glass eyedropper in the kitchen
"George M. Middius" wrote:
>
> Gary wrote:
>
> > > > I have a device that screws into the lemon. It has a spout on it so
> > > > you can squeeze out the juice. Then you put the cap on it and put it
> > > > in the fridge.
> > >
> > > Be sure to roll it hard on a flat surface to activiate the juice molecules.
> >
> > I'll bet Julie bought that device late one night for only $19.95 plus S&H
> > and she probably got a second one for free by calling and ordering within 15
> > minutes.
> >
> > I'm sorry but that sounds like the silliest, most worthless kitchen gadget
> > that I've ever heard of.
>
> Wrong again. Just goes to show you that your precious Bible does not
> contain all the answers.
Bite me George. heheh Now that you've found someone else to pick on, you
are making a fool of yourself. First you assumed I'm some hardcore
republican and I'm not. Now you assume I'm some hard core religious person
which I'm very not. Very wrong in both cases, pal. You should know your
enemy well before you attack.
A lemon costs between 25 and 50 cents each. I just bought two on Saturday
@.50 each. If I don't use all of one, I just put the remainder into a
ziplock bag to use soon. The idea of screwing a tap into one is the dumbest
thing I've ever heard of.
Forgive me if I'm assuming wrong like you do, but I suppose you *also* sat
up late one night and ordered 2 of these items.
G.
>
> The lemon-tap is a clever gadget that does what it's supposed to. It's
> cheaply made because they used to give them away in a bag of lemons.
> The weak spot was the hinge cap -- it would wear out after a couple
> dozen lemons. What it does well is let you tap a lemon for fresh juice
> several times over a couple or three days.
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