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Originally Posted by WhyFi
(Post 22138328)
Don't tell me that you're a strawberry/rhubarb person? Ugh.
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Originally Posted by WhyFi
(Post 22138376)
Ah, you're just "no berries" grump?
The strawberry/blackberry pie is a small one (6") that we brought home, but I got a different slice at the shop: they called it CocoChoconut. Imagine if a pecan pie and a 7-layer bar had a baby - that's what it was like. Delicious. *Dad's Mom wasn't much of a cook, honestly. |
Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 22138550)
I will eat just about anything except for most chocolate, melons and horse meat.
A company I worked for back in the early 00's partnered with a Japanese company on a smallpox vaccine (remember biodefense? Remember five people dying from an anthrax attack?). They were located in an area famous for horsemeat. RAW horsemeat. So when the Bus. Dev. folks and some of the reaserch staff working on the project went to visit, guess what they had to eat. |
Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138565)
... tried to make him tired of pie, so she made a different one every night for more than a week.
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Originally Posted by LAJ
(Post 22138390)
Ever since they did what they did, LPLO is ridiculous
LPLO. :notamused: |
Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138558)
BURN, Heretic!
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Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 22138555)
So I ordered some brake hoods for the touring bike. Thought they seemed expensive for what they are but ordered two anyway. The arrived today. Discovered that they are sold in pairs, so I am set for a good while.
#PayCloserAttentionNextTime I'm trying to decide on seeing how well these hoods for olde Dia Compes will fit on the Galli brake levers on the Legnano ($11 per pair) https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...465dc83690.jpg Or just splurging on these $70 Dia Compe levers with the adjuster doodads up top: https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...653c74f73c.jpg |
Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138565)
Dad's job working at a fruit processing company (largest producer of applesauce in the world!) meant we'd get pie fillings from the company commissary for cheap. Dad LOVED pie, pretty much any kind. One time, my grandmother - Mom's Mom, not Dad's* - tried to make him tired of pie, so she made a different one every night for more than a week. She eventually threw in the towel.
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Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138565)
Dad's job working at a fruit processing company (largest producer of applesauce in the world!) meant we'd get pie fillings from the company commissary for cheap. Dad LOVED pie, pretty much any kind. One time, my grandmother - Mom's Mom, not Dad's* - tried to make him tired of pie, so she made a different one every night for more than a week. She eventually threw in the towel.
*Dad's Mom wasn't much of a cook, honestly. Along those lines, I worked at a pizza place during high school - I do not easily get sick of pizza. Since we've been married (18 years), I've only shocked my wife a couple of times by turning down pizza. |
Originally Posted by Velo Vol
(Post 22138591)
I would eat applesauce every night for more than a week.
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Originally Posted by WhyFi
(Post 22138585)
I like the tartness and flavor of rhubarb, but I'm not a fan of the texture. Not surprisingly, I don't like celery, either.
Interesting thing is that tartness, i.e. the acids in fruit, are where a lot of the flavor is. Gooseberries, for instance - Mom and Dad had gooseberry bushes, and the fruit themselves were inedibly tart. Baked in a pie with a lot of sugar, though, and the flavor was AMAZING!!! Possibly the best pie that I've ever eaten. Also note that cherry pie is made with tart cherries because Bings and Raniers would make a really bland pie. |
Originally Posted by Velo Vol
(Post 22138591)
I would eat applesauce every night for more than a week.
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Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138599)
Maybe you're not cooking it long enough.
Interesting thing is that tartness, i.e. the acids in fruit, are where a lot of the flavor is. Gooseberries, for instance - Mom and Dad had gooseberry bushes, and the fruit themselves were inedibly tart. Baked in a pie with a lot of sugar, though, and the flavor was AMAZING!!! Possibly the best pie that I've ever eaten. Also note that cherry pie is made with tart cherries because Bings and Raniers would make a really bland pie. |
Originally Posted by Velo Vol
(Post 22138597)
Except I eat applesauce in the morning, not in the evening.
Seriously! "Mister Rogers Neighborhood" was filmed in Pittsburgh, and of course the plant where Dad worked is also in PA - though its about a 4 hour drive. And the company decided Dad would be their best spokesman to show Mister Rogers how applesauce is made. So Dad was on Mister Rogers, back in about 1984. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...f200284f28.jpg |
Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138578)
Sounds like a weird appetizer tray.
A company I worked for back in the early 00's partnered with a Japanese company on a smallpox vaccine (remember biodefense? Remember five people dying from an anthrax attack?). They were located in an area famous for horsemeat. RAW horsemeat. So when the Bus. Dev. folks and some of the reaserch staff working on the project went to visit, guess what they had to eat. |
Originally Posted by WhyFi
(Post 22138603)
I'm not a fan of mush, either. Maybe there's a happy medium where I'd be fine with the texture, but I haven't found it, yet (and I'm not too enthusiastic about lookin' for it, tbh).
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As you can see, my Dad was one of those guys who could pull off a bowtie!
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Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138611)
Seriously! "Mister Rogers Neighborhood" was filmed in Pittsburgh, and of course the plant where Dad worked is also in PA - though its about a 4 hour drive. And the company decided Dad would be their best spokesman to show Mister Rogers how applesauce is made. So Dad was on Mister Rogers, back in about 1984.
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Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 22138616)
I had it for lunch (cooked) in Italy back in 2013. Not something I would eat again.
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Originally Posted by genejockey
(Post 22138611)
Seriously! "Mister Rogers Neighborhood" was filmed in Pittsburgh, and of course the plant where Dad worked is also in PA - though its about a 4 hour drive. And the company decided Dad would be their best spokesman to show Mister Rogers how applesauce is made. So Dad was on Mister Rogers, back in about 1984.
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Originally Posted by Velo Vol
(Post 22138625)
Video?
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Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 22138623)
Bigglerville, right?
Musselmans was such a big thing to Biglerville that the high school sports teams were named the Canners. And we had a really strange mascot: https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...0fc5a61eac.jpg *seriously, we badmouthed Musselmans all my childhood. Then Knouse Foods bought out Musselmans, and has continued labelling product as Musselmans, in addition to Lucky Leaf, which is KF's brand. |
Looking at the Canner Man now, it reminds me of....
https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...0638b767d4.jpg |
Originally Posted by Bah Humbug
(Post 22138510)
And the Cimmaron?
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Originally Posted by Velo Vol
(Post 22138530)
Because I say no to blackberries in pie?
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