Ummmm, the question was supposed to be funny, Judge. I'm from California; I only stand near picture windows during earthquakes.Judge Roy Bean wrote:Stay away from the damn windows.Demosthenes wrote:Hey Floridians,
What exactly is one supposed to do during a tornado watch besides look out the window in hopes of seeing a tornado?
I recall all too vividly having a telephone conversation with someone who was foolishly watching a tornado from an office building. It was interrupted when a large sheet of plywood pinwheeled into the window only a few feet from him. He escaped with a lot of nasty-looking cuts.
Snipes and Southern Eats
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Demo.
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Only because you want to see the Amorphous Zucchini Gods stamp their beastly feet against the planet's inner core causing the the two liquid layers above it to do their best impersonation of a warring wave machines which caused the crust to do the cha-cha and the tango - at the same time, which is making all your books fall off their shelves. But you will be sorely disappointed, as you can't see the inner core from your picture window. Try the back door. And look up. They don't like people watching.Demosthenes wrote:I only stand near picture windows during earthquakes.
When chosen for jury duty, tell the judge "fortune cookie says guilty" - A fortune cookie
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Never heard of this before, but I moved to Texas a long time ago. But, in case you had not noticed, there is a reason Fark has a category labeled "Florida."Demosthenes wrote:What the heck? I think I've been pretty open minded about the Sourthern comfort food thing, but last night just went too far.
I ordered fish and chips at a local seafood restaurant and it came with powdered sugar on the fish? Huh?
"My Health is Better in November."
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Boy, that was a screw-up. It was supposed to be cocaine, and it was supposed to be on the chips, not the fish.Demosthenes wrote:I ordered fish and chips at a local seafood restaurant and it came with powdered sugar on the fish? Huh?
Dan Evans
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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I suspect some rookie thought they were hush puppy deserts. 'Round here we'd a had him dragged fifty yards through weeds.Demosthenes wrote:What the heck? I think I've been pretty open minded about the Sourthern comfort food thing, but last night just went too far.
I ordered fish and chips at a local seafood restaurant and it came with powdered sugar on the fish? Huh?
The Honorable Judge Roy Bean
The world is a car and you're a crash-test dummy.
The Devil Makes Three
The world is a car and you're a crash-test dummy.
The Devil Makes Three
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Just so we are clear, on the topic of sausage gravy....
If you can find FRESH (ie, not bought in a store, or restaurant), whole hog sausage, it is amazingly lean. In fact, if you fry it up in a pan, you have to watch it doesn't burn, and maybe even add some water to the pan because there's hardly any grease in the meat. There won't be a bunch of "drippings" from it.
If you buy a pound of sausage from the store, and fry it in the pan, 1/2 of it will end up grease and you'll be lucky to end up with 1/2 a pound of cooked sausage.
Fresh, whole hog sausage, will only be about 10% or less, grease, if that.
And the taste, will just about make you eschew any sausage bought from a store.
Of course, finding it, is the real trick. You have to almost know someone who butchers a hog.
If you can find FRESH (ie, not bought in a store, or restaurant), whole hog sausage, it is amazingly lean. In fact, if you fry it up in a pan, you have to watch it doesn't burn, and maybe even add some water to the pan because there's hardly any grease in the meat. There won't be a bunch of "drippings" from it.
If you buy a pound of sausage from the store, and fry it in the pan, 1/2 of it will end up grease and you'll be lucky to end up with 1/2 a pound of cooked sausage.
Fresh, whole hog sausage, will only be about 10% or less, grease, if that.
And the taste, will just about make you eschew any sausage bought from a store.
Of course, finding it, is the real trick. You have to almost know someone who butchers a hog.
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I have heard of this and its seems as though I've seen it, but it would be very unusual. Find yourself a good calabash and have blast.Demosthenes wrote:What the heck? I think I've been pretty open minded about the Sourthern comfort food thing, but last night just went too far.
I ordered fish and chips at a local seafood restaurant and it came with powdered sugar on the fish? Huh?
As for weather, I'm sure evil squirrel will agree that its been miserable here in the north midwest. Over the weekend it approached -12 with -28 windchill with about a foot of snow on the ground. Of course salt doesn't work in these temperature so sand is strewn about the snow covered roads. ugh... So enjoy rain, I would love to have some rain about now.
"Some people are like Slinkies ... not really good for anything, but you can't help smiling when you see one tumble down the stairs" - Unknown
Speak for yourself. Whole hog sausage is made by the person making it according to their taste. It can have lots of fat in it or little. It is a personal choice and everyone I know of has their own recipe that they keep closely guarded. My family makes it with fat in it - but not as much as the store bought variety. It definitely has enough to make sausage gravy. I've never in my life cooked sausage patties with water - although intestined cased links require it sometimes because the casing retains the fat in the sausage.Just so we are clear, on the topic of sausage gravy....
If you can find FRESH (ie, not bought in a store, or restaurant), whole hog sausage, it is amazingly lean. In fact, if you fry it up in a pan, you have to watch it doesn't burn, and maybe even add some water to the pan because there's hardly any grease in the meat. There won't be a bunch of "drippings" from it.
If you buy a pound of sausage from the store, and fry it in the pan, 1/2 of it will end up grease and you'll be lucky to end up with 1/2 a pound of cooked sausage.
Fresh, whole hog sausage, will only be about 10% or less, grease, if that.
And the taste, will just about make you eschew any sausage bought from a store.
Of course, finding it, is the real trick. You have to almost know someone who butchers a hog.
In any case - I don't know anyone who did not use a fair amount of the otherwise unusable hog fat in their sausage. I guess if you are rich (which does not equate with butchering you own hog) you could just throw the fat away. I've just never personally witnessed such an event.
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Another Florida dining experience:
Remember, there's a reason FARK has a special category for Florida.
As for pork sausage, I grew up working for my Dad in a "cold storage" in Tabor City, NC-- these were built all over farm country after WWII; rent freezer lockers to farmers in the front; slaughter in the back; cut, wrap, make sausage, cure hams, etc., in the middle.
(We lived on and operated a tobacco farm just over the state line in SC.)
Dad mixed the best sausage -- bulk and link -- I have ever had. He used his own spice mix, made up of commercially available bulk products, frequently adding more red pepper for many of his customers, who were white and black farmers.
Sausage was generally made from left-over trimmings -- after the chops, bacon, ham, and shoulders were cut out and trimmed. Some folks might add the shoulders to the sausage, but not many. (We trimmed out the left over lean meat, including the neck and head meat, for the sausage grinder. Southerners never added organ meat to sausage and -- except for beef and pork liver-- never ate organ meat in any form.)
Fat did not go into the sausage -- pork fat was trimmed off and rendered into lard. Some farmers asked that some fat be added, but again, only rarely. Link sausage could be smoked (we had a smoke house for smoking salt/sugar cured hams, shoulders, and bacon). The smoke came from sawdust from a "handle" plant which made tool handles from hickory.
By the way, there is a place like this in Dunn, NC, that will ship hams, sausage, etc. Pretty good stuff.
Fark.com: see http://www.local6.com/news/15098343/detail.htmlWon't pull your car up at Mickey D's drive-thru
Remember, there's a reason FARK has a special category for Florida.
As for pork sausage, I grew up working for my Dad in a "cold storage" in Tabor City, NC-- these were built all over farm country after WWII; rent freezer lockers to farmers in the front; slaughter in the back; cut, wrap, make sausage, cure hams, etc., in the middle.
(We lived on and operated a tobacco farm just over the state line in SC.)
Dad mixed the best sausage -- bulk and link -- I have ever had. He used his own spice mix, made up of commercially available bulk products, frequently adding more red pepper for many of his customers, who were white and black farmers.
Sausage was generally made from left-over trimmings -- after the chops, bacon, ham, and shoulders were cut out and trimmed. Some folks might add the shoulders to the sausage, but not many. (We trimmed out the left over lean meat, including the neck and head meat, for the sausage grinder. Southerners never added organ meat to sausage and -- except for beef and pork liver-- never ate organ meat in any form.)
Fat did not go into the sausage -- pork fat was trimmed off and rendered into lard. Some farmers asked that some fat be added, but again, only rarely. Link sausage could be smoked (we had a smoke house for smoking salt/sugar cured hams, shoulders, and bacon). The smoke came from sawdust from a "handle" plant which made tool handles from hickory.
By the way, there is a place like this in Dunn, NC, that will ship hams, sausage, etc. Pretty good stuff.
"My Health is Better in November."
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Huckabee refuses to release his popcorn squirrel recipie...
http://www.scarysquirrel.org/recipes/huckabee/
http://www.scarysquirrel.org/recipes/huckabee/
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Found this today, appropriate keyboard alerts are in place:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=au9ZP0xrpuI&feature=related
Mr. Snipes explains how you, too, can avoid paying your taxes.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=au9ZP0xrpuI&feature=related
Mr. Snipes explains how you, too, can avoid paying your taxes.
The laissez-faire argument relies on the same tacit appeal to perfection as does communism. - George Soros