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Author Message
25 new of 92 responses total.
mynxcat
response 47 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 19:38 UTC 2003

Yay! Flame war!!
tod
response 48 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 27 21:05 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

klg
response 49 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 28 00:59 UTC 2003

Now, having had the opportunity to consult our home library, we find 
that: "the shochet recites the blessing 'who has hallowed us by thy 
commandments and commanded us regarding ritual slaughter.'"

A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice, Rabbi Isaac Klein, JTSA, NY 1979.
pvn
response 50 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 28 08:54 UTC 2003

Uh, I wanna get me some ribs and BBQ them.  I don't give a hoot or
hollar if some rabbit got paid to say a few words one way or another.
I'm going to "Moo and Oink" where you can get a whole pail of fresh
chitlins for real cheap.  (frie them suckers in sesame oil for snack)
oval
response 51 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 28 18:03 UTC 2003

antisemite! ;)

jaklumen
response 52 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jun 29 08:27 UTC 2003

*shrug* me likes pork.  I'd have a hard time keeping kosher law 
because well, although I could maybe give up pork, man, I could never 
give up shellfish.  Shrimp?  Scallop?  Crab?  Lobster?  *sigh*  No way!
tpryan
response 53 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 16:00 UTC 2003

        rats live on no evil star
other
response 54 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 17:42 UTC 2003

A man, a plan, a canal. Panama!
tod
response 55 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 18:05 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

janc
response 56 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 22:33 UTC 2003

Rob ran, nasal lad, Dallas - Ann Arbor.
slestak
response 57 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 08:07 UTC 2003

Most processed foods are equipped with "supplements". These beautiful food
additives were created to appeal to our taste for something sweet and
exciting!! Real foods have become unappealing to most folks these days. Many
additives were designed with the failing farmer in mind. Corn syrup is a good
example. Vitamins are "byproducts" sometimes harvested from processing raw
foods. Vitamins are additives too! What will we be eating in ten years? "Fast
Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All American Meal" Eric Schlosser....Good
reading before any meal...I think Grex is great food.
void
response 58 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 20:54 UTC 2003

   Tulsa night life?  Filth, gin, a slut!
fitz
response 59 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 9 21:36 UTC 2003

If you haven't checked your Dannon products lately, the company lowered the
calories/container by shrinking the size from 8 oz. to 6 oz. net weight.  The
gelatin was an ingredient in the Blended and Fit 'n' Creamy lines already.

Dannon still makes two lines that contain no gelatine.
keesan
response 60 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 10 09:38 UTC 2003

There is a dairy in Dearborn that makes yogurt from milk and bacterial
cultures and no pectin or cornstarch or gelatin.  It dissolves in soup much
better without these pudding-additives.  Also tastes much better than the
supermarket brands.  We got some from Alladin's Market on Packard.
tod
response 61 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 10 15:53 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 62 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 10 16:05 UTC 2003

Yogurt has live bacteria and less fat and is non-refined.
mynxcat
response 63 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 10 16:41 UTC 2003

Have you never made yoghurt at home? It's fairly simple if you have 
about a spoonful of yoghurt to start with. We do it all the time in 
India
tod
response 64 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 10 17:09 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 65 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 12:25 UTC 2003

Yogurt is easier to make in warm weather.  Otherwise you need to rig up some
sort of heater.
orinoco
response 66 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 14:12 UTC 2003

I've heard that if you have a gas oven, you can leave yoghurt in it to keep
it warm.  Apparently, the head of the pilot light is enough to bring the
temperature up into the 80s where the bacteria like it.  
gull
response 67 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 14:26 UTC 2003

Do gas ovens still have pilot lights?  I assumed they'd all have
electronic ignition by now.

A single low-wattage light bulb inside some kind of box ought to bring
the temperature up to 80.  A breadbox would work well, if anyone still
has breadboxes.
orinoco
response 68 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 15:25 UTC 2003

The gas stove in my apartment in Pittsburgh had pilot lights under all the
burners; I assume it had one for the oven too.  Of course, that wasn't so much
a recent model.
jules
response 69 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 15:27 UTC 2003

my bf is from pittsburgh.
keesan
response 70 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 15:38 UTC 2003

Styrofoam cooler would hold in more heat in cold weather.
gull
response 71 of 92: Mark Unseen   Jul 11 15:42 UTC 2003

Yeah...I was thinking breadbox because it's metal and wouldn't present a
fire hazard.
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