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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote:
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ I appear miraculously to have earned the tinfoil hat. Gosh. This is a Special Occasion. Some of my answers were problematic. I rinse out food cans before putting them in the recycling bin (not the trash). I've never replaced any flatware, so MCINL. Is a "proper spoon rest" necessarily spoon-shaped? If so, I lied on that one. Cindy Hamilton |
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Chatty wrote on Mon, 18 Jun 2007 15:53:00 +0200:
CC> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ CC> Vote now! (or not) CC> -- CC> Cheers CC> Chatty Cathy You might have had another question or two about cutting boards. What are they made from: plastic or wood? How do you keep them clean: dishwasher, just wipe down, wipe down with bleach etc.? Are they built into the counter? (Not a good idea, IMHO.) James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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James Silverton wrote:
> You might have had another question or two about cutting boards. > > What are they made from: plastic or wood? > How do you keep them clean: dishwasher, just wipe down, wipe down with > bleach etc.? > Are they built into the counter? (Not a good idea, IMHO.) BTDT http://www.recfoodcooking.com/survey...html?survey=40 There was quite a nice thread about it, IIRC. -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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Cindy Hamilton > wrote in message
ups.com... [snip] > I rinse out food cans before putting them in the > recycling bin (not the trash). Ditto this; I do the same with the meat/poultry plastic trays and milk cartons. I don't want my recycling can to smell like my garbage can so this extra step has saved me some very unpleasant aromas. > I've never replaced any flatware, so MCINL. If we need to replace flatware (not yet in seventeen years), it'll be due to wanting a new pattern and not because we're throwing it out with the plate scrapings. Can you really purchase individual knives, forks, and spoons? I've only ever seen them in sets... The Ranger |
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Chatty wrote on Mon, 18 Jun 2007 16:17:54 +0200:
??>> You might have had another question or two about cutting ??>> boards. ??>> ??>> What are they made from: plastic or wood? ??>> How do you keep them clean: dishwasher, just wipe down, wipe ??>> down with bleach etc.? Are they built into the counter? ??>> (Not a good idea, IMHO.) CC> BTDT CC> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/survey...html?survey=40 CC> There was quite a nice thread about it, IIRC. I'd forgotten about that one but it did not cover the care and feeding of cutting boards :-) James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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The Ranger wrote:
> > If we need to replace flatware (not yet in seventeen years), it'll > be due to wanting a new pattern and not because we're throwing it > out with the plate scrapings. Can you really purchase individual > knives, forks, and spoons? I've only ever seen them in sets... You can buy the plain SS ones (for everyday use) in sets of 6 (teaspoons, knives, whatever) around here. I don't have to buy the whole set... If you haven't lost one in 17 years you are lucky... Teaspoons are like socks around here - they "go missing". And my DS managed to "lose" one of my "good" knives years ago - he left it in a pizza box and threw the whole thing away - well, that's the theory anyway ![]() drawer full of *real* silver flatware. Never use it. It stains too easily and is a b*tch to clean. -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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James Silverton wrote:
> > I'd forgotten about that one but it did not cover the care and feeding > of cutting boards :-) The thread did - in great detail LOL -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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> On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote: >> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ >> Vote now! (or not) >> -- >> Cheers >> Chatty Cathy > > I wash my cans & bottles before I put them in the recycle bin. They > don't go in the "trash". > > Harrumph! > > T. > Well, good for you LOL! -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote:
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > Vote now! (or not) > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy I wash my cans & bottles before I put them in the recycle bin. They don't go in the "trash". Harrumph! T. |
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On Jun 18, 10:44 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote:
We have a whole > drawer full of *real* silver flatware. Never use it. It stains too > easily and is a b*tch to clean. > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy Now that I am old, I've taken the 'good silver' out of the box and use it everyday in every way. It goes in the dishwasher, too. Same goes with that good china with gold rims around it -- What the heck! I do have a drawer with ss, but it never gets used now except for a food that needs a little more handling strength. Dee Dee |
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Dee Dee wrote:
> > Now that I am old, I've taken the 'good silver' out of the box and > use it everyday in every way. It goes in the dishwasher, too. Same > goes with that good china with gold rims around it -- What the heck! LOL. How old is "old"? We got our silverware given to us by the MIL - who inherited it from her parents - and she's 80-something. I don't have a dishwasher, but even if I did, I wouldn't dare put the "family heirloom" silver in there... so it's elbow-grease and lots of "Silvo". > > I do have a drawer with ss, but it never gets used now except for a > food that needs a little more handling strength. SS is "practical" at the moment - I have children, and one of them is only 3 y/o ![]() -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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> If we need to replace flatware (not yet in seventeen years), it'll
> be due to wanting a new pattern and not because we're throwing it > out with the plate scrapings. Can you really purchase individual > knives, forks, and spoons? I've only ever seen them in sets... > > The Ranger > > You can if you use silver. Generally stainless steel is sold in full sets of 4 or 8 or at the minimum one full place setting. There may be some patterns and manufacturers that let you purchase just a fork or spoon or knife. But you can buy just one piece of a silver or silver plated pattern. Not cheap either. We've replaced a few silver spoons from my MILs silver that we inherited. -- Queenie *** Be the change you wish to see in the world *** |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 07:35:11 -0700, "The Ranger"
> wrote: >If we need to replace flatware (not yet in seventeen years), it'll >be due to wanting a new pattern and not because we're throwing it >out with the plate scrapings. Can you really purchase individual >knives, forks, and spoons? I've only ever seen them in sets... I guess if you purchase the really expensive stuff OR the really cheap stuff, you can do it individually.... but I purchase 3 heavy weight sets and make a service for 12, so if something grows feet and walks away (dinner forks used to be my problem).... there's more where that came from. -- See return address to reply by email |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 16:47:03 +0200, Chatty Cathy
> wrote: wrote: >> On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote: >>> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ >>> Vote now! (or not) >>> -- >>> Cheers >>> Chatty Cathy >> >> I wash my cans & bottles before I put them in the recycle bin. They >> don't go in the "trash". >> >> Harrumph! >> >> T. >> >Well, good for you LOL! No recycling in SA? -- See return address to reply by email |
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In article >,
Chatty Cathy > wrote: > http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > Vote now! (or not) > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy Fascinating results so far! :-) -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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![]() "MayQueen" > wrote >> If we need to replace flatware (not yet in seventeen years), it'll be due >> to wanting a new pattern and not because we're throwing it out with the >> plate scrapings. Can you really purchase individual knives, forks, and >> spoons? I've only ever seen them in sets... > You can if you use silver. Generally stainless steel is sold in full sets > of 4 or 8 or at the minimum one full place setting. There may be some > patterns and manufacturers that let you purchase just a fork or spoon or > knife. I have seen flatware sold by the piece, though not very often. Usually it's a nominal amount and it's just a plain pattern, you don't get your choice. I feel like I've seen them at BB&B, and I know I've seen them at a Crate and Barrel outlet. Of course you can find single pieces at thrift shops, etc. I know that wasn't really the question. nancy |
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sf wrote:
> > No recycling in SA? > Some, sf - but mainly for glass and plastic. Never personally seen a "bin" for cans. But then again, I don't buy much canned goods because I find that most of the canned goods here are (how can I phrase this politely) - yuk, so I have never really looked for them. Even soda pop. I will take glass (or even plastic) over a can any day... -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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On Jun 18, 11:05 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote:
> Dee Dee wrote: > > > Now that I am old, I've taken the 'good silver' out of the box and > > use it everyday in every way. It goes in the dishwasher, too. Same > > goes with that good china with gold rims around it -- What the heck! > > We got our silverware given to us by the MIL - who inherited it from her > parents - and she's 80-something. I don't have a dishwasher, but even if > I did, I wouldn't dare put the "family heirloom" silver in there... so > it's elbow-grease and lots of "Silvo". > > Chatty Cathy I inherited from my mother-in-law who inherited from her grandmother(s), but those are in-hiding! They will get passed down -- along with my used-up (hopefully) ones. Dee Dee |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 15:53:00 +0200, Chatty Cathy wrote: > >> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ >> Vote now! (or not) > > Why am I always #13 to vote? Fortunately I'm not much of a > triskaidekaphobiac, otherwise I'd insist on a titanium hat. ROFL > > ObFood: > > -sw Spaghetti and meat sauce tonight - its Monday, and that's about all I am up to ![]() -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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Sheldon wrote:
> > I typically use an empty tin from the recipe for a spoon rest. Frugal. > > With the choices supplied I couldn't answer those questions honestly > either. So what's new? > > I don't see any connection with those questions to trivia.... trivia > is trivial and obscure facts, not individual's habits.... how many > spoons/boards one has is not trivia... more at picyune nosiness > > Searching <kitchen trivia> on the net produces quite a few interesting > sites, here's just one: > > http://www.brownielocks.com/foodtrivia.html I love you too Sheldon ![]() Just curious. -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> > I appear miraculously to have earned the tinfoil hat. Gosh. This > is a Special Occasion. > > Some of my answers were problematic. I rinse out food cans before > putting them in the recycling bin (not the trash). > > I've never replaced any flatware, so MCINL. > > Is a "proper spoon rest" necessarily spoon-shaped? If so, I lied on > that one. I typically use an empty tin from the recipe for a spoon rest. With the choices supplied I couldn't answer those questions honestly either. I don't see any connection with those questions to trivia.... trivia is trivial and obscure facts, not individual's habits.... how many spoons/boards one has is not trivia... more at picyune nosiness Searching <kitchen trivia> on the net produces quite a few interesting sites, here's just one: http://www.brownielocks.com/foodtrivia.html Sheldon |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 17:25:52 +0200, Chatty Cathy
> wrote: >sf wrote: > >> >> No recycling in SA? >> > >Some, sf - but mainly for glass and plastic. Never personally seen a >"bin" for cans. Aluminum was the first recycling I noticed (sure we had the 5¢ bottle deposit/refund, but that didn't count). We don't have to separate our recycling anymore. Just chuck it all onto one bin and they do it for us. >But then again, I don't buy much canned goods because I >find that most of the canned goods here are (how can I phrase this >politely) - yuk, so I have never really looked for them. Even soda pop. >I will take glass (or even plastic) over a can any day... You don't buy tomato anything in a can, just fresh tomatoes? How about beans - kidney, refried? Olives? Glass has gone the way of the dinosaur here. Plastic bounces when it hits the grocery store floor, glass doesn't.... less clean up for store personnel, I guess. -- See return address to reply by email |
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On Jun 18, 10:48 am, wrote:
> On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote: > > >http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > Vote now! (or not) > > -- > > Cheers > > Chatty Cathy > > I wash my cans & bottles before I put them in the recycle bin. They > don't go in the "trash". > > Harrumph! > > T. I took it to be "throwing them out" and said yes, I do rinse before tossing -- into the recycle bin. My DH tossed out third generation baby utensils once when he went somewhere alone with the kidlet. He did not get it when I went ballistic, since we also had another set, but those were not as old. I guess it served me right for being in the hospital recouperating from back surgery.... maxine in ri |
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Chatty Cathy wrote:
> > http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > Vote now! (or not) > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy I rinse any cans with significant residue before they go in the garbage. We do things efficiently here, no bogus recycling bins, just put it in the garbage and they sort it at the far end. For those of you with recycling bins, you're just wasting your time with feel good nonsense, they still have to sort it out at the far end anyway since people put things in the wrong bins. No wooden spoons here, just plastic and metal. Wood ones just harbor bacteria and they sometimes shatter under heavy mixing load and you have to pick splinters out of what you were mixing. I've never had to replace any silverware. I've got several cutting boards, all plastic. I've become particularly fond of the fairly thin semi disposable plastic cutting boards since you can flex them into a chute when putting what you chopped on them into a pan. Pete C. |
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Steve Wertz > wrote in message
... [snip] > I gave up trying to recycle at home years ago. > If you put one wrong thing in one of those bins > (Like a #5-XYZ plastic), they won't pick up > the entire bin. So screw them. We had a collector that was a complete ass like that too. I solved the noncollection issue by calling in and having a supervisor pick up my recycling the one time he passed my house by. It's amazing how quickly his attitude was adjusted after that single pick up. I never had any recycling left curbside after that. Now we use this "Everything-together" can. No issues whatsoever. The Ranger |
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sf wrote:
> > You don't buy tomato anything in a can, just fresh tomatoes? How > about beans - kidney, refried? Olives? Canned goods I buy mainly a tomatoes (yes, you are right), coconut milk and the odd cans of tuna. Hardly ever buy canned beans anymore. There are plenty of other canned goods available, but I just don't like them. Frozen veggies are much better than than canned, if you can't get fresh, IMHO. And I haven't bought a can of soup for over a year... Too salty. > > Glass has gone the way of the dinosaur here. Plastic bounces when it > hits the grocery store floor, glass doesn't.... less clean up for > store personnel, I guess. > Olives, pickles, mayo, sauces and a lot of other stuff either come in glass or plastic... -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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Pete wrote on Mon, 18 Jun 2007 11:40:14 -0500:
PC> Chatty Cathy wrote: ??>> ??>> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ ??>> Vote now! (or not) ??>> -- ??>> Cheers ??>> Chatty Cathy PC> No wooden spoons here, just plastic and metal. Wood ones PC> just harbor bacteria and they sometimes shatter under heavy PC> mixing load and you have to pick splinters out of what you PC> were mixing. It's not really a spoon but I use a spatula I bought at Williams-Sonoma. It's made from bamboo and, to my pleased surprise, the marking "dishwasher safe" is actually quite correct. It probably has been washed 3 times a week for nearly a year. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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![]() > Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> >> I've never replaced any flatware, so MCINL. >> I have had the same experience. We have the same flatware we've had since we were married in 1966, service for 8 stainless and an almost exactly matching service for 10 in silver. The only piece ever lost was a stainless serving spoon at a potluck. I have lost good Wustof paring knives twice when they went into the trash along with the peelings. Luckily they occasionally are on sale. gloria p |
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Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Jun 18, 9:53 am, Chatty Cathy > wrote: >> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > I appear miraculously to have earned the tinfoil hat. Gosh. This > is a Special Occasion. > Celebrate! And don't forget to wear your new hat! ![]() > I've never replaced any flatware, so MCINL. > Same here. Jill |
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"Chatty Cathy" > wrote in message
... > http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > Vote now! (or not) > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy It's funny, I never thought about it before this survey came up, how many cutting boards do I have? Well, the answer would be a dozen! I didn't realize there were so many. Our kitchen cabinets have built in cutting boards that slide out above the drawers. I have 2 large wooden boards I inherited, 3 bamboo (beautiful!) boards, and 5 of the kind you can roll up- one for meat, one for poultry, one for fish, one for veggies and one for fruits. I prefer a separate one for veggies and fruits because I really don't want my watermelon tasting of onion ![]() kimberly -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCDbWRzbG1M "I told you this was easy" |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 12:02:41 -0700, "Nexis" > wrote:
>It's funny, I never thought about it before this survey came up, how many cutting >boards do I have? >Well, the answer would be a dozen! I didn't realize there were so many. I have a butcher block table by John Boos, plus a heavy wooden Boos cutting board. Plus quite a few (?4) plastic (not really sure of the material) cutting boards. Two others I have in my traveling pack...for when I am on assignment. Christine |
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![]() (2007-06-18) Survey on the RFC site: Kitchen trivia... Group: rec.food.cooking Date: Mon, Jun 18, 2007, 3:53pm (EDT+6) From: (Chatty*Cathy) http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ "Vote now! (or not)" -- Cheers Chatty Cathy I usually rinse out my cans just so they dont smell up the garbage.. or I take the ones with the shiny insides and pop in a plastic bag to refreeze leftover sauce etc.then pop the bag out under hot water and back to the freezer. I usually keep a plastic Winn-Dixie bag in the freezer tied tightly to collect any wet food remnants,bones etc,to be tossed out on garbage day.Keeps my garbage bin from nasty things.Learned that from a nieghbor. I also poke holes in the opposite end to start plants in.... * I have a ceramic duck for a spoonrest thats seen better days. Teaspoons mysteriously get lost just like socks in a dryer. I use whatever packege I open as a cutting board then toss the whole thing Cheers,Smitty |
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On Jun 18, 3:09 pm, Christine Dabney > wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 12:02:41 -0700, "Nexis" > wrote: > >It's funny, I never thought about it before this survey came up, how many cutting > >boards do I have? > >Well, the answer would be a dozen! I didn't realize there were so many. > > I have a butcher block table by John Boos, plus a heavy wooden Boos > cutting board. Plus quite a few (?4) plastic (not really sure of the > material) cutting boards. Two others I have in my traveling > pack...for when I am on assignment. > > Christine I have about 10+. All of them are the plastic kind. Sometimes I'll have 5-6 in the dishwasher at a time. Actually I could use a few more. ;-)) Dee Dee |
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"Chatty Cathy" > wrote in message
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > Vote now! (or not) > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy Do you rinse/wash out empty food cans before tossing them in the trash? Never. I'm throwing it away so why wash it? How many wooden spoons do you have in the kitchen? More than 3. I don't use them often, but I have at least 10. What do you have to replace *most* often? My choice is not listed ??????? I replace the entire set when I get tired of them. I'm on my...third? set. My brother and his family are using my last set. Do you have a proper 'spoon rest' in the kitchen (or more than one)? Yes. The clean kitchen counter is a "proper" spoon rest, as far as I'm concerned. So is the clean top of the stove, between the burners. How many cutting boards do you have in the kitchen? More than 3. Five that I use regurlarly. Several decorative wooden ones if you count them. Hmmmmm? There are 4 more cutting boards out in the cabinet on the patio. BOB |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 17:05:37 +0200, Chatty Cathy
> wrote: >Dee Dee wrote: > >> >> Now that I am old, I've taken the 'good silver' out of the box and >> use it everyday in every way. It goes in the dishwasher, too. Same >> goes with that good china with gold rims around it -- What the heck! > >LOL. How old is "old"? > >We got our silverware given to us by the MIL - who inherited it from her >parents - and she's 80-something. I don't have a dishwasher, but even if >I did, I wouldn't dare put the "family heirloom" silver in there... so >it's elbow-grease and lots of "Silvo". LOL! When my mother gave me her and dad's wedding china, I was soooooooo reverent. We had a big holiday meal at my house (I think it was Thanksgiving), and I pulled out all the stops. When it was time to clean up, my aunt started to put the china in the dishwasher. I was AGHAST. And as I corrected her and began to pull it out, mom said "if I had had a dishwasher all these years, I would have used it on the china". That settled it. China went in the DW. (course, if mom HAD had a DW, I might now have fewer china pieces.....) TammyM, we ain't got no silverware |
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On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 09:46:34 -0700, "The Ranger"
> wrote: >Steve Wertz > wrote in message ... >[snip] >> I gave up trying to recycle at home years ago. >> If you put one wrong thing in one of those bins >> (Like a #5-XYZ plastic), they won't pick up >> the entire bin. So screw them. >Now we use this "Everything-together" can. No issues whatsoever. That's the case in Sac too. I've never had a problem. TammyM |
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On Jun 20, 11:04 pm, Terry Pulliam Burd >
wrote: > > My grandmother gave me her wedding china many years ago. It was a > service for 24, mostly complete, with "morning plates," various > serving pieces, small and soup bowls, salad plates, cups, saucers...it > is massive. Attrition has made it a usable service for 14, if you keep > out the chipped pieces. It's Noritake from around 1916. It's hand > painted with gold trim and gets used on the major holidays, meaning > Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter. Not one piece goes in the > dishwasher, which makes my cleanup crew really, really happy <g> The > cleanup crew, BTW, is comprised of whichever female child unit is on > hand, as the SILs sit on their rear ends and swap stories. This is > actually okay with everyone, b/c the female child units are sisters > and step-sister, and this makes for a great bonding time. They chatter > away the whole time they're working and actually seem to be enjoying > themselves, plus the SILs live on opposite coasts and really enjoy > each others' company, so a good time is had by all. > > Add to that, I inherited my mother's 12 piece silver flatware set and > that doesn't go in the dishwasher, either. Add to that the crystal > that doesn't go in the dishwasher. After a Christmas dinner for 18 > (odd pieces from stainless flatware and Dansk everyday filling in the > blanks), every flat surface in the kitchen has a dish towel laid out > with something drying on it while the girls dry the silver and > crystal. > > I usually spend several days in preparation for a big holiday and go > into overdrive on The Day, so seeing the girls in the kitchen while I > lounge around with an aperitif and an espresso produces a feeling of > well being :-) > > Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd Your ancestors certainly showed good judgment in realizing the joy that these gifts would bring you. Thanks for sharing these important events in your life. Dee Dee |
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On Wed, 20 Jun 2007 20:04:19 -0700, Terry Pulliam Burd
> wrote: >My grandmother gave me her wedding china many years ago. It was a >service for 24, mostly complete, with "morning plates," What's a morning plate? I know luncheon plates are smaller than dinner plates.... but morning plates? -- See return address to reply by email |
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