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#211
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Home again.
On Jun 27, 6:38 pm, "Donna in NE La." wrote:
I usually just lurk but had to reply to this. LOL I grew up in northwest Florida and we had potted meat in our house. Potted meat and crackers for a snack--yum!! LOL I still love potted meat and crackers! I rarely eat it because it is SOOOO bad for me. But I love it! g Higs, Katherine |
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#212
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Home again.
Katherine wrote:
On Jun 27, 6:38 pm, "Donna in NE La." wrote: I usually just lurk but had to reply to this. LOL I grew up in northwest Florida and we had potted meat in our house. Potted meat and crackers for a snack--yum!! LOL I still love potted meat and crackers! I rarely eat it because it is SOOOO bad for me. But I love it! g Higs, Katherine I second that. Dennis |
#213
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Home again.
Could everyone please do me a HUGE favor? You may notice the title of this thread is "home again" and I started it on June 13 to tell everyone I was no longer in hospital. Being still pretty weak, I cross posted to several groups on which I am fairly regular. Now, however, because of our collective mastery of topic drift, it has grown into a monster. So,, if you reply to any of the postings, please strip out the extra addresses and post it only on the group you happen to be reading. Thanks again for all the good wishes, I am improving very slowly, but I AM improving. Olwyn Mary in New Orleans. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#214
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OT: SPAM
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#215
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OT: SPAM
On 6/27/07 7:20 PM, in article , "Kathleen"
wrote: ellice wrote: On 6/26/07 6:25 PM, "Katherine" wrote: On Jun 26, 3:16 pm, Karen C - California wrote: Katherine wrote: Yepper! Which is why home cooking is better. You can regulate what goes into the meal. Absolutely. But you can't regulate what goes into the husband when he's not home. When we first got married, I was puzzled how he could be gaining weight on what I was feeding him. Then I found out. On his way to work, he supplemented my healthy breakfast with a 600-calorie muffin slathered with butter. He topped off the low-cal lunch I packed with a bucket of the Colonel's finest. After a low-fat dinner, he'd run an errand by way of either Dunkin Donuts or the ice cream shop. It's not that I'm a bad cook, it's that I don't cook the way his mother did (with lots of salt, lots of fried food, gravy on everything) and my healthy meals made him feel "deprived". OK, how long have you been married to m y Keith? g I remember one summer when he swore that he wasn't eating anything but what I prepared and he kept gaining weight. Turns out he was DRINKING a minimum of two iced cappucinos every day! Higs, Katherine Hey, the cappucino's won't do anything - they're just milk and some expresso. But, the extra junk if it's full of syrup, etc - that'll drive the calorie count way up. I worked for a couple of architects who owned a tiny firm. Them, an apprentice and me. Swenson's (an ice cream shop) opened up downstairs. Afternoon malts quickly became a semi-weekly tradition. Although it was the partners' treat I quickly realized that no good could come of this and switched my own order to a blueberry phosphate with *lots* of ice and seltzer. The guys stuck to their large hand-scooped chocolate malts. By about Labor Day, the three of them were bemoaning the extra notches in their belts and were dumbfounded when I pointed out that their Swenson's habit added an extra 3000 calories to their weekly intake. They dropped the malted milk monkey and with no further effort, lost their big bellies within about 6 weeks (I hate guys sometimes). That is just cruel |
#216
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OT: SPAM
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#217
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OT: Home again.
CypSew wrote:
Now you're talking, Bruce! Except we "Texans" call it Menudo(may-nu-doe). My brother had lived a number of years in NM and W TX, and when he was dying in Meridian, MS several years ago, I took large containers over there to him with enough to share with the nurses. Then one day, I stopped at a restaurant near the hospital and found the owner's son-in-law was from the interior of Mexico and made the best menudo we'd tasted in many years. My Mother knew how to fix it and I have no idea of how/where she got the recipe, but the taste was perfect. She grew up, lived & died in mid-S MS, the area we call "The Oil Capital of the South." And no, it isn't good for a person to eat on a regular basis, but a treat ever so often. I haven't eaten any since my brother's death. BTW, I told my DS, a nurse practitioner, & his wife, a pharmacist, about this discussion and they laughed and said, "We've bought it at the Post Exchange in both MD and SC. He and wife are actually "real health-food addicts", most of the time, but eat a small can ever so often to remind themselves of their childhood. I thought that was hilarious, knowing her propensity for eating healthy. However, they don't give it to DGD. Nor do either of them eat menudo. Emily I've heard that the one infallible sign of an authentic Mexican restaurant in the U.S. is menudo on the menu. Also that menudo soup is a hangover cure. Not that I've tried it, mind. |
#218
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Home again.
On 6/27/07 7:09 PM, "me" wrote:
I don't know how "regional" distributed the products are, as I have lived all over the USA (both East & West coasts, in the North and in the South), and have found potted meat (labelled "potted meat" or "potted meat product") in grocery stores in every place I have ever lived. It is a pretty standard shelf item. You can even purchase it in "Super" WalMarts in their grocery section (which have their inventory entirely controlled & standardized at a corporate level). It is usually found in markets near the vienna sausages, and the "standard" tin is the same size. (It can also be purchased in "half" tins, which are half the height of a vienna sausage tin) me Interesting. I've never grocery shopped in Wal-Mart. But, then again, I didn't really grow up in the Wal-Mart region, and while now they are here, I tend to avoid them based on the child-slave labor issue (there are other bargain places to use). Might just be how labelling of products is at different places. Interesting far from stitching conversation. ellice On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 22:16:33 GMT, ellice wrote: How lovely. However, it is entirely likely and probable that some of these products are regional in their offering. I never doubted anyone else in other places hearing the phrase, just know that in the areas where I've lived it wasn't used. And I have never seen in the grocery store in any of those places something labelled "potted meat" . I have seen Vienna Sausages, and SPAM - but not with "potted meat" on the label. ellice |
#219
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OT: SPAM
On 6/27/07 7:20 PM, "Kathleen" wrote:
ellice wrote: On 6/26/07 6:25 PM, "Katherine" wrote: On Jun 26, 3:16 pm, Karen C - California wrote: Katherine wrote: Yepper! Which is why home cooking is better. You can regulate what goes into the meal. Absolutely. But you can't regulate what goes into the husband when he's not home. When we first got married, I was puzzled how he could be gaining weight on what I was feeding him. Then I found out. On his way to work, he supplemented my healthy breakfast with a 600-calorie muffin slathered with butter. He topped off the low-cal lunch I packed with a bucket of the Colonel's finest. After a low-fat dinner, he'd run an errand by way of either Dunkin Donuts or the ice cream shop. It's not that I'm a bad cook, it's that I don't cook the way his mother did (with lots of salt, lots of fried food, gravy on everything) and my healthy meals made him feel "deprived". OK, how long have you been married to m y Keith? g I remember one summer when he swore that he wasn't eating anything but what I prepared and he kept gaining weight. Turns out he was DRINKING a minimum of two iced cappucinos every day! Higs, Katherine Hey, the cappucino's won't do anything - they're just milk and some expresso. But, the extra junk if it's full of syrup, etc - that'll drive the calorie count way up. I worked for a couple of architects who owned a tiny firm. Them, an apprentice and me. Swenson's (an ice cream shop) opened up downstairs. Afternoon malts quickly became a semi-weekly tradition. Although it was the partners' treat I quickly realized that no good could come of this and switched my own order to a blueberry phosphate with *lots* of ice and seltzer. The guys stuck to their large hand-scooped chocolate malts. I totally understand this. When I first stopped my "real" job, I ended up as a supervisor/asst mngr in a Starbucks. Lots of fun. But, quickly I learned what the calories were in those hefty drinks. So, also, not being very much of a sweets person, that helped. But, you could see the regulars coming in for their daily 500 calorie drink. The worst - a very nice youngish woman, kind of puffy, with some skin issues - every day - a Caramel Macchiato, made with 5 or 6 shots of expresso, and extra caramel syrup (in the cup) and extra caramel sauce (on the top) and....instead of milk - with Half'n'half. What a killer - clog your arteries, hype you up, and fatten you up all at once. Personally,I'm a cappucino drinker in winter, and iced latte's in summer - maybe with 1 pump of syrup (about 20-30 cal). Always skim milk. Even on Weight Watchers - that way I get my milk in. I do need something about mid-afternoon. By about Labor Day, the three of them were bemoaning the extra notches in their belts and were dumbfounded when I pointed out that their Swenson's habit added an extra 3000 calories to their weekly intake. They dropped the malted milk monkey and with no further effort, lost their big bellies within about 6 weeks (I hate guys sometimes). I can see this. One of my contractors years ago in science world had put a cappucino machine in their kitchen for that particular group. When we'd go over to meet - review some seriuos calculations, the first thing one of the guys would immediately say (the chief investigators were a great pair, one Israeli, the other German - both now American) "C'mon - let's make cappucinos" . It was a hoot. I hate guys for the quick weight loss thing as well. DH - who only does the visit to the colonel when he's away or I'm not around - about once every 3 mnonths - can lose it sooooo quickly. His biggest issue - he still can eat like the teenage boy jock that he was - so getting him to go with smaller portions on some things, is the key. But, if he just cuts some sweet indulgence - he loses quickly. Life just isn't fair. ellice |
#220
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OT: SPAM
On 6/27/07 10:47 PM, "spampot" ""spampot"@NO SPAM orph.org" wrote:
ellice wrote: On 6/26/07 6:25 PM, "Katherine" wrote: On Jun 26, 3:16 pm, Karen C - California wrote: Katherine wrote: Yepper! Which is why home cooking is better. You can regulate what goes into the meal. Absolutely. But you can't regulate what goes into the husband when he's not home. When we first got married, I was puzzled how he could be gaining weight on what I was feeding him. Then I found out. On his way to work, he supplemented my healthy breakfast with a 600-calorie muffin slathered with butter. He topped off the low-cal lunch I packed with a bucket of the Colonel's finest. After a low-fat dinner, he'd run an errand by way of either Dunkin Donuts or the ice cream shop. It's not that I'm a bad cook, it's that I don't cook the way his mother did (with lots of salt, lots of fried food, gravy on everything) and my healthy meals made him feel "deprived". OK, how long have you been married to m y Keith? g I remember one summer when he swore that he wasn't eating anything but what I prepared and he kept gaining weight. Turns out he was DRINKING a minimum of two iced cappucinos every day! Higs, Katherine Hey, the cappucino's won't do anything - they're just milk and some expresso. But, the extra junk if it's full of syrup, etc - that'll drive the calorie count way up. Ellice The iced cappuccinos are usually sweetened, though. The stuff the BK and MacDonalds is serving - absolutely. It's purposely being marketed that way, iced coffees, etc. Dunkin Donut's as well. Read/saw some show about the coffee wars. But a true cappucino isn't. Of course, an iced cappucino is kind of an oxymoron - in that cappucinos are traditionally espresso with a 50/50 foam-milk mix. Lattes are the straight milk - with a tiny bit of foam. So, well, an iced cappucino is a tough thing - unless you're pouring foamed milk into a glass with ice & expresso. And then if you really get into it - there is the "wet" cappucino - which is higher percentage milk/lower percentage foam & the "dry" cappucino - the opposite - more foam, less milk. In a coffee bar they won't sweeten unless you ask them to, or you're ordering a sweetened drink recipe. Bottled Frappucino - definitely addictive and sweet. The things you can learn as a barista. So, I drink cappucinos because it's a little less "milky" than a latte. ellice |
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