• Re: Dinner Tonight 5/10/2025

    From Bruce@21:1/5 to j_mcquown@comcast.net on Sun May 11 06:10:22 2025
    On Sat, 10 May 2025 16:06:37 -0400, Jill McQuown
    <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, >browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't >figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be

    Don't say it, don't say it!

    steamed

    You said it.

    cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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  • From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 10 16:06:37 2025
    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake,
    browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't
    figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill

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  • From ItsJoanNotJoAnn@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sat May 10 20:21:00 2025
    On Sat, 10 May 2025 20:06:37 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill


    Sounds pretty good to me! But here, it will be some
    leftovers and I don't mind as they're pretty tasty.
    Also, a banana to be eaten, too.

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  • From Dave Smith@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sat May 10 18:06:48 2025
    On 2025-05-10 4:06 p.m., Jill McQuown wrote:
    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :)  I haven't figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Saturday night burgers here. My wife is heating up the pan to cook
    them. I made the patties and slice the accessories and she is going to
    cook them.

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  • From Hank Rogers@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sat May 10 19:43:06 2025
    Jill McQuown wrote on 5/10/2025 3:06 PM:
    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :)  I haven't figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill


    I'm having leftover white chicken chili, your majesty. Your strip steak
    sounds real good. That 8oz of meat should feed your Highness for at
    least a week.

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  • From Hank Rogers@21:1/5 to Bruce on Sat May 10 19:44:51 2025
    Bruce wrote on 5/10/2025 3:10 PM:
    On Sat, 10 May 2025 16:06:37 -0400, Jill McQuown
    <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake,
    browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't
    figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be

    Don't say it, don't say it!

    steamed

    You said it.


    She meant "LIGHTLY" steamed, dumbass!

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  • From Leonard Blaisdell@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sun May 11 23:24:23 2025
    On 2025-05-10, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    Any cooking plans tonight?


    We had beef stew. She will have beef stew tonight. I "did" buy her a,
    very small, living flower for Mother's Day, for ten bucks.

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    leo

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  • From dsi1@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Mon May 12 04:45:39 2025
    On Sat, 10 May 2025 20:06:37 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill

    Breakfast today was an omelette. Dinner was curry rice and chicken. I
    used chicken breast because when I cook it, it comes out tender and
    tasty.

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/LwaP7Z8AFaPvayos7

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/AEZ84RYA9bgRrkLR9

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to dsi100@yahoo.com on Mon May 12 15:55:29 2025
    On Mon, 12 May 2025 04:45:39 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:

    On Sat, 10 May 2025 20:06:37 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake,
    browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't
    figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill

    Breakfast today was an omelette. Dinner was curry rice and chicken. I
    used chicken breast because when I cook it, it comes out tender and
    tasty.

    Does it taste of ammonia?

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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  • From Cindy Hamilton@21:1/5 to Bruce on Mon May 12 09:10:17 2025
    On 2025-05-12, Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On Mon, 12 May 2025 04:45:39 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:

    On Sat, 10 May 2025 20:06:37 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot
    cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake,
    browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't
    figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill

    Breakfast today was an omelette. Dinner was curry rice and chicken. I
    used chicken breast because when I cook it, it comes out tender and
    tasty.

    Does it taste of ammonia?

    Bleach, not ammonia.

    https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/analysis-and-features/chlorinated-chicken-explained-why-do-the-americans-treat-their-poultry-with-chlorine/555618.article

    --
    Cindy Hamilton

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to chamilton5280@invalid.com on Mon May 12 19:18:13 2025
    On Mon, 12 May 2025 09:10:17 -0000 (UTC), Cindy Hamilton <chamilton5280@invalid.com> wrote:

    On 2025-05-12, Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    On Mon, 12 May 2025 04:45:39 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:

    On Sat, 10 May 2025 20:06:37 +0000, Jill McQuown wrote:

    A half of a 16 oz. prime grade NY strip steak, pan seared in a very hot >>>> cast iron skillet, cooked to just past rare. Oh, and a fresh crab cake, >>>> browned in butter in a different pan. So, turf and surf. :) I haven't >>>> figured out what vegetable to have with it but chances are it will be
    steamed cauliflower since I have some and it needs to be cooked.

    Any cooking plans tonight?

    Jill

    Breakfast today was an omelette. Dinner was curry rice and chicken. I >>>used chicken breast because when I cook it, it comes out tender and >>>tasty.

    Does it taste of ammonia?

    Bleach, not ammonia.

    https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/analysis-and-features/chlorinated-chicken-explained-why-do-the-americans-treat-their-poultry-with-chlorine/555618.article

    I asked AI:
    "Chickens excrete uric acid (not urea like humans). When this waste
    accumulates in bedding or litter, microbial activity breaks the uric
    acid down into ammonia (NH3). This happens quickly in warm, damp,
    poorly ventilated environments, common in large-scale poultry houses."

    But bleach is a good point too.

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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  • From Rudy Canoza@21:1/5 to Cindy Hamilton on Mon May 12 09:35:23 2025
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-11, Leonard Blaisdell <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
    On 2025-05-10, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    Any cooking plans tonight?


    We had beef stew. She will have beef stew tonight. I "did" buy her a,
    very small, living flower for Mother's Day, for ten bucks.

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    Can't I enjoy the day as well?


    It's too bad *your* mother didn't forgo having
    children, you fucking swine.

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  • From Cindy Hamilton@21:1/5 to Leonard Blaisdell on Mon May 12 09:08:40 2025
    On 2025-05-11, Leonard Blaisdell <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
    On 2025-05-10, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    Any cooking plans tonight?


    We had beef stew. She will have beef stew tonight. I "did" buy her a,
    very small, living flower for Mother's Day, for ten bucks.

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    Can't I enjoy the day as well?

    --
    Cindy Hamilton

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  • From danny burstein@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 12 13:48:00 2025
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    [snip]

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    Why is it always days for "happy" groups? Where's
    the "Grumpy Mother's Day"?

    --
    _____________________________________________________
    Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
    dannyb@panix.com
    [to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

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  • From Leonard Blaisdell@21:1/5 to Cindy Hamilton on Wed May 14 23:01:24 2025
    On 2025-05-12, Cindy Hamilton <chamilton5280@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 2025-05-11, Leonard Blaisdell <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    Can't I enjoy the day as well?


    Of course! I didn't spread genetics either. Father's Day is meaningless
    to me, and I don't regret a minute of my life. Well...there's got to be
    a few, but I have to think hard.

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net on Thu May 15 09:24:00 2025
    On 14 May 2025 23:01:24 GMT, Leonard Blaisdell
    <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    On 2025-05-12, Cindy Hamilton <chamilton5280@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 2025-05-11, Leonard Blaisdell <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

    "Happy Mother's Day!", for those who qualify.

    Can't I enjoy the day as well?

    Of course! I didn't spread genetics either. Father's Day is meaningless
    to me, and I don't regret a minute of my life. Well...there's got to be
    a few, but I have to think hard.

    I have a stepdaughter. She lives between my keyboard and my monitor.
    Does that count?

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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  • From dsi1@21:1/5 to Bruce on Thu May 15 06:05:10 2025
    On Mon, 12 May 2025 9:18:13 +0000, Bruce wrote:

    I asked AI:
    "Chickens excrete uric acid (not urea like humans). When this waste accumulates in bedding or litter, microbial activity breaks the uric
    acid down into ammonia (NH3). This happens quickly in warm, damp,
    poorly ventilated environments, common in large-scale poultry houses."

    But bleach is a good point too.

    In the future, we'll all be bleaching our clothes with chamber lye. We
    can even make it ourselves!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xenLzd2-Dk&t=100s

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to dsi100@yahoo.com on Thu May 15 20:02:20 2025
    On Thu, 15 May 2025 06:05:10 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:

    On Mon, 12 May 2025 9:18:13 +0000, Bruce wrote:

    I asked AI:
    "Chickens excrete uric acid (not urea like humans). When this waste
    accumulates in bedding or litter, microbial activity breaks the uric
    acid down into ammonia (NH3). This happens quickly in warm, damp,
    poorly ventilated environments, common in large-scale poultry houses."

    But bleach is a good point too.

    In the future, we'll all be bleaching our clothes with chamber lye. We
    can even make it ourselves!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xenLzd2-Dk&t=100s

    Yabbut just because the US is going through a backward phase doesn't
    mean the whole world's going to go back 200 years in time. Besides,
    maybe the light will be turned on again in the US, in 4 years.

    Maybe, in 50 years, Americans will be embarrassed to admit to their grandchildren that they once voted for Trump.

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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