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Vote now! (or not)... -- Cheers Chatty Cathy Garlic: the element without which life as we know it would be impossible |
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Andy wrote:
> ChattyCathy said... > >> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ >> >> Vote now! (or not)... > > > After the garlic stomper post, I'll be cooking for all potential Mrs. Andys > from here on out! LOL! Don't blame you... -- Cheers Chatty Cathy Garlic: the element without which life as we know it would be impossible |
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ChattyCathy said...
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > Vote now! (or not)... After the garlic stomper post, I'll be cooking for all potential Mrs. Andys from here on out! Andy |
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ChattyCathy wrote:
> > http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > Vote now! (or not)... > > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy > > Garlic: the element without which life as we know it would be impossible Nice survey ![]() that lottery, I shan't be going out to restaurants too often (sigh). This time, I'll go with the #7 Sports Hat - it'll come in handy with all the bike riding ![]() Sky, who still feels lucky and hopes to win that "big lottery" someday -- Ultra Ultimate Kitchen Rule - Use the Timer! Ultimate Kitchen Rule -- Cook's Choice |
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ChattyCathy wrote:
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > Vote now! (or not)... Loverly LOs tonight.... Wednesday I made a batch of fried sausage (16) with a ton of home grown bell peppers (16), onions (six), and sliced garlic (entire head)... don't need to cook, and why would I want to eat out or even consider take out... I'm gonna stay home and pig out! Had one portion for dinner on Wednesday, have three portions remaining... I can easy eat this every other night for a week. Got a jumbo 30 can case of Genny too. Sheldon Sleepalone |
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Sky said...
> Sky, who still feels lucky and hopes to win that "big lottery" someday Sky, I hope you do! I wrote a lot of lotto checker programs in my day. To try to convince my mate in Australia to stop playing the lottery I wrote a Perl program to generate 100,000 pseudo random lotto quick pick games and then match them against a winning number series I chose. I had it set to infinitely loop until it triggered a grand prize match. It took about 10 seconds to run each iteration. After 48 hours I had to kill the program. You do the math! If you can't do that, don't play the lottery! <G> 170,000,000:1 He keeps sending me money to manage his lotto habit, for 10%. In 5 years he's lost $800. I've made $3.00, MAYBE! I still go in for $1.00 when it's over $100 million. I can't be bothered with a measly $50 million jackpot. What kind of island would THAT buy? <G> Andy |
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Sheldon said...
> Got a jumbo 30 can case of Genny too. Now I KNOW you're sick!!! Andy |
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Andy wrote:
> > Sky said... > > > Sky, who still feels lucky and hopes to win that "big lottery" someday > > Sky, > > I hope you do! > > I wrote a lot of lotto checker programs in my day. To try to convince my > mate in Australia to stop playing the lottery I wrote a Perl program to > generate 100,000 pseudo random lotto quick pick games and then match them > against a winning number series I chose. I had it set to infinitely loop > until it triggered a grand prize match. It took about 10 seconds to run > each iteration. After 48 hours I had to kill the program. > > You do the math! If you can't do that, don't play the lottery! <G> > > 170,000,000:1 > > He keeps sending me money to manage his lotto habit, for 10%. In 5 years > he's lost $800. I've made $3.00, MAYBE! > > I still go in for $1.00 when it's over $100 million. I can't be bothered > with a measly $50 million jackpot. What kind of island would THAT buy? <G> > > Andy I get 1 lotto and 1 Mega Millions ticket each time I get gas. I figure what's $2 on top of the $60 in gas? Not likely I'm going to win, but not really going to miss the $50/yr. As for the jackpot, I don't pay much attention to it, I'll take anything I can and anything that puts a mil in the bank is sufficient for me to retire. I don't need a multi million dollar house. |
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On Sep 14, 11:31 am, ChattyCathy > wrote:
> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > > Vote now! (or not)... > > -- > Cheers > Chatty Cathy > > Garlic: the element without which life as we know it would be impossible MCINL DH's church is having their monthly potluck tonight, so we're taking my mom's veggie bean soup in the crockpot. OTOH, there will be takeout there. Having worked with the kitchen crew (who set up the tables, organize the food, slice the cakes and such) it's amazing to me how many people will bring a bucket of KFC or buy a fancy cake from Whole Paycheck. maxine in ri |
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On Sep 14, 12:39 pm, Andy <q> wrote:
> Sheldon said... > > > Got a jumbo 30 can case of Genny too. > > Now I KNOW you're sick!!! > > Andy Think global, buy local. maxine in ri, where Narragansett is no longer made |
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:31:08 +0200, ChattyCathy
> wrote: >http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > >Vote now! (or not)... Not me on both questions. We moved 2 months ago to a place that has 25+ restaurants within easy walking distance. Never been to one of them or ordered out. We're on our way out to our new weekend cottage and I've finally got everything together to try Steves signature Lamb Gyro recipe. I'm jonesin for a Gyro big time. After seeing pictures of his food I'll trust that it's going to be good. There's no restaurants where were going so if it's bad we'll be having cream cheese on crackers with sardines. Lou |
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Lou Decruss said...
> cream cheese on crackers with sardines Very doable!!! Have a nice retreat. Andy |
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maxine in ri said...
> On Sep 14, 12:39 pm, Andy <q> wrote: >> Sheldon said... >> >> > Got a jumbo 30 can case of Genny too. >> >> Now I KNOW you're sick!!! >> >> Andy > > Think global, buy local. > > maxine in ri, where Narragansett is no longer made I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. It was the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we couldn't swallow! The good ol' neon green Genesee! I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. Andy |
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![]() "maxine in ri" > wrote in message oups.com... > Think global, buy local. > > maxine in ri, I like that. Dee Dee |
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:31:08 +0200, ChattyCathy
> wrote: >http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > >Vote now! (or not)... Good time to ask... I've been hard at work this afternoon cleaning (and I've still got more to do) so I'm not going to cook anything special. I gave DH a choice - frozen chicken tortellini with tomato sauce, frozen cheese ravioli with bolegnase (also frozen), frozen lasagna, or pizza... he said pizza but then we reconsidered because he had lunch out today (I didn't... I didn't even HAVE lunch!) and we really can't afford to do it again. So we're having the next best thing - frozen cheese ravioli and tomato sauce with ham. Those frozen pastas are great - they're quick and easy to fix, and if you throw a can of seasoned tomato on them you've got dinner for less than five bucks and quicker than waiting for the delivery guy to show up! |
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:31:08 +0200, ChattyCathy
> wrote: >http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ > >Vote now! (or not)... We went to a restaurant tonight.... for pizza (and one order of lasanga "dinner", which means one soup/salad and cloth napkins all around). It's a pizza joint that my husband went to when he was 10, maybe less.... and it had been in business for a while by that time. Needless to say: We've been going there (together) a long time. The original owner sold to a regular customer 25ish years ago and the place has barely changed (motto: don't mess with success). The new owner has watched my kids grow up and now knows my six year old grandson as well. I have to say that it has become a very kid friendly place over the years in a non mechanical way. They've always had a side counter next to the pizza oven. Back in the "olden days", the side counter was where the take out orders were done, but now it's the "kids counter". Kids that have trouble staying put in a chair have a place to go and watch the action. While they are there they are given a piece of pizza dough to play with and some cheese to munch on. The staff is careful not to over feed them. It's get just enough to take the rumble out of their tummy. Need I repeat that I absolutely love that restaurant and think it's a worthy place to celebrate a family event in? So, I couldn't think of a better establishment to celebrate getting the keys to a new house for my son (and his SO) than that pizza joint. Life is good, at least for now. ![]() -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 10:59:08 -0500, Andy <q> wrote:
> >After the garlic stomper post, I'll be cooking for all potential Mrs. Andys >from here on out! WHAT??? You didn't do that before? OMG... -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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sf wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:31:08 +0200, ChattyCathy > > wrote: > >> http://www.recfoodcooking.com/ >> >> Vote now! (or not)... > > We went to a restaurant tonight.... for pizza (and one order of > lasanga "dinner", which means one soup/salad and cloth napkins all > around). It's a pizza joint that my husband went to when he was 10, > maybe less.... and it had been in business for a while by that time. > Needless to say: We've been going there (together) a long time. > > The original owner sold to a regular customer 25ish years ago and the > place has barely changed (motto: don't mess with success). The new > owner has watched my kids grow up and now knows my six year old > grandson as well. > > I have to say that it has become a very kid friendly place over the > years in a non mechanical way. They've always had a side counter next > to the pizza oven. Back in the "olden days", the side counter was > where the take out orders were done, but now it's the "kids counter". > Kids that have trouble staying put in a chair have a place to go and > watch the action. While they are there they are given a piece of > pizza dough to play with and some cheese to munch on. The staff is > careful not to over feed them. It's get just enough to take the > rumble out of their tummy. > > Need I repeat that I absolutely love that restaurant and think it's a > worthy place to celebrate a family event in? So, I couldn't think of > a better establishment to celebrate getting the keys to a new house > for my son (and his SO) than that pizza joint. Life is good, at least > for now. How lovely ![]() |
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sf wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 10:59:08 -0500, Andy <q> wrote: > >> >> After the garlic stomper post, I'll be cooking for all potential >> Mrs. Andys from here on out! > > WHAT??? You didn't do that before? > > OMG... Awwwwwwww good luck Andy ![]() |
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![]() <sf> wrote > Need I repeat that I absolutely love that restaurant and think it's a > worthy place to celebrate a family event in? So, I couldn't think of > a better establishment to celebrate getting the keys to a new house > for my son (and his SO) than that pizza joint. Life is good, at least > for now. That's a great story. However, when I first read it, it was in Ophelia's reply and I had it in my head she is the one who went out for pizza. Struck me as strange, her having this pizza place in Scotland. They probably do, what do I know. Heh. I hardly ever go out on Friday nights, or even order in. My crowd-avoidance thing. Forget if you call out for chinese or pizza, you'd better go pick it up yourself if you're hungry, otherwise it's a long wait. However, I did go out for lunch. Sat at the bar, naturally, and had eggplant parmesan while overlooking the river ... excuse me, estuary. Swans. Boats. Mansions. Nice view. Then went walking on the beach and then took a drive through an historic fort. Then went to see some fossil beds in my town, been meaning to go there for years. I did not see any fossils which is what I suspected. All in all, a nice day. nancy |
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Nancy Young wrote:
> <sf> wrote > >> Need I repeat that I absolutely love that restaurant and think it's a >> worthy place to celebrate a family event in? So, I couldn't think of >> a better establishment to celebrate getting the keys to a new house >> for my son (and his SO) than that pizza joint. Life is good, at >> least for now. > > That's a great story. However, when I first read it, it was in > Ophelia's reply and I had it in my head she is the one who went > out for pizza. Struck me as strange, her having this pizza place > in Scotland. They probably do, what do I know. Heh. heck yes ![]() ![]() |
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![]() "Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > Nancy Young wrote: >> That's a great story. However, when I first read it, it was in >> Ophelia's reply and I had it in my head she is the one who went >> out for pizza. Struck me as strange, her having this pizza place >> in Scotland. They probably do, what do I know. Heh. > > heck yes ![]() ![]() I'm sure! It's just this sort of legacy place, your husband has been going there since he was 10 ... silly me, I thought you might say that about a chip shop or something ... not a pizza joint. Just being a goof. nancy |
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Nancy Young wrote:
> "Ophelia" > wrote in message > ... >> Nancy Young wrote: > >>> That's a great story. However, when I first read it, it was in >>> Ophelia's reply and I had it in my head she is the one who went >>> out for pizza. Struck me as strange, her having this pizza place >>> in Scotland. They probably do, what do I know. Heh. >> >> heck yes ![]() ![]() > > I'm sure! It's just this sort of legacy place, your husband has > been going there since he was 10 ... silly me, I thought you > might say that about a chip shop or something ... not a pizza > joint. Just being a goof. Well no, I have to say we don't have a legacy place as special as yours ![]() I have lived in too many places to have such lovely places in my life. You are very lucky ![]() |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 09:46:49 -0400, Nancy Young wrote: > >> Struck me as strange, her having this pizza place >> in Scotland. They probably do, what do I know. Heh. > > There are at least 25 Domino's in Scotland. They have 49 > different specialty pizzas on the menu. Their current Special is > "Pepperoni, Ham, Chorizo, Tandoori Chicken, Meatballs and Smoky > Bacon, together with our Tomato Sauce and Mozzarella Cheese, all > on our classic fresh-dough base." > > Pizza Hut offers toppings such as goat cheese, spicy pork, corn, > whole(!) black olives, tuna, shrimp, crayfish, rocket and > chorizo. > > Heck, I might try this at home (I wonder what the "spicy pork" > tastes like?) > > Curry Heaven > spicy pork, green chillies, coriander, onion, curry sauce(no > pizza sauce) Well! I didn't know that ![]() |
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![]() "Ophelia" > wrote in message ... > > Well no, I have to say we don't have a legacy place as special as > yours ![]() > life. You are very lucky ![]() My sentiments, also. But I guess there are trade-offs in life for the (us) wanderers. Dee Dee |
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In article >, Andy <q> wrote:
> > I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. It was > the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we couldn't > swallow! Or nobody ADMITTED to drinking it. > > The good ol' neon green Genesee! > > I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. > My father and other male relatives liked Black Label, Utica Club, and Schaefer. Cindy -- C.J. Fuller Delete the obvious to email me |
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In article >, Andy <q> wrote:
> > I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. It was > the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we couldn't > swallow! Or nobody ADMITTED to drinking it. > > The good ol' neon green Genesee! > > I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. > My father and other male relatives liked Black Label, Utica Club, and Schaefer. Cindy -- C.J. Fuller Delete the obvious to email me |
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On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 11:25:45 -0700, Cindy Fuller
> wrote: >In article >, Andy <q> wrote: > >> >> I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. It was >> the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we couldn't >> swallow! > >Or nobody ADMITTED to drinking it. >> >> The good ol' neon green Genesee! >> >> I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. >> >My father and other male relatives liked Black Label, Utica Club, and >Schaefer. > >Cindy black label is pretty vile. national bohemian ('natty bo' to those in the know) is making something of a comeback in the d.c. area. your pal, blake |
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blake murphy wrote:
> On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 11:25:45 -0700, Cindy Fuller > wrote: > >>In article >, Andy <q> wrote: >> >>> >>> I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. >>> It was the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we >>> couldn't swallow! >> >>Or nobody ADMITTED to drinking it. >>> >>> The good ol' neon green Genesee! >>> >>> I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. >>> >>My father and other male relatives liked Black Label, Utica Club, and >>Schaefer. >> >>Cindy > > black label is pretty vile. national bohemian ('natty bo' to those in > the know) is making something of a comeback in the d.c. area. Cheapies that I remember (I don't drink much beer any more) are Red White And Blue (that's one beer <g>) and Lucky Lager. -- Blinky RLU 297263 Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org <----------- New Site Aug 28 |
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Blinky the Shark > wrote in message
... [snip] > Cheapies that I remember [..] Lucky Lager. LL is used to assist with forgetting... The Ranger |
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On 16 Sep 2007 17:56:31 GMT, Blinky the Shark >
wrote: >blake murphy wrote: >> On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 11:25:45 -0700, Cindy Fuller > wrote: >> >>>In article >, Andy <q> wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> I went to college in Rochester and NOBODY drank Genesee cream ale. >>>> It was the "Made on the banks of the Genesee river" slogan that we >>>> couldn't swallow! >>> >>>Or nobody ADMITTED to drinking it. >>>> >>>> The good ol' neon green Genesee! >>>> >>>> I do remember 10¢ Black label beers at the Varsity Inn. >>>> >>>My father and other male relatives liked Black Label, Utica Club, and >>>Schaefer. >>> >>>Cindy >> >> black label is pretty vile. national bohemian ('natty bo' to those in >> the know) is making something of a comeback in the d.c. area. > >Cheapies that I remember (I don't drink much beer any more) are Red >White And Blue (that's one beer <g>) and Lucky Lager. i think the cheapest beer i've ever drunk was a store brand, a & p lager in cans, in new york city. generally best to wait until after the fourth or fifth bottle of something else before wading into that. your pal, blake |
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On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:36:41 GMT, blake murphy >
wrote: >On 16 Sep 2007 17:56:31 GMT, Blinky the Shark > >wrote: >> >>Cheapies that I remember (I don't drink much beer any more) are Red >>White And Blue (that's one beer <g>) and Lucky Lager. > >i think the cheapest beer i've ever drunk was a store brand, a & p >lager in cans, in new york city. generally best to wait until after >the fourth or fifth bottle of something else before wading into that. > I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I like to make beer bread with. -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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BTW: Interesting to see more people prefer "either" on turkey than
chicken. I would have bet money that it would be the other way around. -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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In article >, sf wrote:
> I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored > stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle > that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I > like to make beer bread with. Rolling Rock? -- Julian Vrieslander |
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On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 20:31:29 -0700, Julian Vrieslander
> wrote: >In article >, sf wrote: > >> I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored >> stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle >> that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I >> like to make beer bread with. > >Rolling Rock? I almost said yes, but I looked it up. That's not the stumpy bottle I'm thinking of. This one is really stumpy (short neck). -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 19:41:31 -0700, sf wrote:
>On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:36:41 GMT, blake murphy > >wrote: > >>On 16 Sep 2007 17:56:31 GMT, Blinky the Shark > >>wrote: >>> >>>Cheapies that I remember (I don't drink much beer any more) are Red >>>White And Blue (that's one beer <g>) and Lucky Lager. >> >>i think the cheapest beer i've ever drunk was a store brand, a & p >>lager in cans, in new york city. generally best to wait until after >>the fourth or fifth bottle of something else before wading into that. >> >I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored >stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle >that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I >like to make beer bread with. i mostly drink american beer, which i thing is usually thought of as lager or pilsner style. (if not, i'm sure someone will correct me.) the stumpy green bottle rings a bell, but i can't think of the name. did it have a wide mouth as well? your pal, blake |
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On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 20:31:29 -0700, Julian Vrieslander
> wrote: >In article >, sf wrote: > >> I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored >> stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle >> that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I >> like to make beer bread with. > >Rolling Rock? i was thinking it might be that, too, if she was thinking about the pony bottles (a.k.a. 'pocket rockets'). but they're not really stumpy. plus i like rolling rock. in the context of american beers, it's by no means vile. your pal, blake |
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blake murphy wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 19:41:31 -0700, sf wrote: > >>On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:36:41 GMT, blake murphy > wrote: >> >>>On 16 Sep 2007 17:56:31 GMT, Blinky the Shark > wrote: >>>> >>>>Cheapies that I remember (I don't drink much beer any more) >>>>are Red White And Blue (that's one beer <g>) and Lucky Lager. >>> >>>i think the cheapest beer i've ever drunk was a store brand, a >>>& p lager in cans, in new york city. generally best to wait >>>until after the fourth or fifth bottle of something else before >>>wading into that. >>> >>I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light >>colored stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy >>green bottle that someone told me was called "green death" back >>in the day that I like to make beer bread with. > > i mostly drink american beer, which i thing is usually thought > of as lager or pilsner style. (if not, i'm sure someone will > correct me.) > > the stumpy green bottle rings a bell, but i can't think of the > name. did it have a wide mouth as well? That would probaby be "Mickey Big Lips". (Mickey's beer in the wide-mouth bottle.) I'm not used to that being considered as the cheapest along with stuff like Lucky Lager and Shaeffer. -- Blinky Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org <------------- New Site Aug 28 |
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![]() I've been a lurker here for some time. Couldn't resist this one: Mickey's Big Mouth. On Tue, 18 Sep 2007, blake murphy wrote: > On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 20:31:29 -0700, Julian Vrieslander > > wrote: > > >In article >, sf wrote: > > > >> I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored > >> stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle > >> that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I > >> like to make beer bread with. > > > >Rolling Rock? > > i was thinking it might be that, too, if she was thinking about the > pony bottles (a.k.a. 'pocket rockets'). but they're not really > stumpy. plus i like rolling rock. in the context of american beers, > it's by no means vile. > > your pal, > blake > > > |
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![]() "sf" wrote in message ... > On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 20:31:29 -0700, Julian Vrieslander > > wrote: > >>In article >, sf wrote: >> >>> I'm not a beer drinker and don't like lagers (that's the light colored >>> stuff, right?) in general - but there's one in a stumpy green bottle >>> that someone told me was called "green death" back in the day that I >>> like to make beer bread with. >> >>Rolling Rock? > > I almost said yes, but I looked it up. That's not the stumpy bottle > I'm thinking of. This one is really stumpy (short neck). Mickey's BOB |
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