noodle
like foods have been made from many substances from everywhere on the
planet... there are cultures that made noodles from plantains and
other starchy plants... fried strips of potato can be defined as
noodles, same as their are rice and buckwheat noodles. But pasta and
egg noodles each have a different precise culinary definition in
today's vernacular... pasta contains no egg. Pasta is as differerent
from egg noodles as matzo is from bread. Apples and oranges are both
fruit but are not the same. You need to educate yourself about how
that similar is not identical. Just because you weigh 130 lbs and are
5' 5" and wear a 32 B bra you need to realize that your boobs are not
similar to those for a 130 lb 5'5" woman who needs a 38 DD bra.
Well that's the difference between pasta and egg noodles. LOL

Hank Rogers

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Apr 19, 2020, 6:26:29 PM4/19/20
to
Popeye does yoose wife still wear those C cup bras?

That ain't 38 DD either!


Omni Vore

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Apr 19, 2020, 11:23:40 PM4/19/20
to
On 4/18/2020 11:52 PM, dsi1 wrote:

> My guess is that the Chinese invented ketchup.

Nope. Indonesians.

Omni Vore

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Apr 19, 2020, 11:27:29 PM4/19/20
to
Nope. From Indonesian/Malay "kecjap."

Bruce

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Apr 19, 2020, 11:59:51 PM4/19/20
to
On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 20:27:26 -0700, Omni Vore <eats...@good.things>
wrote:
Chinese --> Malaysian --> English
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketchup

Cindy Hamilton

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Apr 20, 2020, 6:05:08 AM4/20/20
to
On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 6:13:22 PM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
> On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 13:36:05 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
> <angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> >On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 4:21:23 PM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
> >> On Sun, 19 Apr 2020 09:39:11 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
> >> <angelica...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> >On Sunday, April 19, 2020 at 9:50:50 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> Actually you're wrong, the Mayans invented noodles, made from corn
> >> >> tortias.
> >> >
> >> >Actually, you are wrong. Noodles were invented independently in
> >> >several cultures.
> >> >
> >> >> And the Jews invented fermented veggies,
> >> >
> >> >Fermented vegetables were invented independently in several cultures.
> >> >
> >> >Cindy Hamilton
> >>
> >> NO EXAMPLES, JUST BLOWING WIND AND WHOMEVER.
> >
> >Ah. I thought you might ask for citations:
> >
> ><https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasta#History>
> >
> ><https://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitchen/history-pickles/>
> >
> >Cindy Hamilton
>
> Your citations are absolute nonsense, based soley on modern
> expectations... like claiming egg noodles are pasta.

<https://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/fresh-pasta-dough>

Gary

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Apr 20, 2020, 11:54:30 AM4/20/20
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dsi1 wrote:
> My guess is that the Chinese invented ketchup. I love that stuff!

Whoever invented ketchup as we know it now should be nominated
for the Nobel Condiment prize. :)

dsi1

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Apr 20, 2020, 4:24:48 PM4/20/20
to
I had a steak last night and mixed up a sauce of ketchup, dark soy sauce, garlic, Sriracha, honey, and oyster sauce. That's good eats! It also occured to me that beef and tuna will be coming down in price because there will be a lack of people buying meat. The price of Spam might go up. Please buy Spam before the price goes up.

hchrish

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Apr 20, 2020, 8:12:14 PM4/20/20
to

> Terry Coombs wrote:
> Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in
the
> slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in
gravy
> made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread .
Mashed
> potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly
is
> happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
>
> --
> Snag
> Yes , I'm old
> and crochety - and armed .
> Get outta my woods !


I am picturing it in my head and drooling right now!


This is a response to the post seen at:
http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=539996562#539996562


Bruce

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Apr 20, 2020, 8:20:04 PM4/20/20
to
On Mon, 20 Apr 2020 19:12:07 -0500,
mariemi...@gmail-dot-com.no-spam.invalid (hchrish) wrote:

> > Terry Coombs wrote:
> > Tonight's dinner was based on the leftover beef roast I cooked in
> > the slow cooker a couple of nights ago . Slices of the meat warmed in
> > gravy made from the drippings , laid on a slice of homemade bread .
> > Mashed potatoes and green beans as sides . Damtasty and filling , my belly
> > is happy . So is my wife ... I think she likes my cooking !
> >
>I am picturing it in my head and drooling right now!

At least that's good ol' American cooking instead of fandangled commie
food!

Ophelia

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Apr 21, 2020, 5:52:12 AM4/21/20
to
"dsi1" wrote in message
news:1d63798f-e52e-4aaa...@googlegroups.com...
====

Why will people stop buying meat etc ?

Terry Coombs

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Apr 21, 2020, 8:23:34 AM4/21/20
to
  Looks like Google has some competition at stealing and reposting
other's intellectual property . JLA forums can FUCK OFF AND DIE . JLA is
expressly forbidden from reposting my intellectual property in the
future under pain of legal action . All my posts to usenet are to be
considered copyrighted material and may not be reposted anywhere else
without written permission .

Gary

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Apr 21, 2020, 8:28:48 AM4/21/20
to
Sheldon Martin wrote:
> But they call it kim chee... I find kim chee disgusting, once tryed it
> on a frankfurter, ruined that dog.

I'd like to try kim chee but wouldn't dare try to make it
myself unless I try some good stuff first. Just to see how
it's supposed to taste.

Is there a decent brand that you can buy? I've never thought
to look for it in my grocery stores. Probably better to try
an Asian market.

Gary

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Apr 21, 2020, 8:31:49 AM4/21/20
to
Ophelia wrote:
> Why will people stop buying meat etc ?

No meat available. The meat workers are refusing to come
to work in a virus environment. Hasn't affected my stores
yet though.

Cindy Hamilton

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Apr 21, 2020, 9:26:58 AM4/21/20
to
On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 8:28:48 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
> Sheldon Martin wrote:
> > But they call it kim chee... I find kim chee disgusting, once tryed it
> > on a frankfurter, ruined that dog.
>
> I'd like to try kim chee but wouldn't dare try to make it
> myself unless I try some good stuff first. Just to see how
> it's supposed to taste.

I'm not sure you should make kimchee even after you know what it's
suppose to taste like. I made some in my garage once, and it stunk
up the joint. But it was delicious.

> Is there a decent brand that you can buy? I've never thought
> to look for it in my grocery stores. Probably better to try
> an Asian market.

I doubt there's a national brand. My regular grocery store carries
kimchee in a refrigerated case in the produce section. But, y'know,
college town.

Cindy Hamilton

Dave Smith

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Apr 21, 2020, 9:46:25 AM4/21/20
to
One of Canada's largest meat processing plants has shut down for a
couple weeks because so many of the employees have tested positive for
the virus.

Gary

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Apr 21, 2020, 10:07:27 AM4/21/20
to
Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> I doubt there's a national brand. My regular grocery store carries
> kimchee in a refrigerated case in the produce section. But, y'know,
> college town.

I'll try to remember to look for it. At least you've given me an
idea of where to look other than the asian section of shelf
stable items.

Of course, first I'll have to remember what to use it with.
Dsi1 can help me out there. Sheldon's use on a hot dog doesn't
sound all that good.

Cindy Hamilton

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Apr 21, 2020, 10:23:55 AM4/21/20
to
I usually just eat it on the side, like any other pickle.

Cindy Hamilton

graham

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Apr 21, 2020, 10:38:25 AM4/21/20
to
> the virus,

What they don't publicize is that the vast majority of the workers in
that Cargill plant are Filipinos who tend to shack up to save on rent
etc. As a result, a Filipina has transmitted the virus to a nursing home.
Cargill has a big plant in the Philippines.
The Canadian one slaughters about 30,000 cattle per week.

Sheldon Martin

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Apr 21, 2020, 11:36:49 AM4/21/20
to
Depends what kind of meat, national brands of cured pork is in short
supply here but there is plenty of all meats from our the local
farms... the Tops Market in town here is fully stocked with fresh
meat. I'm surrounded by Black Angus farms... plenty of pig and
chicken farms too. There's a smoke house right in town, if you're a
bacon lover you will drool if you drive by with your car vents open.

Silvar Beitel

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Apr 21, 2020, 11:38:59 AM4/21/20
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On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 8:28:48 AM UTC-4, Gary wrote:
> I'd like to try kim chee but wouldn't dare try to make it
> myself unless I try some good stuff first. Just to see how
> it's supposed to taste.

Gary:
I always have a batch of this on hand:
https://www.maangchi.com/recipe/easy-kimchi
"Easy" because you just stir the goop into the chopped wilted cabbage.
The beauty of home-made is that you can adjust the recipe for spicyness, garlickyness, etc. For instance, I use a glob of shrimp paste instead of the salty squid since I never remember to get salty squid when I'm at an asian market. :-)

> Is there a decent brand that you can buy? I've never thought
> to look for it in my grocery stores. Probably better to try
> an Asian market.

Don't have an answer for you, but home-made is easy, cheap, and delicious, either freshly made or cold-fermented in the fridge for a month or two.

But look for commercial kimchee in the refrigerated case, in the vicinity of pickles. Or make friends with a Korean (which is how I got started).

Like Cindy, most of the time I just eat it as a side, but also:
- Chopped fine and used as a relish on a grilled protein.
- Whizzed in the FP and used as a marinade.
- In a grilled cheese sandwich (really!)
- In scrambled eggs.
- Stirred into those cheap packages of ramen noodles for an easy lunch.
- "Camping" stew using canned mackerel (also on maangchi's site).

Oh, and make sure you use genuine Korean coarse red pepper flakes.

Good luck.

--
Silvar Beitel

Bruce

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Apr 21, 2020, 1:39:32 PM4/21/20
to
On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 07:23:35 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag...@msn.com>
wrote:

>On 4/20/2020 7:12 PM, hchrish wrote:
>> >
>> I am picturing it in my head and drooling right now!
>>
>>
>> This is a response to the post seen at:
>> http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=539996562#539996562
>>
>>
>
>   Looks like Google has some competition at stealing and reposting
>other's intellectual property . JLA forums can FUCK OFF AND DIE . JLA is
>expressly forbidden from reposting my intellectual property in the
>future under pain of legal action .

But you don't have any intellectual property :)

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 1:57:41 PM4/21/20
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People will be buying less meat so the price should go down. They're buying less because a lot of them will have a greatly reduced income. Some of them will have no income at all.

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 2:11:51 PM4/21/20
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When we moved to California back in 1977, I was delighted to find some kim chee in the Albertson's supermarket. It was a Hawaiian style kim chee that was pretty tasty. These days, my guess is that most of the kimchi sold in stores is Korean style, which is a hotter, more intense, type of kimchi. OTOH, I might be wrong about that. Hawaiian kim chee is more suitable for mainlanders because it's less hardcore.

Bruce

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Apr 21, 2020, 2:14:45 PM4/21/20
to
On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 10:57:35 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
<dsi...@hawaiiantel.net> wrote:

>On Monday, April 20, 2020 at 11:52:12 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
>> "dsi1" wrote in message
>> news:1d63798f-e52e-4aaa...@googlegroups.com...
>>
>> On Monday, April 20, 2020 at 5:54:30 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote:
>> > dsi1 wrote:
>> > > My guess is that the Chinese invented ketchup. I love that stuff!
>> >
>> > Whoever invented ketchup as we know it now should be nominated
>> > for the Nobel Condiment prize. :)
>>
>> I had a steak last night and mixed up a sauce of ketchup, dark soy sauce,
>> garlic, Sriracha, honey, and oyster sauce. That's good eats! It also occured
>> to me that beef and tuna will be coming down in price because there will be
>> a lack of people buying meat. The price of Spam might go up. Please buy Spam
>> before the price goes up.
>>
>> ====
>>
>> Why will people stop buying meat etc ?
>>
>People will be buying less meat so the price should go down. They're buying less because a lot of them will have a greatly reduced income. Some of them will have no income at all.

Are we finally getting your famine? Are we finally going to rejoice
over a can of spam in the back of a cupboard?

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 2:22:40 PM4/21/20
to
When it all goes down like it's gonna go down, you will learn to love Spam and other assorted canned meats - including cat food.

Bruce

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Apr 21, 2020, 2:27:49 PM4/21/20
to
On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 11:22:35 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
You're not the most cheerful chap, are you?

Dave Smith

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Apr 21, 2020, 3:11:07 PM4/21/20
to
The point would seem to be that it is the lifestyle of the workers that
has led to the virus running rampant and doesn't really have much to do
with the plant. I imagine it is not the best lace to work and probably
doesn't pay as much as those now rare jobs in the oil fields,
Filiopinos are well known for their frugal life style here because they
send a lot of money back home to their families.

Ophelia

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Apr 21, 2020, 3:43:41 PM4/21/20
to
"dsi1" wrote in message
news:39fef6c6-b30f-4b21...@googlegroups.com...
===

Oh dear:(((




Terry Coombs

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Apr 21, 2020, 5:13:14 PM4/21/20
to
  Ignore him , he's been listening to the mainstream media . They are
deeply involved in fear mongering for the liberal political machine .
Can't let a good crisis go to waste donchaknow . <spit>

Bruce

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Apr 21, 2020, 5:20:47 PM4/21/20
to
On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 16:14:15 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag...@msn.com>
wrote:

>On 4/21/2020 2:40 PM, Ophelia wrote:
>> "dsi1" wrote in message
>> news:39fef6c6-b30f-4b21...@googlegroups.com...
>>
>> On Monday, April 20, 2020 at 11:52:12 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
>>>
>>> I had a steak last night and mixed up a sauce of ketchup, dark soy
>>> sauce,
>>> garlic, Sriracha, honey, and oyster sauce. That's good eats! It also
>>> occured
>>> to me that beef and tuna will be coming down in price because there
>>> will be
>>> a lack of people buying meat. The price of Spam might go up. Please
>>> buy Spam
>>> before the price goes up.
>>>
>>> ====
>>>
>>>     Why will people stop buying meat etc ?
>>>
>> People will be buying less meat so the price should go down. They're
>> buying less because a lot of them will have a greatly reduced income.
>> Some of them will have no income at all.
>>
>> ===
>>
>>   Oh dear:(((
>>
>   Ignore him , he's been listening to the mainstream media . They are
>deeply involved in fear mongering for the liberal political machine .
>Can't let a good crisis go to waste donchaknow . <spit>

Says the guy who is holed up in his mountain shack full of toilet
paper and smoked brisket.

Here's an article about a man who said corona virus was a political
ploy. He's dead now. Of corona virus.

<https://www.news.com.au/world/coronavirus/health/coronavirus-man-dies-of-covid19-after-blasting-restrictions-as-bullst/news-story/5baec2d936df42be9505c0463879bdee>

graham

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Apr 21, 2020, 5:24:23 PM4/21/20
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On 2020-04-21 1:11 p.m., Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2020-04-21 10:38 a.m., graham wrote:
>> On 2020-04-21 7:46 a.m., Dave Smith wrote:
>
>>>
>>> One of Canada's largest meat processing plants has shut down for a
>>> couple weeks because so many of the employees have tested positive
>>> for the virus,
>>
>> What they don't publicize is that the vast majority of the workers in
>> that Cargill plant are Filipinos who tend to shack up to save on rent
>> etc. As a result, a Filipina has transmitted the virus to a nursing home.
>> Cargill has a big plant in the Philippines.
>> The Canadian one slaughters about 30,000 cattle per week.
>
> The point would seem to be that it is the lifestyle of the workers that
> has led to the virus running rampant and doesn't really have much to do
> with the plant.

Actually, it does! they work close together on the production line with
nothing in the way of N-95 masks and equivalent protection.

Dave Smith

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Apr 21, 2020, 5:37:05 PM4/21/20
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They could wear all that stuff at work, but then they go home to their
crowded apartments.

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 6:35:22 PM4/21/20
to
That's right folks, nothing to see here. Just keep on moving along. Nothing to see here. Just keep on moving along. Nothing to see...

Terry Coombs

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Apr 21, 2020, 7:04:53 PM4/21/20
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  Oh quit being an asshole . Yes , there is a problem , no it's not as
dire as the major news outlets would have us think . Turns out that
there are studies  - and more coming all the time - that show that a
much larger percentage than previously thought is actually showing
immunity . That indicates that many if not most that get the virus
probably don't even know it . I'm pretty sure though we've not been
tested that my wife and I will both test positive for antibodies . Our
kids/grands in
Memphis have all been very ill with the typical symptoms , the wife and
I have both been down a bit but not as bad as them . We're not being
fanatical , but then we're not going out planting big juicy kisses on
every stranger we meet either .

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 7:24:07 PM4/21/20
to
It's all a matter of perception. You believe that not knowing you have the virus is a good thing. That it means we're somehow protected. I see it as very bad news i.e., it can pretty much be spread undetected and unchecked. The reality is that in order to prevent the most amount of deaths, we have to isolate ourselves from each other. Your reality is that you're willing to take a 3 or 4 percent or more death toll in order to keep the American way of life moving. it is people like you that should be ignored. OTOH, as I said, it's all a matter of perception.

graham

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Apr 21, 2020, 9:56:44 PM4/21/20
to
That may be so but have you noticed that large abattoirs throughout the
USA are similar hotspots for the virus?

Terry Coombs

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Apr 21, 2020, 10:03:25 PM4/21/20
to
So much spin on my words that I'm getting dizzy . Do you by chance have
a liberal arts degree from a liberal university ?

dsi1

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Apr 21, 2020, 10:36:10 PM4/21/20
to
I don't have any interest in spinning your words. You got a right to voice your opinions, the same as any other American. OTOH, if you feel the need to give out your opinion on my opinion, you can count on me giving my opinion on your opinion of my opinion. That's fair, right? My suggestion is that you use this forum to clarify and explain what your position is - or don't. I don't care what you do - just as long as you leave me out if it.

Gary

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Apr 28, 2020, 9:20:43 AM4/28/20
to
I'm a bit late in responding but I do thank you for all you
wrote. I've saved it to refer to someday. I will look for some in
the grocery store. :)
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