Or maybe I should leave a cake out in the rain.
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Or maybe I should leave a cake out in the rain.
The cake is a lie.
Smoked gouda is not. It's excellent with grapes. The smokiness of the gouda contrasts nicely with the sweet/tartness of the grapes.
You don't see as many fondue parties anymore. I'd think "keto" dippers could revive the fad. Low carb vegetables, chicken breast cubes, etc.
How strong is the inverse correlation between fondue parties and beards?
In the '70s fondue parties were usually part of a double-date. Often a follow up to some cross-country skiing or ice skating. It was seen as more mature than sipping cocoa and playing Euchre, leaving minds more free for listening to music and conversation. It was also a pretty simple thing to set up in a dorm room.
I hesitate to imagine what goes on in college these days.
When I was in the store a few days ago there was a huge display of those foam "pool noodle" toys. What the heck are those for? I've seen a few kids bashing each other over the head with them, but not much else. Who buys these?
I guess I have seen some of them used as raw material in different craft and DIY projects. So a cheap source of shaped foam as long as you buy the "smooth" ones instead of those shaped with ribbed or spiraled or "ringed shank" surfaces that don't seem as potentially useful.
You find those in any commercial hot spring pool in Idaho. I've found them to be quite useful. I took a few of them and wove a simple chair that allowed me to float, mostly submerged, in a nearly fully reclined position. It was amazing after a long day of hiking. I was floating around in warm water, so thoroughly relaxed that I could fall asleep, while looking up at snow-capped peaks towering above me.
I also use one for a physical therapy exercise for my shoulder. Basically, I lay the noodle flat on a hardwood floor, then lie on it such that it runs the length of my spine. This elevates my shoulders off the floor, at which point I can do a series of core exercises.
I see that now. Good to know.
I'd like to imagine they are made by recycling plastic. I wouldn't place a bet on that though.
I'd be surprised if they were.
So "Grimace's Shake" is a thing now? I hear it's become a meme for killer corporate crap that induces delayed vomiting and seizures. Oh, those kids and their TikToks and their VR goggle phones.
They're buoyancy aids. They're quite fun to use as extra obstacle at a climbing wall though.Quote:
What the heck are those for?
Whew. Several exotic variants of candida entering the food supply. It's a yeast, or fungus, or bacterium depending on who is talking. These "new" ones seem only to be new to people who grew up in Europe and N. America. They don't have as much resistance to it.
It's most often seen in "baby carrots" that were peeled and bagged in South America. They look fine when purchased, but a few days in the fridge white colonies may be seen developing. The carrots may feel slimy to the touch long before the white bloom can be seen.
Bleh.
Of course that isn't a new thing in itself. Slimy peeled carrots have been with us now for three decades. The difference now is the rise of new variants on store shelves.
I guess you're supposed to scrub them in plenty of cold water, rinse, dry, and then bag tightly in a bit of hydrogen peroxide solution. Refrigerate and use them up as quickly as possible.
Of course restaurants just dump them onto their salad bars right out of the oozing sacks.
slimy carrots are a thing? urgghhhh sounds awful.Quote:
Of course that isn't a new thing in itself. Slimy peeled carrots have been with us now for three decades. The difference now is the rise of new variants on store shelves.
I guess you're supposed to scrub them in plenty of cold water, rinse, dry, and then bag tightly in a bit of hydrogen peroxide solution. Refrigerate and use them up as quickly as possible.
I dont know what Is happening with your food in the US but you will never catch me rinsing my veggies in bleach !!!!!
They seem to last a loooong time for me. A month, no problem. They don't turn slimy, usually they get rubbery. I don't wash, dry, bag.
But I don't hardly ever eat them raw, mainly for stews, pot roasts.
Natural unpeeled carrots that were washed and dried before bagging normally last a long time if kept cool. At least until they begin to sprout and grow hair roots. But you can even trim and scrape those or peel them at time of use.
Rubbery? Yeah, those are probably done for.
You should marinate your carrots in VERY salty water. Do this for a couple days. Then you won't have to worry about bacteria...since after you tie your carrot in a knot, no sane person would eat it....but I expect that college kids would.
True fact, carrots used to be purple (though also red, black, and white varieties). They're only orange because the Dutch House of Orange thought that would look cool. We've been messing with food for a loooong time.
I would definitely turn away from a slimy carrot though. Not to be trusted.
I prefer marinating them in copious amount of butter but each to there ownQuote:
You should marinate your carrots in VERY salty water.
Bleach, now salt water what other crimes against veggies are you damn Americans perpetrating?? :wave:Quote:
Do this for a couple days. Then you won't have to worry about bacteria
A nation that invents sprayable cheese is capable of ANY atrocityQuote:
water what other crimes against veggies are you damn Americans perpetrating??
Sprayable butter, too. Or something so close that I can't believe it's not butter.
Could be worse. Could be pork and beans as a sandwich filling.
Open or closed? As an open sandwich, it wouldn't be so bad. As a closed sandwich...messy.
Not sure what that was a reference to as we don't really do that over here. What we do do is beans on toast:-Attachment 188091Quote:
Could be pork and beans as a sandwich filling.
It's got to be Heinz and grated cheddar is optional. Food of the Gods!
What god, cthulhu?
Cthulhu's not a god, he's a great old one. A bit like me.
It reminds me of an old song:
Quote:
Well, I had to pay him double 'cause he was the man in charge
And the jailer's job was not the best in town
Later on his wife brought hot bologna, eggs and gravy
The first day I was there I turned it down
Well, next morning they just let us sleep but I was up real early
Wonderin' when I'd get my release
Later on we got more hot bologna, eggs and gravy
And by now I wasn't quite so hard to please
I saw the butt end of a black bear while on my bike ride. Had I seen it earlier, I might have been able to get a picture. Normally, black bears are not all that photogenic. They tend to be seen in low light, at which point they are black on black, which is not the best for a picture. This one was in the early morning in full sun with a green background. It would have been reasonably picturesque. I was busy taking a picture of a sign, though, and didn't notice the bear in time. The bear didn't notice me, either.
He was bearly tolerable.
I wanted to ask it, "what's ur-sign?" But that would have given it pause, and it already had four of them.
Black bears mainly stick to the woods around here. Below the bridge they're pretty rare except in communities bordering State and National Forest lands, where they vie with the giant raccoons invading trashcans. You can identify these areas in the daytime by the armored trash pickup cages at the roadsides.
The last time I saw one up close was in the U.P. where I passed some idiot parked going the other way trying to feed a bear through a rolled down window. This was on a highway through a large swamp, though they are more often found at garbage dumps up there.
In the more remote tracts trailheads offer some scary instructional signage. Those bears aren't as familiar with people so they can be more bold and territorial than near residential areas.
Black bears are all over the place out here, but since they are hunted, they are also pretty shy. In rural areas, there can be issues with bears breaking into houses and the like, but problem bears tend not to be repeat offenders for one reason or another.
They can still be problems, though. For example, a bear was found in a tree on the grounds of an elementary school in Boise. That was a problem.
Another bear was found in a tree in the tank compound of the local National Guard armory. That was a problem, too. That one turned into a very entertaining problem for all involved, but it's a story too long to relate.
I watched Cocaine Bear a couple of days ago. Had some funny parts but it was gorier than I expected. Gore is not my thing, never liked the slasher movies.
That's an inconvenient truth.
Somehow there is an audience for that though. I haven't seen it and don't plan to, so I can't honestly say much more.
It wasn't a bad movie, better than I expected, I just had to close my eyes a few times. lol
Did that come from the story about the black bear in California that broke into a camper or cooler or both, and drank a heroic amount of beer? They might have just changed the drug for impact.
The actions weren't unrealistic in the mind of that bear. He was just a bit wacked out.
This thread has dropped too far.
Pulling your boots up by your selfstraps?
Horrible racket in the back yard this morning. Turned out to be two hawks on the ground screeching at each other. I never did see a rabbit or something for them to be fighting over.
When they saw me one flew off, the other up onto a tree limb and watched me until I started toward it.
Never did identify the species. Maybe bigger than a large crow but smaller than a typical chicken. We don't get them in town like this very often.
It's a bit late in the year for them to be just courting. Had it been earlier, that's what I would have suspected. Might still be a youth learning to hunt.
Last night quite late we had another noisy rarity. Some motorcycle crowd seemed to think it was a grand idea to drive through here en masse about 1 AM.
The joke was on them. From one direction it is a straight shot into this community but for historical reasons development patterns left other routes more convoluted. Add to that summer road construction barriers with detours... It was funny for about 45 minutes listening to the pack of rumbling bumblers run to and for trying to find a path out of here.
So loud they woke a lot of people up. So absurd they gave many a good laugh as they ran from one corner to another trying to reach escape velocity.
Vroomity-vroomity trundling along. Then movement stops as they settle like broody hens, chuckle-chuckle zing-zing chuckle. Vroomity-vroomity as they posture for each other, more zoomity-zoomity as they start moving again. Rinse, repeat.
Everyone remembers the infamous South Park episode.
I had a neighbor with one of those who always left at some crazy time. At the moment, I forget whether it was late at night or very early morning when they left, but it was always loud.
I was passed by what amounted to a low-end moped on the greenbelt in Boise, today. That got me thinking about the rules for walking/biking paths. For a long time, there was a pretty clean distinction between motor vehicles and non-motor vehicles, but the distinction has become terribly blurred, out here.
First there were the occasional electric bikes and occasional electric scooters (both private and rentals). Now, electric bikes probably outnumber pedal bikes. Sometimes, you even see somebody pedaling along on an electric bike, while moving FAR faster than they'd be able to move that bike with their feeble pedaling alone.
So, if electric bikes are fine, then why not a bike with a gas motor...and then a motorcycle...and then....
I suppose the rule should be that electric bikes and scooters are motorized and shouldn't be allowed. Out here, that ship has probably sailed. The electric bikes allow for a lot of elderly people to get out in ways they likely couldn't before. On the other hand, I have yet to see an electric bike operating at a speed that isn't faster than it really ought to be operated. Plenty of pedal bikes are operated faster than they should be, but all electric bikes are, at least on a walking path.
Are your problems overthinking?
We've seen "path use" problems here for a long time.
In the 1970s Federal funds were used to create "bike paths" to encourage bicycling. These were concrete and similar to sidewalks except wider to permit 2-way travel, had smoother joints, and still have money spent to maintain them (adjacent mowing, high quality repairs, snow plowing, etc.).
From the start people insisted on walking on them, and that quickly led to signage and fines because pedestrian use basically rendered them useless for cycling. Motor travel use was also a problem but far rarer in the early decades.
With time, pedestrian use pretty much ruined them as cycling paths. Though legally they are still roads and money is still spent keeping them up to par... in all other ways they were abandoned to pedestrian use.
Now where these parallel what was a 4-lane road, the road got restriped as a 3-lane road plus bike path. These get chaotic near intersections as the right turn lane crosses over the bike path.
It's all a huge mess: ongoing expense, source of accidents, impediment to traffic flow, and that's before considering the chaos of several classes of powered bikes and scooters in the mix today.
Probably best not... but I'll admit it's almost acceptable when applied to douchebag bikers. (Or boy racers, come to think of it)Quote:
(British term for cigarette is not allowed I guess...)
We have them all over the place and they work well. I think the difference, though, is that our towns and cities typically only have single lane roads with multilane roads typically only occurring between towns and cities. We have a few dual carriageways in cities but they're rare. And we simply don't have an expectation of being able to drive above 30 mph in a built up area (in side roads it's 20).Quote:
"bike paths"
Putting a bike lane alongside a 4 lane highway where cars are pulling 70 mph just sounds stupid.
We don't have so many bike paths. When one exists, you often just need to look a bit closer to understand why. We have greenbelt pathways, some of which are quite nice. They are built because the land couldn't otherwise be developed. Some are single lane, others are double. The one in Boise is all double lane with a line in the middle, which people generally respect. The path is open to biking and walking, with a large number of both. I believe there are more pedestrians than bikers, but that might be because bikers pass through an area much faster, and therefore are in the field of view for a much shorter time for any observer. It does seem to work fine.
That may end up changing, though. Both the numbers and types of users are growing.
I like the bike lanes. It just so dangerous when you come up on a bike that has to use part of your lane because there isn't a bike lane. I'd hate to hit someone.
They probably wouldn't be thrilled, either.
It bothers me though to have a bike lane painted in the road when there is a separate, well-maintained, wide concrete path (with no encroaching trees or bushes allowed) running parallel which still gets funding for support specifically as a bicycle path. Throw some electric scooters on there, bobbing and weaving among the promenading pedestrians using it now... it's a mess.
But I repeat myself.
Yeah, that's a really interesting situation you mentioned there. It sounds like it evolved that way, but it hasn't evolved that way out here, or in any other place I'm familiar with (which is very few, and possibly VERY unrepresentative). I'm curious as to what forces allowed it to evolve that way and how we avoided it. From your description, our greenbelt is not materially different, and yet I'm not aware of any walking/biking/scooter conflict existing on our greenbelt.
What we have are concrete bike paths that look like incredibly nice broad sidewalks to the clueless. These now run through neighborhoods that built up around them over decades.
Because it become impossible to police this (imagine that every Joe Weeble started walking down paved streets one day) bike rotes were moved back into the road by restriping 4-lane roads into 3-car+1-bike lanes (center car lane for left turns only).
So now we have these "fancy sidewalks" running along artery routes, all maintained using funding that was set aside to encourage bicycle use. Bikes are back in the roads even though the entire point was to offer protected bicycle routes. Throw in the newer motorized contraptions at every scale running all over the place and the unruly mess got bigger.
The bicycling lobby comes off looking like the bad guy. Huge slabs of budget spent on them to no functional effect while they demand part of the road as well.
Another wrinkle is that if by fiat those were declared to be sidewalks the cost of snow clearing and repairs all falls on the adjacent property owners. They've paid nothing directly for them ever unlike all other sidewalks. They also lose their primacy and become subject to crowding by trees, shrubs, utility pole guywires, crossing driveways, etc.