Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
"jmcquown" > wrote in message
... > On 3/18/2018 3:11 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> On Sunday, March 18, 2018 at 2:54:01 PM UTC-4, Jill McQuown wrote: >>> >>> Military pot lucks aren't the only ones that add plastic utentils, etc. >>> to potluck signup sheets. The civilian corporate world does it, too. >>> Reason being, no one should have to bring their own eating utensils from >>> their home/barracks (don't tell me no one has a field mess kit) to the >>> "work" pot luck. >>> >>> Jill >> >> Our company always has boxes of plastic flatware in the break room. >> > As the departments expanded the company started providing the utensils, > paper plates, etc. The folks who didn't cook had to figure something else > out. > >> One bachelor who worked for the company for 50 years always brought >> pickles to the potlucks. >> >> Cindy Hamilton >> > At least he brought something. There was always one guy who never > contributed anything but sure ate his share of the food! This was the > same guy who would wander around to the various other departments every > morning just in case someone somewhere had brought donuts. > > Jill There's usually at least one in every crowd. Cheri |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
writes:
>On 2018-03-17 8:51 PM, Janet wrote: >> In article >, >> says... >>> >>> On Saturday, March 17, 2018 at 7:34:51 AM UTC-10, Dave Smith wrote: >>>> >>>> The best I can think of would be a misunderstanding of the meaning of >>>> potluck. >>> >>> You would be correct. When a person hears words used in a way they're >not used to, they will naturally assume that the speaker doesn't >understand the meaning of the word or has trouble with the language. >This is only natural. It is also dead wrong. >> >> The OP did not use the word potluck . >> > >No? Then how did it show up in the subject line? Check above, and then >check the OP where talks about people chipping in and needing to come up >with 25 pieces of something...... Potluck nope - it's a reception - also in the original post |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
|
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
|
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
On 2018-03-19 10:09 AM, Cheri wrote:
> "jmcquown" > wrote in message > ... >> At least he brought something.Â* There was always one guy who never >> contributed anything but sure ate his share of the food!Â* This was the >> same guy who would wander around to the various other departments >> every morning just in case someone somewhere had brought donuts. >> >> Jill > > > There's usually at least one in every crowd. I worked in an all male environment, so that sort of thing rarely happened. One guy's wife loved to back so he would occasionally bring in some cookies. We had one guy who would have been running around your guy to look for freebies. Andy would drive for miles to meet up with us at meal time. He would always order way more food than us, and when it came time to pay he never had enough money to pay his bill. We started asking him before he joined us if he had money, and he still managed to order more than he could afford. It got so bad that we started making him show us his money before we let him come along. We were on expense accounts, so it's not like he was actually going to have to pay for his food. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
|
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
On Monday, March 19, 2018 at 7:10:06 AM UTC-10, tert in seattle wrote:
> > I'm not a a she > > and the subject says "not a pot luck" I don't need any help in deciphering and reading the subject line and I still don't care what word you used. Sorry about the mistaken sexual identity, dude. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
writes:
>On Mon 19 Mar 2018 11:58:57a, Dave Smith told us... > >> On 2018-03-19 1:08 PM, tert in seattle wrote: >>> writes: >>>> >>>> "jmcquown" > wrote in message >>>> ... >>>>> On 3/17/2018 10:16 AM, Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>>>> On Sat 17 Mar 2018 07:04:22a, Nancy Young told us... >>>>>> >>>>>>> On 3/17/2018 9:52 AM, Wayne Boatwright wrote: >>>>>>>> On Sat 17 Mar 2018 05:47:33a, Janet told us... >>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Actually you do.You requoted his original post. He >>>>>>>>> never said it was a >>>>>>>>> potluck, and it clearly is not. He said >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> " it's a reception that a bunch of people are >>>>>>>>> chipping in items for >>>>>>>>> I need to come up with some finger food / appetizer >>>>>>>>> type stuff >>>>>>>>> they are saying 25 pieces but they also say they >>>>>>>>> aren't being very >>>>>>>>> scientific about it desserts are the other option, so >>>>>>>>> the finger food should be savory I think .any ideas? >>>>>>>>> I'm at a loss" >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> A rose by any other name. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I was wondering what I didn't know about potlucks that this >>>>>>> didn't qualify as such. Is it because there was a category >>>>>>> specified? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> nancy >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> In most places I've lived it was not uncommon to request that >>>>>> someone bring a particlar category of food so as not to over >>>>>> duplicate. In fact in some cases I've seen sign-up lists for >>>>>> a persons name and what they planned to bring. >>>>>> >>>>> That's the way the pot lucks (not fancy enough to be called >>>>> "receptions") at the office were conducted. Without categories >>>>> there would have been an over-abundance of desserts. Ours were >>>>> the sign-up list sort of thing. >>>>> >>>>> I can't figure out if tert is being *told* what category or >>>>> what. I missed a huge thing - his original post. LOL >>>> >>>> I think only some people were asked to bring things. >>> >>> Everyone is being asked to bring something. The categories are >>> appetizer (finger food), dessert, non-alcoholic beverage, and >>> alcoholic beverage. >>> >>> It's a reception following a musical performance next Sunday >>> March 25. >>> >> >> >> So when people show up with whatever they made for the reception, >> each bringing enough for 25, you will know what they made. That >> sounds a lot like potluck. Canadians! >I would love it if 25 pies shows up at this affair. It doesn't sound >very well organized. > >For Tert: Have you finalized what you're going to take yet? When >I'm faced with this sort of thing and the selections were not >specified, I will make up my mind within the first day or two what >I'm going to bring. My recipe software, Mastercok, has a database of huhuhuhuhuh |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Sunday, March 18, 2018 at 6:01:09 PM UTC-4, cshenk wrote: > > Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > > > > On Sunday, March 18, 2018 at 2:54:01 PM UTC-4, Jill McQuown wrote: > > > > On 3/17/2018 4:16 PM, cshenk wrote: > > > > > Nancy Young wrote: > > > > > > > > > >> On 3/17/2018 9:52 AM, Wayne Boatwright wrote: > > > > >>> On Sat 17 Mar 2018 05:47:33a, Janet told us... > > > > > > > > > > >>>> Actually you do.You requoted his original post. He never > > > > said it >>>> was a > > > > >>>> potluck, and it clearly is not. He said > > > > > > > > > > > > >>>> " it's a reception that a bunch of people are chipping > > > > in items >>>> for > > > > >>>> I need to come up with some finger food / appetizer type > > > > stuff >>>> they are saying 25 pieces but they also say they > > > > aren't being >>>> very > > > > >>>> scientific about it desserts are the other option, so the > > > > finger >>>> food > > > > >>>> should be savory I think .any ideas? I'm at a loss" > > > > > > > > > > >>> A rose by any other name. > > > > > > > > > > >> I was wondering what I didn't know about potlucks that this > > > > didn't >> qualify as such. Is it because there was a category > > > > specified? > > > > > > > > > > >> nancy > > > > > > > > > > Naw, most I have been at have a sort of rough signup list (but > > > > > you can bring anything). It's mostly to help make sure they > > > > > have a balance. Military ones even account for the ones in > > > > > barracks living with no cooking facilites and add stuff like > > > > > plastic utensils and so on. > > > > > > > > > "make sure they have a balance" is the key phrase there! That's > > > > the reason for signup sheets. > > > > > > > > Military pot lucks aren't the only ones that add plastic > > > > utentils, etc. to potluck signup sheets. The civilian > > > > corporate world does it, too. Reason being, no one should have > > > > to bring their own eating utensils from their home/barracks > > > > (don't tell me no one has a field mess kit) to the "work" pot > > > > luck. > > > > > > > > Jill > > > > > > Our company always has boxes of plastic flatware in the break > > > room. > > > > > > One bachelor who worked for the company for 50 years always > > > brought pickles to the potlucks. > > > > > > Cindy Hamilton > > > > Were they good tasting pickles? > > Just regular jarred pickles. I'm not sure I ever tasted them. > > Cindy Hamilton Ah but those can be good too! |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
jmcquown wrote:
> On 3/18/2018 3:11 PM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > On Sunday, March 18, 2018 at 2:54:01 PM UTC-4, Jill McQuown wrote: > > > > > > Military pot lucks aren't the only ones that add plastic > > > utentils, etc. to potluck signup sheets. The civilian corporate > > > world does it, too. Reason being, no one should have to bring > > > their own eating utensils from their home/barracks (don't tell me > > > no one has a field mess kit) to the "work" pot luck. > > > > > > Jill > > > > Our company always has boxes of plastic flatware in the break room. > > > As the departments expanded the company started providing the > utensils, paper plates, etc. The folks who didn't cook had to figure > something else out. > > > One bachelor who worked for the company for 50 years always brought > > pickles to the potlucks. > > > > Cindy Hamilton > > > At least he brought something. There was always one guy who never > contributed anything but sure ate his share of the food! This was > the same guy who would wander around to the various other departments > every morning just in case someone somewhere had brought donuts. > > Jill LOL! Me, I randomly bring fresh bread of various types. Folks crawl out of the woodwork then but I don't mind. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2018-03-19 10:09 AM, Cheri wrote: > >"jmcquown" > wrote in message > ... > > > > At least he brought something.Â* There was always one guy who > > > never contributed anything but sure ate his share of the food!Â* > > > This was the same guy who would wander around to the various > > > other departments every morning just in case someone somewhere > > > had brought donuts. > > > > > > Jill > > > > > > There's usually at least one in every crowd. > > > I worked in an all male environment, so that sort of thing rarely > happened. One guy's wife loved to back so he would occasionally bring > in some cookies. We had one guy who would have been running around > your guy to look for freebies. Andy would drive for miles to meet up > with us at meal time. He would always order way more food than us, > and when it came time to pay he never had enough money to pay his > bill. We started asking him before he joined us if he had money, and > he still managed to order more than he could afford. It got so bad > that we started making him show us his money before we let him come > along. We were on expense accounts, so it's not like he was actually > going to have to pay for his food. WOW, odd that one! Then again, I'm in my first job that is mostly male (I'm actually the only female of 10 that does my specific job). I think we run about 5% female across the set of some 50 of us. No, not sexism, just a field that requires specific experience and few woman have the 20+ years at it yet to get these senior jobs. Anyways, the guys bring in random stuff too but it't usually from the grocery store. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
On 3/19/2018 9:55 AM, jmcquown wrote:
> At least he brought something.Â* There was always one guy who never > contributed anything but sure ate his share of the food!Â* This was the > same guy who would wander around to the various other departments every > morning just in case someone somewhere had brought donuts. Somehow we worked with the Same Guy. How he found free food even in the next building, I'll never know. But he'd brag that his contribution to whatever food thing was a pound cake ... because he could find a mix for $1. nancy |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
So funny that I came across this column today: Office Potlucks Attract More Eaters Than Contributors Mar 19, 2018 - DEAR ABBY: This may seem minor in the scheme of things, but it's driving me crazy. Occasionally we have a potluck day at work. The problem is, while there are always people who eat, others never bring food to share. It's usually the men in our office -- those who hold higher positions and make far more money than the rest of us. They are also the ones who eat the most. They go back for seconds before the rest of us have eaten. If they do occasionally bring anything, it's usually a bag of chips. I'm tired of paying for their lunches when they are more than capable of providing something -- takeout from a deli or even asking their wives to help. I'm also tired of going to get my lunch and discovering most of the food is already gone. I would welcome your advice or any tips your readers may have. -- FED UP IN DES MOINES DEAR FED UP: Try this: Assign a list of what people need to bring to the potluck so there won't be duplication. And when you do, specify that only those who participate can eat the food. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
wrote:
> > Gary wrote: > > wrote: Probably the easiest is various giant subs. > >YOU could easily bring 25 small "leg of cat" dishes. > You can bring bacon ferret scrapple, with their little crying > faces looking up at you... nightmares for you every night for the rest > of your wretched life. LOL! Your response there was great, Sheldo. Each time I read it, I crack up. "bacon ferret scrapple, with their little crying faces looking up at you..." LMAO Seriously, that's the funniest comeback I've read here in years! Anyway, I say, "Let there be peace." (pic of 2 ferrets vs 1 cat) http://www.hostpic.org/images/1803201754310092.jpg |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
not a potluck
Gary wrote:
> wrote: > > > > Gary wrote: > > > > > wrote: > Probably the easiest is various giant subs. > > > > YOU could easily bring 25 small "leg of cat" dishes. > > > You can bring bacon ferret scrapple, with their little crying > > faces looking up at you... nightmares for you every night for the > > rest of your wretched life. > > LOL! Your response there was great, Sheldo. Each time I read it, > I crack up. "bacon ferret scrapple, with their little crying > faces looking up at you..." LMAO Seriously, that's the > funniest comeback I've read here in years! > > Anyway, I say, "Let there be peace." > (pic of 2 ferrets vs 1 cat) > http://www.hostpic.org/images/1803201754310092.jpg Ferrets win there! |