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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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My wife has checked this out from the library so many
times that we went ahead and bought it. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 with Prime shipping. --B |
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On Thursday, February 6, 2014 5:39:33 AM UTC-6, Janet wrote:
> In article >, > > says... > > > > > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many > > > times that we went ahead and bought it. > > > > > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ > > > > > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner > > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the > > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 > > > with Prime shipping. > > > > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the > > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? > It's all in cups and teaspoons, but with as many recipes that are in non-metric measures, it would behoove anyone who uses recipes to own a cup calibrated both ways, and a teaspoon is so close to 5ml that they are interchangeable. Looks like a brand new copy would only cost £7.67 w/ shipping. http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/offer-listing/1451685874/ A nice gift for a kid, and since it's American, it'd be a bit exotic. ![]() > > Janet UK --B |
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On Thu, 6 Feb 2014 11:39:33 -0000, Janet > wrote:
> In article >, > says... > > > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many > > times that we went ahead and bought it. > > > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ > > > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 > > with Prime shipping. > > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? > If you'd taken a moment to "look inside", you'd see the recipes are in measures... obviously written for an American audience. -- Good Food. Good Friends. Good Memories. |
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In article >,
says... > > On Thu, 6 Feb 2014 11:39:33 -0000, Janet > wrote: > > > In article >, > > says... > > > > > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many > > > times that we went ahead and bought it. > > > > > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ > > > > > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner > > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the > > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 > > > with Prime shipping. > > > > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the > > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? > > > If you'd taken a moment to "look inside", you'd see the recipes are in > measures... obviously written for an American audience. Which is exactly why I asked. I did look inside, and all the recipes I saw were in cups. However, one of the Amazon reviews said "Sadly, though, the measures are listed solely in U.S. imperial units". That's why I asked Bryan, who has the book, if ALL the recipes are in cups, because I can't see any in Imperial. Janet UK |
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On Thursday, February 6, 2014 12:06:14 PM UTC-6, Janet wrote:
> In article >, > > says... > > > > > > On Thu, 6 Feb 2014 11:39:33 -0000, Janet > wrote: > > > > > > > In article >, > > > > says... > > > > > > > > > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many > > > > > times that we went ahead and bought it. > > > > > > > > > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ > > > > > > > > > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner > > > > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the > > > > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 > > > > > with Prime shipping. > > > > > > > > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the > > > > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? > > > > > > > If you'd taken a moment to "look inside", you'd see the recipes are in > > > measures... obviously written for an American audience. > > > > Which is exactly why I asked. > > > > I did look inside, and all the recipes I saw were in cups. However, > > one of the Amazon reviews said > > > > "Sadly, though, the measures are listed solely in U.S. imperial units". > > > > That's why I asked Bryan, who has the book, if ALL the recipes are in > > cups, because I can't see any in Imperial. > Isn't it the case that even you Brits don't use imperial anymore for anything other than pints of beer? > > Janet UK --B |
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On 2/6/2014 1:25 PM, Sqwertz wrote:
> From my experience, a lot of Americans think that Imperial is > synonymous with U.S. standard measurements. > Many seem to. And they are wrong. |
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In article > ,
Janet > wrote: >In article >, >says... >> >> On Thu, 6 Feb 2014 11:39:33 -0000, Janet > wrote: >> >> > In article >, >> > says... >> > > >> > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many >> > > times that we went ahead and bought it. >> > > >> > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ >> > > >> > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner >> > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the >> > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 >> > > with Prime shipping. >> > >> > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the >> > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? >> > >> If you'd taken a moment to "look inside", you'd see the recipes are in >> measures... obviously written for an American audience. > > Which is exactly why I asked. > > I did look inside, and all the recipes I saw were in cups. However, >one of the Amazon reviews said > >"Sadly, though, the measures are listed solely in U.S. imperial units". > > That's why I asked Bryan, who has the book, if ALL the recipes are in >cups, because I can't see any in Imperial. The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint is 20 ounces. Cindy Hamilton -- |
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On Thursday, February 6, 2014 2:32:08 PM UTC-6, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> In article > , > > Janet > wrote: > > >In article >, > > >says... > > >> > > >> On Thu, 6 Feb 2014 11:39:33 -0000, Janet > wrote: > > >> > > >> > In article >, > > >> > says... > > >> > > > > >> > > My wife has checked this out from the library so many > > >> > > times that we went ahead and bought it. > > >> > > > > >> > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1451685874/ > > >> > > > > >> > > It's for kids, but she says it's the best beginner > > >> > > cookbook for anyone of any age. By clicking on the > > >> > > other sellers link, I ended up getting it for $7.99 > > >> > > with Prime shipping. > > >> > > > >> > That looks like a great book for kids. However, can you tell me are the > > >> > recipe measurements all in US cups? Or weights? > > >> > > > >> If you'd taken a moment to "look inside", you'd see the recipes are in > > >> measures... obviously written for an American audience. > > > > > > Which is exactly why I asked. > > > > > > I did look inside, and all the recipes I saw were in cups. However, > > >one of the Amazon reviews said > > > > > >"Sadly, though, the measures are listed solely in U.S. imperial units". > > > > > > That's why I asked Bryan, who has the book, if ALL the recipes are in > > >cups, because I can't see any in Imperial. > > > > The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. > > A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint > > is 20 ounces. > Imperial pint-- http://beeradvocate.com/beer/profile/113/574/ > > Cindy Hamilton > --B |
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On 2/6/2014 3:32 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. > A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint > is 20 ounces. > Just to confuse things: an Imperial pint=20 Imperial ounces=19.2152 US ounces |
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In article >,
S Viemeister > wrote: >On 2/6/2014 3:32 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > >> The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. >> A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint >> is 20 ounces. >> >Just to confuse things: >an Imperial pint=20 Imperial ounces=19.2152 US ounces > Thanks. The difference between a US ounce and an Imperial ounce is one of the many things I can't remember. I recall a bit in... 1984? Brave New World? where some old gaffer is complaining about the recently adopted metric system. Half a liter of beer isn't enough; a whole liter is too much. It didn't make much sense to me at first: half a liter is very, very close to a U.S. pint. Cindy Hamilton -- |
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![]() "Cindy Hamilton" > wrote in message .. . > In article >, > S Viemeister > wrote: >>On 2/6/2014 3:32 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> >>> The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. >>> A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint >>> is 20 ounces. >>> >>Just to confuse things: >>an Imperial pint=20 Imperial ounces=19.2152 US ounces >> > > Thanks. The difference between a US ounce and an Imperial > ounce is one of the many things I can't remember. > > I recall a bit in... 1984? Brave New World? where some old > gaffer is complaining about the recently adopted metric system. > Half a liter of beer isn't enough; a whole liter is too much. > It didn't make much sense to me at first: half a liter is > very, very close to a U.S. pint. And never the twain shall meet <g> -- http://www.helpforheroes.org.uk/shop/ |
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On Thursday, February 6, 2014 3:19:39 PM UTC-6, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> In article >, > > S Viemeister > wrote: > > >On 2/6/2014 3:32 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > > > > >> The reviewer doesn't know the difference between U.S. and Imperial. > > >> A lot of people don't. All I can remember is that an Imperial pint > > >> is 20 ounces. > > >> > > >Just to confuse things: > > >an Imperial pint=20 Imperial ounces=19.2152 US ounces > > > > > > > Thanks. The difference between a US ounce and an Imperial > > ounce is one of the many things I can't remember. > > > > I recall a bit in... 1984? Brave New World? where some old > > gaffer is complaining about the recently adopted metric system. > > Half a liter of beer isn't enough; a whole liter is too much. > > It didn't make much sense to me at first: half a liter is > > very, very close to a U.S. pint. > As far as beer goes, a half liter isn't nearly enough, and a liter, well, that's still not enough. > > Cindy Hamilton --B |
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On Thursday, February 6, 2014 1:06:14 PM UTC-5, Janet wrote:
> > "Sadly, though, the measures are listed solely in U.S. imperial units". > Imperial measures for volume are not used in the USA. An imperial pint is 20 ounces, in the USA a pit is 16 ounces. |
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