View Single Post
  #524 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
dsi1[_18_] dsi1[_18_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 592
Default Stinky fridge syndrome...

On 2/10/2016 8:52 AM, graham wrote:
> On 10/02/2016 11:33 AM, Je�us wrote:
>> On Wed, 10 Feb 2016 11:31:32 -0700, graham > wrote:
>>
>>> On 10/02/2016 11:21 AM, Je?us wrote:
>>>> On Wed, 10 Feb 2016 08:04:38 -0700, graham > wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 09/02/2016 10:46 PM, Je?us wrote:
>>>>>> On Tue, 9 Feb 2016 22:36:15 -0500, jmcquown >
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 2/7/2016 7:59 PM, Cheri wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Where I am, they are not supposed to run loose, but a person
>>>>>>>> can't shoot
>>>>>>>> them (who the Hell would want to do that) but you can trap them
>>>>>>>> and take
>>>>>>>> them to the animal shelter.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Cheri
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Apparently graham thinks shooting cats is a good idea.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Graham seems to have a lot of ill-founded ideas, invariably based on
>>>>>> ignorance and sometimes personal inexperience.
>>>>>>
>>>>> How the hell do you come up with such stupid comments!
>>>>
>>>> It's remarkably easy with you, Graham.
>>>> 'Mr rational scientist' that you think you are
>>>> You never did explain your scepticism/problem over my buying Himalayan
>>>> salt, for example.
>>>>
>>> NaCl is NaCl, or didn't you know that?

>>
>> That's what I figured you'd say. You're an idiot.
>>

> No! The idiots are those who think it has some special *spiritual"
> qualities.


It does have some mystical properties. It's a fossil seasoning from
Earth's past that saw the coming of and the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Fossil salt will probably see the extinction of man and perhaps it will
be used by whatever species that comes after us to season their food at
their table.

You won't find it in my kitchen because the bag of salt that I bought
had hard, insoluble, quartz-like, particles in the mix. I suppose I
could have dissolved the salt in water and evaporated the water out but
that seems kinda pointless.