• 133 travel was crusty etc

    From MICHAEL LOO@1:123/140 to RUTH HAFFLY on Monday, March 25, 2019 09:46:26
    More like the latter, though I admit that
    obscure and sometimes arbitrary variables exist.
    It's as good a reason as any. (G)
    Gngngngn (snarl).
    Sometimes that's the best reason. (G)
    Gngngngn (snarl).
    (G)

    You'll have reduced me to those monosyllabic grunts
    if you don't watch out.

    I'm not convinced that it makes a difference.
    Trans fat, too. Much of the research implicates
    all palm oils in heart problems, so that lets
    out both those products ... and also, which the
    health nuts don't realize, coconut oil as well.
    Can't win for losing sometimes.
    As they said about the anorexic.
    Which none of us are in any danger of becoming.

    We had an anorexic on RIME. She had me over to dinner
    and produced a palatable though very low-calorie white
    meat chicken and white rice meal. She ate very little
    but went to town on dessert, which I forget. She was
    actually very slender.

    Small mammals have their place in the ecosystem too so I don't write them off.
    No doubt in every case, but it's exceedingly
    difficult to discern what that is.
    Sometimes, yes. Other times you see them at work, doing their part to
    keep the ecosystem in balance.

    I don't believe a balanced ecosystem exists. The
    best state of affairs is if changes aren't overly
    disruptive; and the best we can do to determine
    its condition is to use our own lives as the
    main criterion.

    apple juice-fexofenadine, atenolol, aliskiren; orange
    juice-aliskiren, atenolol, celiprolol, montelukast,
    fluoroquinolones, alendronate; pomelo juice-sildenafil;
    grape juice-cyclosporine), ... Seville orange
    juice-felodipine, pomelo juice-cyclosporine, orange-
    aluminum containing antacids).
    The article does go on to say that the nongrapefruit
    interactions are mostly reported as less severe, though.
    And none of those drugs are ones we have to worry about. I'm done with
    the 2 weeks of antibiotics my ortho doctor wanted me to have. I had
    yogurt, with active cultures, almost every day so had no adverse
    reaction to the extended use of them.

    I've been prescribed a few of those drugs.

    Maybe add some lemon to a glass of water? push comes to shove, the vitamin C tablet is the easiest way to get C in the diet.
    You're assuming that she perceives a need for it.
    That's hardly the case. On the other hand, she
    no doubt gets enough from bloody rare meat, which
    has more than most people give it credit for.
    So you are making sure she gets C in some form, at least every other
    day?

    Not except by feeding her very rare meat every night
    and nodding with approval when she has fruit or juice
    in the morning.

    repeat until you have as many as you want. We never did empty the
    tree > as it had so many fruit, and a lot of them out of reach of even the
    pole.
    Eh, leave the ones up top for the birds!
    We did--tree wasn't a good one for climbing. (G)

    The one I remember in Hawaii would have been, except
    you'd fall out quickly from the grease on the branches.

    [caramel pork]
    Menus change, and I was referring to
    off the menu.
    Not being that familiar with the cuisine, we don't order off the
    menu.
    Vietnamese caramelized pork
    categories: French, American, main
    servings: 4
    Might be worth trying if we go to a Viet Namese restaurant. Have to ask
    tho, if they use the cilantro or not.

    Just tell them in no uncertain terms to omit it.
    In pictures if necessary.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v7.07

    Title: Fish Lemongrass
    Categories: Vietnamese, Seafood
    Servings: 2

    2 lg Redfish
    1 Stalk Lemongrass
    1 Hot Pepper, Bias-Sliced Thin
    1/2 ts Curry Powder
    1 ts Salt
    1 Clove Garlic, Crushed
    3 tb Oil

    Crush the stalk of lemongrass with the flat side of a cleaver, then cut
    it
    into small pieces. Clean the fish and with a sharp knife slash
    diagonally
    across the body of the fish. Mix lemongrass, curry powder, salt and
    peppers. Put the redfish in the mixture, coat well, cover and
    refrigerate
    for one hour. Heat oil in a large skillet, and lightly saute the garlic.
    Then place the redfish in the skillet, let brown very well before turning
    it over. (If the fish is not very brown it will fall apart.) Brown well
    on
    other side, and serrve.

    From: Living and Cooking Vietnamese by Paula Tran ISBN 0-931722-79-9

    Posted by Syd Bigger.

    MMMMM
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    * Origin: Fido Since 1991 | QWK by Web | BBS.FIDOSYSOP.ORG (1:123/140)
  • From Ruth Haffly@1:396/45.28 to MICHAEL LOO on Monday, March 25, 2019 18:24:58
    Hi Michael,

    More like the latter, though I admit that
    obscure and sometimes arbitrary variables exist.
    It's as good a reason as any. (G)
    Gngngngn (snarl).
    Sometimes that's the best reason. (G)
    Gngngngn (snarl).
    (G)

    You'll have reduced me to those monosyllabic grunts
    if you don't watch out.

    I will, if you lay off the snarls.

    health nuts don't realize, coconut oil as well.
    Can't win for losing sometimes.
    As they said about the anorexic.
    Which none of us are in any danger of becoming.

    We had an anorexic on RIME. She had me over to dinner
    and produced a palatable though very low-calorie white
    meat chicken and white rice meal. She ate very little
    but went to town on dessert, which I forget. She was
    actually very slender.

    Entree sounds less than appetising. Was that the way she ate all the
    time or was it a special "company" meal?

    Small mammals have their place in the ecosystem too so I
    don't write > ML> > them off.
    No doubt in every case, but it's exceedingly
    difficult to discern what that is.
    Sometimes, yes. Other times you see them at work, doing their part
    to > keep the ecosystem in balance.

    I don't believe a balanced ecosystem exists. The
    best state of affairs is if changes aren't overly
    disruptive; and the best we can do to determine
    its condition is to use our own lives as the
    main criterion.

    There needs to be enough of a balance that one group doesn't overpower
    any of the others. Ends up, that group would die off a lot faster for
    lack of support structure. Basically, all groups intertwine with each
    other for checks and balances.

    The article does go on to say that the nongrapefruit
    interactions are mostly reported as less severe, though.
    And none of those drugs are ones we have to worry about. I'm done
    with > the 2 weeks of antibiotics my ortho doctor wanted me to have. I
    had
    yogurt, with active cultures, almost every day so had no adverse reaction to the extended use of them.

    I've been prescribed a few of those drugs.

    I've probably had more than my share. Some years it seemed like I was on
    them the better part of the year. The past few years it's been much less
    tho, with some exceptions.

    Maybe add some lemon to a glass of water? push comes to
    shove, the > ML> > vitamin C tablet is the easiest way to get C in
    the diet.
    You're assuming that she perceives a need for it.
    That's hardly the case. On the other hand, she
    no doubt gets enough from bloody rare meat, which
    has more than most people give it credit for.
    So you are making sure she gets C in some form, at least every other day?

    Not except by feeding her very rare meat every night
    and nodding with approval when she has fruit or juice
    in the morning.

    So it sounds like she's getting sufficient levels.

    repeat until you have as many as you want. We never did empty
    the > ML> tree > as it had so many fruit, and a lot of them out of
    reach of even > ML> the
    pole.
    Eh, leave the ones up top for the birds!
    We did--tree wasn't a good one for climbing. (G)

    The one I remember in Hawaii would have been, except
    you'd fall out quickly from the grease on the branches.

    You would have had a time getting up to the branches on this one. It was
    an old one, but really put out the fruit.

    [caramel pork]
    Menus change, and I was referring to
    off the menu.
    Not being that familiar with the cuisine, we don't order off
    the > ML> menu.
    Vietnamese caramelized pork
    categories: French, American, main
    servings: 4
    Might be worth trying if we go to a Viet Namese restaurant. Have to
    ask > tho, if they use the cilantro or not.

    Just tell them in no uncertain terms to omit it.
    In pictures if necessary.

    Or get someone who knows Viet Namese to translate. Hopefully the menu
    would be bi-lingual and the wait staff know enough English that we could
    get the point across.

    ---
    Catch you later,
    Ruth
    rchaffly{at}earthlink{dot}net FIDO 1:396/45.28


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