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Chicken satay
Cauliflower marinated in yogurt and curry powder then grilled
Grilled corn
green beans
Pita
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On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 17:40:40 -0400, Dave Smith
> wrote:

>Chicken satay
>Cauliflower marinated in yogurt and curry powder then grilled
>Grilled corn
>green beans
>Pita


Sounds good, the sort of thing I never get around to making for no
particular reason.

I have some pork belly defrosting - not sure what the plan is yet, I
can always default to cooking it with apples and (alcoholic) cider,
that always works well. Good winter food... snowed here yesterday,
this morning we have a hard frost and about -7°, hope my newborn lambs
are okay (but they should be okay in the shelter). Yeah, I know... -7°
is peanuts to you guys
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On 2015-08-03 5:45 PM, Je�us wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 17:40:40 -0400, Dave Smith
> > wrote:
>
>> Chicken satay
>> Cauliflower marinated in yogurt and curry powder then grilled
>> Grilled corn
>> green beans
>> Pita

>
> Sounds good, the sort of thing I never get around to making for no
> particular reason.
>
> I have some pork belly defrosting - not sure what the plan is yet, I
> can always default to cooking it with apples and (alcoholic) cider,
> that always works well. Good winter food...



Pork belly is something I have never cooked.


> snowed here yesterday,
> this morning we have a hard frost and about -7°, hope my newborn lambs
> are okay (but they should be okay in the shelter). Yeah, I know... -7°
> is peanuts to you guys
>



We are in the middle of summer here. It is currently + 26C. Minus 7 &
would actually be a nice temperature for us but we are suffering through
this global warming stuff and the past winter was exceptionally cold
with temperatures in the -20 to -30 range, which makes it too cold for
me to enjoy.


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On 8/3/2015 4:00 PM, Dave Smith wrote:
>> Good winter food...

>
>
> Pork belly is something I have never cooked.


Fnnd a cop, filet his belly, set on grille, simple.
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On Monday, August 3, 2015 at 5:40:43 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> Chicken satay
> Cauliflower marinated in yogurt and curry powder then grilled
> Grilled corn
> green beans
> Pita


Nice.

I had leftover grilled shrimp on romaine lettuce with thinly
sliced radishes and carrots, and a little shredded cabbage,
dressed with lime juice, rice wine vinegar, and a little
canola oil. Salted steamed soybeans (naked edamame)
on the side.

Cindy Hamilton


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On 8/4/2015 8:28 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
Running for the White House, Jeb Bush portrays himself as a man who has
"worked his tail off" to get ahead in life. But in his business
dealings—which involved such diverse fields as real estate, credit card
services, and water pumps—the candidate seemed to benefit from his
father's political power and worked with people who turned out to be
criminals, the Washington Post reports. Bush's business outlook in his
early years was "a little bit of damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead,"
says a professor who wrote about him. "His judgment on who to associate
with is lacking." Unlike his father and brother George, who each made
fortunes as young men, Jeb jumped from one business venture to another,
at times with unsavory characters.

When Jeb's dad was vice-president, Jeb lobbied the federal government
for the owner of a Miami health-maintenance organization who was later
charged with $200 million in Medicare fraud and fled the US. I
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On 8/4/2015 7:40 AM, Dave Smith wrote:
Running for the White House, Jeb Bush portrays himself as a man who has
"worked his tail off" to get ahead in life. But in his business
dealings€”which involved such diverse fields as real estate, credit card
services, and water pumps€”the candidate seemed to benefit from his
father's political power and worked with people who turned out to be
criminals, the Washington Post reports. Bush's business outlook in his
early years was "a little bit of damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead,"
says a professor who wrote about him. "His judgment on who to associate
with is lacking." Unlike his father and brother George, who each made
fortunes as young men, Jeb jumped from one business venture to another,
at times with unsavory characters.

When Jeb's dad was vice-president, Jeb lobbied the federal government
for the owner of a Miami health-maintenance organization who was later
charged with $200 million in Medicare fraud and fled the US. I
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On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 18:00:03 -0400, Dave Smith
> wrote:

>On 2015-08-03 5:45 PM, Je?us wrote:
>> On Mon, 3 Aug 2015 17:40:40 -0400, Dave Smith
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> Chicken satay
>>> Cauliflower marinated in yogurt and curry powder then grilled
>>> Grilled corn
>>> green beans
>>> Pita

>>
>> Sounds good, the sort of thing I never get around to making for no
>> particular reason.
>>
>> I have some pork belly defrosting - not sure what the plan is yet, I
>> can always default to cooking it with apples and (alcoholic) cider,
>> that always works well. Good winter food...

>
>
>Pork belly is something I have never cooked.


You ought to do something about that come the next winter (unless it's
not your thing). Done right, it's fantastic.

>> snowed here yesterday,
>> this morning we have a hard frost and about -7°, hope my newborn lambs
>> are okay (but they should be okay in the shelter). Yeah, I know... -7°
>> is peanuts to you guys
>>

>
>We are in the middle of summer here. It is currently + 26C. Minus 7 &
>would actually be a nice temperature for us but we are suffering through
>this global warming stuff


Yeah, I'd be happy if it never went over 20°C here. Easier to work
outdoors, or do other outdoors stuff. Plus I tend to prefer colder
weather types of food. Most of the summers have been mild since I've
lived here, but in the first year here, we had a 43°C one day. Wasn't
too bad in the house... not so good outside.

>and the past winter was exceptionally cold
>with temperatures in the -20 to -30 range, which makes it too cold for
>me to enjoy.


I'm comfortable with -6C or so, a good time to go cut/split firewood.

Colder than that you start to have problems with pumps and engines,
pipes, etc... I have a Hilux 4x4 here that I need to put new welsh
plugs in, as we had a -14°C a few weeks ago. Froze the engine block
(which had no anti-freeze in, my fault!) and the welsh plugs did their
job, saving the engine... it also killed the water pump in my washing
machine as well.
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On 8/5/2015 8:32 AM, Je�us wrote:
I have, on at least three prior occasions, written posts that delve into
the €śalleged€ť lurid past of one of our former presidents, George Herbert
Walker Bush (GHWB), the current but ailing patriarch of the Bush Family
Dynasty €“ I refer to them as the Bush Family Crime Syndicate, certainly
not in terms of endearment €“ but rather more like the Mafia Godfather
who prepares his sons to take over the family business upon his death.
This particular post references an article by Stew Webb, a contributor
of Veterans Today.

In his life-time, George H. W. Bush (GHWB) has controlled every
clandestine (hidden from view) and secret organization/operation within
the arsenal of the United States government as either 1) Director of the
CIA, 2) Vice President to Ronald Reagan (who was an unwitting puppet to
the Bush controlled cabal €“ GHWB secretly gave Reagan poisons that
hastened his fall into Alzheimers Disease and evidence suggests he
helped plan Reagan attempted assassination by John Hinckley, whose
family were close friends of the Bush family €“ a coincidence?) and 3)
ultimately as President of the United States before Bill Clinton took
office.

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