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The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill
and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. Warmed a French baguette. While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer to get them on the skewers than to cook them. Excellent meal. |
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On 3/28/2019 8:59 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the > grill and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic.Â* Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO.Â* Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes.Â* Took > longer to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. Â* I finished off the pot of ham-n-beans I made a few nights ago . Dessert is a White Russian made with home made Kahlua . Might have 2 ... -- Snag Yes , I'm old and crochety - and armed . Get outta my woods ! |
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On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 9:20:16 PM UTC-5, Terry Coombs wrote:
> On 3/28/2019 8:59 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the > > grill and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > > juice, olive oil, garlic.Â* Put them on skewers for the grill. > > > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > > > Warmed a French baguette. > > > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > > for $13.49 but it was BOGO.Â* Good price that way. > > > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes.Â* Took > > longer to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > > > Excellent meal. > > Â* I finished off the pot of ham-n-beans I made a few nights ago . > Dessert is a White Russian made with home made Kahlua . Might have 2 ... > > -- > Snag > Yes , I'm old > and crochety - and armed . > Get outta my woods ! I GAVE UP drinking ethanol! No reason, I guess I just got too good at it! John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Warmed Fresh Fruit Salad Eater! |
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![]() "Ed Pawlowski" > wrote in message ... > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio for > $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer to > get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. I'm not cooking. Had to get new medical insurance and switch some Drs. So have been having to deal with medical stuff for days and always close to dinner time. I do have leftovers. I made the Salisbury steak dish the other might. Small patties with green pepper, sweet onion, mushrooms and gravy with mashed potatoes. Bought a premade Mexican meal at Winco that I still need to eat as I ate the leftovers yesterday. Bought some premade orange chicken and Teriyaki chicken and veg. I did make a big salad, both brown and white rice and some pinto beans. So the others should have enough food for later and tomorrow. |
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![]() "Julie Bove" wrote in message ... "Ed Pawlowski" > wrote in message ... > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio for > $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer to > get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. I'm not cooking. Had to get new medical insurance and switch some Drs. So have been having to deal with medical stuff for days and always close to dinner time. I do have leftovers. I made the Salisbury steak dish the other might. Small patties with green pepper, sweet onion, mushrooms and gravy with mashed potatoes. Bought a premade Mexican meal at Winco that I still need to eat as I ate the leftovers yesterday. Bought some premade orange chicken and Teriyaki chicken and veg. I did make a big salad, both brown and white rice and some pinto beans. So the others should have enough food for later and tomorrow. == Last night I roasted a Teriyaki chicken and served it with broccoli, cauliflower and peas. D. had some new potatoes with his. Atm I have lamb with mint cooking in the slow cooker for tonight. |
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On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 9:59:12 PM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. Nice. You can cook for me anytime. Yesterday was grocery shopping after a frustrating day at work. It's a sad state of affairs when I look forward to the grocery store for interaction with smart people. Dinner was scrambled eggs with a sizeable quantity of finely minced parsley and green onion tops mixed in. A slice of impeccably fresh bread, lightly buttered. A small glass of milk. Cindy Hamilton |
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On 3/29/2019 6:10 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> > Nice. You can cook for me anytime. > > Yesterday was grocery shopping after a frustrating day at work. It's > a sad state of affairs when I look forward to the grocery store for > interaction with smart people. > > Dinner was scrambled eggs with a sizeable quantity of finely minced > parsley and green onion tops mixed in. A slice of impeccably fresh > bread, lightly buttered. A small glass of milk. > > Cindy Hamilton > Sounded good until the end. Last glass of milk I had was about 1962. Glass of water for me, thanks. |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 10:08:53 AM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 3/29/2019 6:10 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > > > > > Nice. You can cook for me anytime. > > > > Yesterday was grocery shopping after a frustrating day at work. It's > > a sad state of affairs when I look forward to the grocery store for > > interaction with smart people. > > > > Dinner was scrambled eggs with a sizeable quantity of finely minced > > parsley and green onion tops mixed in. A slice of impeccably fresh > > bread, lightly buttered. A small glass of milk. > > > > Cindy Hamilton > > > > Sounded good until the end. Last glass of milk I had was about 1962. > Glass of water for me, thanks. Sure. No problem. Not everybody likes milk. Personally, I'm not all that fond of wine. I'd rather have water, but I'm not a pill about it. If wine is served at dinner, I'll sip along with everybody else. Cindy Hamilton |
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On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 3:59:12 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() |
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![]() "dsi1" wrote in message ... On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 3:59:12 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() == Oh heck ![]() |
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On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 09:15:19 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
> wrote: > >Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. >Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. What good is storing perishables unrefrigerated... would make more sense to cook those or give them to a neighbor. Now you know that you need a 2nd fridge... in Ukelala land you can put a 2nd fridge outdoors. >Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. Isn't there a hardware store in Ukelala land? Temperarilly any kind of hose will suffice... any auto parts store will have heater hose and hose clamps... a hunk of garden hose will work. >I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. Which part that you can't buy it locally... your icecube tray sprung a leak? Are you saying there are no appliance repair stores in Ukelala land... most stores that sell appliances also repair them so they stock parts. Meanwhile use an ice chest. I'll bet you can buy block ice within walking distance. I grew up without a refrigerator, we had an ice-a-box.... the same guy who delivered coal in winter delivered ice in summer. I can live here without a refrigerator/freezer, in winter our two car garage is a giant fridge/freezer. >Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() That's a no brainer, buy another TV... most people own more than one... we have four TVs. What do you do when you want to watch TV in a different room, have to move it around. We don't always watch the same shows. We each have our own office with a computer and TV. We have a TV in the living room and an even larger one in our bedroom. People can easily afford multiple TVs nowadays... the first TV we had growing up was a Dumont, w/11" screen, B&W. back then it cost about a Grand. There were only four channels and needed to use rabbit ears or a giant antenna on the roof. TV didn't come on until 6 AM and went off at Midnight. During night time the TV was powered down, unless one enjoyed staring at the screen pattern. |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 9:35:34 AM UTC-10, Sheldon wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 09:15:19 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 > > wrote: > > > >Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. > >Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. > > What good is storing perishables unrefrigerated... would make more > sense to cook those or give them to a neighbor. Now you know that you > need a 2nd fridge... in Ukelala land you can put a 2nd fridge > outdoors. > > >Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. > > Isn't there a hardware store in Ukelala land? Temperarilly any kind > of hose will suffice... any auto parts store will have heater hose and > hose clamps... a hunk of garden hose will work. > > >I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. > > Which part that you can't buy it locally... your icecube tray sprung a > leak? Are you saying there are no appliance repair stores in Ukelala > land... most stores that sell appliances also repair them so they > stock parts. Meanwhile use an ice chest. I'll bet you can buy block > ice within walking distance. I grew up without a refrigerator, we had > an ice-a-box.... the same guy who delivered coal in winter delivered > ice in summer. I can live here without a refrigerator/freezer, in > winter our two car garage is a giant fridge/freezer. > > >Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() > > That's a no brainer, buy another TV... most people own more than > one... we have four TVs. What do you do when you want to watch TV in > a different room, have to move it around. We don't always watch the > same shows. We each have our own office with a computer and TV. We > have a TV in the living room and an even larger one in our bedroom. > People can easily afford multiple TVs nowadays... the first TV we had > growing up was a Dumont, w/11" screen, B&W. back then it cost about a > Grand. There were only four channels and needed to use rabbit ears or > a giant antenna on the roof. TV didn't come on until 6 AM and went > off at Midnight. During night time the TV was powered down, unless > one enjoyed staring at the screen pattern. Bitch, bitch, bitch. All you gots left is to bitch your life away. What the hell kind of life is that? Anyway, the hose has a fitting crimped onto a part of the sprayer. I could add a section of hose but that would be a temporary fix. Sure I could get the 12V DC motor for the refrigerator locally. It would probably cost $140. I can get it off the internet for $20. I did pay $13 for the shipping. Looks like I saved over a hundred bucks. I figure that by repairing the fridge myself, I save about $350. That's enough to buy a new TV. |
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![]() "dsi1" wrote in message ... Sure I could get the 12V DC motor for the refrigerator locally. It would probably cost $140. I can get it off the internet for $20. I did pay $13 for the shipping. Looks like I saved over a hundred bucks. I figure that by repairing the fridge myself, I save about $350. That's enough to buy a new TV. == Any idea how to get the door open on the washing machine?? Sigh. I was doing my last wash yesterday before we go away on Monday. Stuck and in trying to get it open I pulled the handle off (don't know my own strength) Anyway it will have to wait till we get back. We pay the company we bought it from for repairs and maintenance but we don't have a hope in hell of getting them in before Monday. Ooh it is good to have a good moan eh?? ![]() |
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Ophelia wrote:
> "dsi1" wrote in message > ... > > > Sure I could get the 12V DC motor for the refrigerator locally. It would > probably cost $140. I can get it off the internet for $20. I did pay $13 for > the shipping. Looks like I saved over a hundred bucks. I figure that by > repairing the fridge myself, I save about $350. That's enough to buy a new > TV. > > == > > Any idea how to get the door open on the washing machine?? Sigh. I was > doing my last wash yesterday before we go away on Monday. Stuck and in > trying to get it open I pulled the handle off (don't know my own strength) > Anyway it will have to wait till we get back. We pay the company we bought > it from for repairs and maintenance but we don't have a hope in hell of > getting them in before Monday. > > Ooh it is good to have a good moan eh?? ![]() Just happened to me with my DVD player, after several years of yeoman service, the "eject" button would not work, luckily no discs in the tray...of course it only cost like seventy bucks to replace, not as dire as a big appliance! -- Best Greg |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 11:04:49 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
> "dsi1" wrote in message > ... > > > Sure I could get the 12V DC motor for the refrigerator locally. It would > probably cost $140. I can get it off the internet for $20. I did pay $13 for > the shipping. Looks like I saved over a hundred bucks. I figure that by > repairing the fridge myself, I save about $350. That's enough to buy a new > TV. > > == > > Any idea how to get the door open on the washing machine?? Sigh. I was > doing my last wash yesterday before we go away on Monday. Stuck and in > trying to get it open I pulled the handle off (don't know my own strength) > Anyway it will have to wait till we get back. We pay the company we bought > it from for repairs and maintenance but we don't have a hope in hell of > getting them in before Monday. > > Ooh it is good to have a good moan eh?? ![]() I'd stick a putty knife in the area and try to unlatch it. If the handle doesn't move when you open the door you can pry it open. Good luck! |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 12:15:23 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote:
> On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 3:59:12 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > > > Warmed a French baguette. > > > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > > > Excellent meal. > > Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() Go for next day shipping. I ship to HI everyday from Pennsylvania. |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 9:47:38 AM UTC-10, Thomas wrote:
> On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 12:15:23 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote: > > On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 3:59:12 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > > > The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > > > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > > > > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > > > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > > > > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > > > > > Warmed a French baguette. > > > > > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > > > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > > > > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > > > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > > > > > Excellent meal. > > > > Things aren't so sweet in this house, we're going to be eating junk food during the weekend. Our refrigerator has crapped out and there's food in boxes in the kitchen. Our kitchen faucet hose has sprung a leak so a new hose has to be sent in from the mainland. I ordered a part for the refrigerator but it takes 3 days to get here. Our TV reboots every few minutes. It's a real shitstorm out here. ![]() > > Go for next day shipping. I ship to HI everyday from Pennsylvania. I paid $13 for the 2 day shipping. Next day was $24. I balked at that. The funny thing about next day shipping is that it takes 2 days. I suppose there's some way to get true next day shipping but you can bet that I'm not willing to pay that much. |
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On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. Unless all you have is a grill. -sw |
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Sqwertz wrote:
> > On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. > They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even > grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of > overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. agreed! |
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On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 12:26:48 -0500, Gary > wrote:
>Sqwertz wrote: >> >> On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: >> >> > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer >> > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. >> >> I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. >> They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even >> grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of >> overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. > >agreed! Of course you agree. |
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On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 12:26:48 -0500, Gary > wrote:
> >> Sqwertz wrote: >>> >>> On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: >>> >>>> Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer >>>> to get them on the skewers than to cook them. >>> >>> I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. >>> They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even >>> grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of >>> overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. >> >> agreed! You do get a bit of texture from the grill. It makes for simple cooking to turn a bunch of shrimp at one time. Makes a nice presentation. I was grilling the asparagus anyway so it is done at the same time and same place. The grill is a couple of steps from the table so the meal is prepared in just a few minutes right where we are going to eat. Yeah,it takes a few minutes to skewer them so get a very large shrimp. Have you at least tried it? |
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Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> > Yeah,it takes a few minutes to skewer them so get a very large shrimp. > Have you at least tried it? Tried it once, Ed. Most of the grilled flavor comes from drippings hitting the coals then smoking the food above. Shrimp don't drip so why grill them? I prefer a shrimp boil or just butterfly them and quickly cook in a frying pan with oil and garlic. |
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On 2019-03-29 1:26 p.m., Gary wrote:
> Sqwertz wrote: >> >> On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: >> >>> Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer >>> to get them on the skewers than to cook them. >> >> I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. >> They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even >> grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of >> overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. > > agreed! > I don't. I frequently cook shrimp on the gas grill and they are much better than when broiled or done on a grill pan. They do cook quickly, and they do get grill marks, which, BTW, appear quickly when flesh is laid onto a hot grill. At any rate, it is a something that cooks quickly and easily when eating alfresco. |
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On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 15:07:59 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2019-03-29 1:26 p.m., Gary wrote: >> Sqwertz wrote: >>> >>> On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: >>> >>>> Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer >>>> to get them on the skewers than to cook them. >>> >>> I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. >>> They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even >>> grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of >>> overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. >> >> agreed! > > I don't. I frequently cook shrimp on the gas grill and they are much > better than when broiled or done on a grill pan. They do cook quickly, > and they do get grill marks, which, BTW, appear quickly when flesh is > laid onto a hot grill. At any rate, it is a something that cooks quickly > and easily when eating alfresco. Eat your next batch of grilled shrimp in the bathroom at McDonalds. Still taste better than the broiler? -sw |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 11:27:24 AM UTC-5, Gary wrote:
> > Sqwertz wrote: > > > > > > I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. > > They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even > > grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of > > overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. > > agreed! > Both of you need to try the spicy shrimp recipe from Reynold Wrap if you want spicy shrimp from the grill. |
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On Saturday, March 30, 2019 at 7:22:10 AM UTC-5, Sqwertz wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Mar 2019 16:17:38 -0700 (PDT), > wrote: > > > Both of you need to try the spicy shrimp recipe from Reynold Wrap if you want > > spicy shrimp from the grill. > > I'm guessing it probably requires shrimp on top of foil on top of a > grill? How is that different from shrimp on a cheap aluminum pan on > a gas stove? > > -sw > No, I just skewered my shrimp and put them on the grill. Of course, done in the kitchen in a skillet no skewering is necessary. You could even do them in the oven on a large sheet pan. |
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On Friday, March 29, 2019 at 12:22:17 PM UTC-4, Sqwertz wrote:
> On Thu, 28 Mar 2019 21:59:09 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > I always thought "shrimp on the barbie" bullshit was pointless. > They cook so quickly that they get no flavor from the grill, or even > grill marks (slight flavor of burnt shrimp but at the risk of > overcooking). and that threading skewers bullshit. A minute on each side on a ripping hot gas grill provides all the flavor and grill marks I need, without overcooking the shrimp. I almost always marinate them, which protects them from overcooking. I'm sorry you don't like threading skewers. Many tasks are tedious but rewarding. > Unless all you have is a grill. What is your preferred dry-heat method for cooking shrimp? Cindy Hamilton Cindy Hamilton |
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On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 9:59:12 PM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. lunch today: home made chicken soup with rivels(https://www.wikihow.com/Make-Rivels:) asparagus and carrots. hot italian sausage(nothing to brag about), and potato salad.(real good). pineapple kipfel. coffee. our rivels are different than the above recipe. we make a stiff dough, and then grate it through the big holes in a box grater. the rivels come out really nice and small. add an extra egg white, and they become more firm. you can purchase dried rivels here which are imported from hungary, but they are real pricey. |
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On Thursday, March 28, 2019 at 3:59:12 PM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> The weather has been perfect this week so I wanted to cook on the grill > and eat on the lanai to enjoy the evening. > > Defrosted some wild caught shrimp and marinated them in fresh orange > juice, olive oil, garlic. Put them on skewers for the grill. > > Picked up some asparagus too, so gave them a little olive oil. > > Warmed a French baguette. > > While in the store to get the bread, this week they had a pinot grigio > for $13.49 but it was BOGO. Good price that way. > > Both the shrimp and the asparagus only took a few minutes. Took longer > to get them on the skewers than to cook them. > > Excellent meal. I just ate a bowl of pork and taro leaves that I found in the freezer. I figure that it's a good time to empty the bin out. Beats the heck out of me how long it's been buried there. My guess it's between 1 or 2 years however, it could be longer. As we all know, time just flies when you're having fun.. https://www.amazon.com/photos/shared...hne2rWV6wz7QGP |
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