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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>
> Hi, the
> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> I would love to give it a try.
>
> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>
> Shirley Holtsmark
>


Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling. I like marinading pork or beef ribs in a Worcestershire sauce - yellow mustard mix and then smoking them for two days before grilling with plenty of salt (I'm not particular about exact measurements) and I add peppers to the BBQ sauce.
It's a very heart-stupid recipe, but your taste buds won't mind!
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> >
> > Hi, the
> > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > I would love to give it a try.
> >
> > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> >
> > Shirley Holtsmark
> >

>
> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling


Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907

24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.

--Bryan
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On 9/6/2020 1:30 PM, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>
>>> Hi, the
>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>
>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>
>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>

>>
>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

>
> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>
> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>
> --Bryan
>



I used a Wang minicomputer with 65K RAM, only 56K available to program.
I made that thing sing.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

Taxed and Spent wrote:
>
> I used a Wang minicomputer with 65K RAM, only 56K available to program.
> I made that thing sing.


When taking computer programming classes in the early 80's
I believe it was an IBM 4345 mainframe (?) that they had.
The computer lab was open 24/7 and I would go there after
midnight on Fri and Sat and was often all alone there.
Not crowded like earlier times of day.

Then I bought a Vic-modem for the Commodore and was able
to do my work at home using one of their 24 dialup lines.
Made life easy. I could do my programming homework
online and save it. Then right before I drove out there
for class, I'd send it to the printer there and the
printout was waiting for me in the computer lab.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> > >
> > > Hi, the
> > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > > I would love to give it a try.
> > >
> > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> > >
> > > Shirley Holtsmark
> > >

> >
> > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

>
> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>
> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>
> --Bryan


My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.


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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 14:43:12 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
wrote:

>On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>> > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>> > >
>> > > Hi, the
>> > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>> > > I would love to give it a try.
>> > >
>> > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>> > >
>> > > Shirley Holtsmark
>> > >
>> >
>> > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

>>
>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>
>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>
>> --Bryan

>
>My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.


If you're not a gamer "super fast" doesn't mean that much.
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On 9/6/2020 3:18 PM, Bruce wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 14:43:12 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
> wrote:
>
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi, the
>>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>>
>>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
>>>
>>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>>
>>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>>
>>> --Bryan

>>
>> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> If you're not a gamer "super fast" doesn't mean that much.
>


and if you are not super fast, you are not a gamer.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 15:28:04 -0700, Taxed and Spent
> wrote:

>On 9/6/2020 3:18 PM, Bruce wrote:
>> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 14:43:12 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>>>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>>>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi, the
>>>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
>>>>
>>>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>>>
>>>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>>>
>>>> --Bryan
>>>
>>> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>>
>> If you're not a gamer "super fast" doesn't mean that much.
>>

>
>and if you are not super fast, you are not a gamer.


You have to be super fast and have 4 arms.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 12:18:51 PM UTC-10, Bruce wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 14:43:12 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
> wrote:
>
> >On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> >> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> >> > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> >> > >
> >> > > Hi, the
> >> > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> >> > > I would love to give it a try.
> >> > >
> >> > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> >> > >
> >> > > Shirley Holtsmark
> >> > >
> >> >
> >> > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
> >>
> >> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> >>
> >> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> >>
> >> --Bryan

> >
> >My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> If you're not a gamer "super fast" doesn't mean that much.


Of course I know - I am supa-talented computer technician. My son has a very fast microprocessor but at these levels, a graphics card is more important than the processor. Two graphics cards are even better.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

Bruce wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 14:43:12 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
> wrote:
>
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi, the
>>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>>
>>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
>>>
>>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>>
>>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>>
>>> --Bryan

>>
>> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> If you're not a gamer "super fast" doesn't mean that much.
>


Indeed Gruce. It's like your ass sniffing ... when yoose can savor
the aroma longer, yoose enjoying more, yet yoose not super fast. Right?






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dsi1 wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>
>>>> Hi, the
>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>
>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>
>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>
>>>
>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

>>
>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>
>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>
>> --Bryan

>
> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.
>


Hahaha. I know. Their entire lives actually revolve around
characters in their games. No computer is too expensive, even if
the baby don't have shoes and bill collectors are pounding on the
door. You can sell them brats anything for gaming, even ridiculous
expensive flashing led gadgets to improve their "experience".

It could be worse ... Some of them even put on full face helmets
with video devices inside, then blindly stumble around in their
make believe "virtual reality" world. That's the breaks, right?

Try to be patient with yoose little boy. He's just very young and
most kids eventually do grow up. They're not really retarded, they
just got hooked on the gaming BS. Better that than heroin and meth,
right? Yoose got a good little boy man!

My guess is this: in the future, when his braces finally come off,
he won't be buck toothed anymore, his pimples will have receded,
and he will dumpster all his little boys toys. Your son will
finally be a young man!















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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 12:59:13 PM UTC-10, Hank Rogers wrote:
> dsi1 wrote:
> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> >> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> >>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> >>>>
> >>>> Hi, the
> >>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> >>>> I would love to give it a try.
> >>>>
> >>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> >>>>
> >>>> Shirley Holtsmark
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
> >>
> >> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> >>
> >> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> >>
> >> --Bryan

> >
> > My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.
> >

>
> Hahaha. I know. Their entire lives actually revolve around
> characters in their games. No computer is too expensive, even if
> the baby don't have shoes and bill collectors are pounding on the
> door. You can sell them brats anything for gaming, even ridiculous
> expensive flashing led gadgets to improve their "experience".
>
> It could be worse ... Some of them even put on full face helmets
> with video devices inside, then blindly stumble around in their
> make believe "virtual reality" world. That's the breaks, right?
>
> Try to be patient with yoose little boy. He's just very young and
> most kids eventually do grow up. They're not really retarded, they
> just got hooked on the gaming BS. Better that than heroin and meth,
> right? Yoose got a good little boy man!
>
> My guess is this: in the future, when his braces finally come off,
> he won't be buck toothed anymore, his pimples will have receded,
> and he will dumpster all his little boys toys. Your son will
> finally be a young man!


Nice mind ****. Save that for the city folks and your hillbilly buddies - that shit don't work on Hawaiians.

I'll let you know about my business just this one time - you gap tooth, no-life of your own, commie-troll. You're so clueless it's pathetic. This summer, my son is helping out a lawyer who has a backlog of a thousand cases, by writing briefs. My son is able to read up on a case and write a summery at a fast pace. This makes him pretty invaluable.

A classmate of his described him as the smartest kid in their class - "not just smart, but scary smart", she told me. If he wants to spend his money on a gaming computer, I ain't going to tell him what to do. I never tell my kids what they should be doing. I got my own life to live and they got their own.

Now go out and get a job - dummkopf.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 4:43:19 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> > > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> > > >
> > > > Hi, the
> > > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > > > I would love to give it a try.
> > > >
> > > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> > > >
> > > > Shirley Holtsmark
> > > >
> > >
> > > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

> >
> > Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> >
> > 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> >
> > --Bryan

> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.


I used to buy a new, el cheapo computer every several years. About 4 years ago, I was at Microcenter, and they had a used HP Z400. It had Win7 Pro on it. Later on, I bought the one I'm using right now, a Z800. Both needed new graphics cards. The Z800 came with 24GB RAM (12 2GB DIMMs), and I'd intended to replace 6 of them with 8GB DIMMs. I ordered them, and then soon after got an email that appeared to me to say that my purchase had been cancelled because they were no longer available, so I ordered 6 more. My order hadn't been cancelled. The email was just about something I had been looking at at a store where I was logged in (Newegg maybe?). So, while I had intended to upgrade to 60GB, I ended up with 96. That's actually only half the maximum supported. The machine was 6-7 years old, but when they were released, they were the highest end Windows workstations--the closest thing to a Mac Pro. It dual boots Win7 Pro or Linux Mint. It really is everything I could ever need, as I'm not a gamer, though it really could use a much better graphics card. My old boss gave me the one that's in it for free, as it was an old one he'd replaced on a previous computer. When it's booted in Windows the Windows Experience test has it maxed out or very close to maxed out on everything but the graphics, which is less than 2.0 out of 7..9. Even with the added RAM, and SSDs, I've only got less than $500 into it, and my cheap ass really ought to spend the $200 on a decent graphics card, as the thing does slow down when the processors have to deal with duties that should really be preformed by the graphics card. I should probably buy a memory cooling fan too, as when I boot it, and it detects 96 gigs of RAM, and I have to F1 to boot. I've had the memory installed for about a year, and no memory modules have failed.

It really is a thing of beauty aesthetically. The brushed aluminum case was designed by BMW, and all the components snap in w/o any screws.
https://www.techeblog.com/bmw-design...z800-computer/
I only boot Windows when working offline, as Win7 has no more security patches, and I don't run antivirus.

--Bryan
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 1:23:48 PM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 4:43:19 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> > > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> > > > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> > > > >
> > > > > Hi, the
> > > > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > > > > I would love to give it a try.
> > > > >
> > > > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> > > > >
> > > > > Shirley Holtsmark
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
> > >
> > > Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> > >
> > > 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> > >
> > > --Bryan

> > My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> I used to buy a new, el cheapo computer every several years. About 4 years ago, I was at Microcenter, and they had a used HP Z400. It had Win7 Pro on it. Later on, I bought the one I'm using right now, a Z800. Both needed new graphics cards. The Z800 came with 24GB RAM (12 2GB DIMMs), and I'd intended to replace 6 of them with 8GB DIMMs. I ordered them, and then soon after got an email that appeared to me to say that my purchase had been cancelled because they were no longer available, so I ordered 6 more. My order hadn't been cancelled. The email was just about something I had been looking at at a store where I was logged in (Newegg maybe?). So, while I had intended to upgrade to 60GB, I ended up with 96. That's actually only half the maximum supported. The machine was 6-7 years old, but when they were released, they were the highest end Windows workstations--the closest thing to a Mac Pro. It dual boots Win7 Pro or Linux Mint. It really is everything I could ever need, as I'm not a gamer, though it really could use a much better graphics card. My old boss gave me the one that's in it for free, as it was an old one he'd replaced on a previous computer. When it's booted in Windows the Windows Experience test has it maxed out or very close to maxed out on everything but the graphics, which is less than 2.0 out of 7.9. Even with the added RAM, and SSDs, I've only got less than $500 into it, and my cheap ass really ought to spend the $200 on a decent graphics card, as the thing does slow down when the processors have to deal with duties that should really be preformed by the graphics card. I should probably buy a memory cooling fan too, as when I boot it, and it detects 96 gigs of RAM, and I have to F1 to boot. I've had the memory installed for about a year, and no memory modules have failed.
>
> It really is a thing of beauty aesthetically. The brushed aluminum case was designed by BMW, and all the components snap in w/o any screws.
> https://www.techeblog.com/bmw-design...z800-computer/
> I only boot Windows when working offline, as Win7 has no more security patches, and I don't run antivirus.
>
> --Bryan


Some computer cases are just awesome but I always went with budget cases that looked kind of cool. I got my first PC in 1989 and it was quite an exciting ride for the next 20 years. The years after that were kind of a drudge with all the problems with security, updating, and upgrading. These days, I use a lightweight computer with a lightweight, low-wattage, processor. I'm as happy as a clam.

That stuff my son is doing is not the future of gaming, instead, it's a dead end. The future of gaming is going to be in the clouds. OTOH, I'm not into gaming these days.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 17:11:42 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 >
wrote:

>On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 1:23:48 PM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 4:43:19 PM UTC-5, dsi1 wrote:
>> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>> > > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
>> > > > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>> > > > >
>> > > > > Hi, the
>> > > > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>> > > > > I would love to give it a try.
>> > > > >
>> > > > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>> > > > >
>> > > > > Shirley Holtsmark
>> > > > >
>> > > >
>> > > > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
>> > >
>> > > Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>> > >
>> > > 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>> > >
>> > > --Bryan
>> > My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>>
>> I used to buy a new, el cheapo computer every several years. About 4 years ago, I was at Microcenter, and they had a used HP Z400. It had Win7 Pro on it. Later on, I bought the one I'm using right now, a Z800. Both needed new graphics cards. The Z800 came with 24GB RAM (12 2GB DIMMs), and I'd intended to replace 6 of them with 8GB DIMMs. I ordered them, and then soon after got an email that appeared to me to say that my purchase had been cancelled because they were no longer available, so I ordered 6 more. My order hadn't been cancelled. The email was just about something I had been looking at at a store where I was logged in (Newegg maybe?). So, while I had intended to upgrade to 60GB, I ended up with 96. That's actually only half the maximum supported. The machine was 6-7 years old, but when they were released, they were the highest end Windows workstations--the closest thing to a Mac Pro. It dual boots Win7 Pro or Linux Mint. It really is everything I could ever

>need, as I'm not a gamer, though it really could use a much better graphics card. My old boss gave me the one that's in it for free, as it was an old one he'd replaced on a previous computer. When it's booted in Windows the Windows Experience test has it maxed out or very close to maxed out on everything but the graphics, which is less than 2.0 out of 7.9. Even with the added RAM, and SSDs, I've only got less than $500 into it, and my cheap ass really ought to spend the $200 on a decent graphics card, as the thing does slow down when the processors have to deal with duties that should really be preformed by the graphics card. I should probably buy a memory cooling fan too, as when I boot it, and it detects 96 gigs of RAM, and I have to F1 to boot. I've had the memory installed for about a year, and no memory modules have failed.
>>
>> It really is a thing of beauty aesthetically. The brushed aluminum case was designed by BMW, and all the components snap in w/o any screws.
>> https://www.techeblog.com/bmw-design...z800-computer/
>> I only boot Windows when working offline, as Win7 has no more security patches, and I don't run antivirus.
>>
>> --Bryan

>
>Some computer cases are just awesome but I always went with budget cases that looked kind of cool. I got my first PC in 1989 and it was quite an exciting ride for the next 20 years. The years after that were kind of a drudge with all the problems with security, updating, and upgrading. These days, I use a lightweight computer with a lightweight, low-wattage, processor. I'm as happy as a clam.
>
>That stuff my son is doing is not the future of gaming, instead, it's a dead end. The future of gaming is going to be in the clouds. OTOH, I'm not into gaming these days.


Gaming in the cloud? How can that ever be fast enough?


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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 5:43:19 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> > > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> > > >
> > > > Hi, the
> > > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > > > I would love to give it a try.
> > > >
> > > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> > > >
> > > > Shirley Holtsmark
> > > >
> > >
> > > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling

> >
> > Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> >
> > 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> >
> > --Bryan

> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.


Just imagine if they had 8K 5G 60 frames per second back in 1996, wow.
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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 3:11:46 PM UTC-10, bruce bowser wrote:
> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 5:43:19 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote:
> > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 10:30:10 AM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote:
> > > On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, an imposter wrote:
> > > > On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> > > > >
> > > > > Hi, the
> > > > > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > > > > I would love to give it a try.
> > > > >
> > > > > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> > > > >
> > > > > Shirley Holtsmark
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling
> > >
> > > Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> > >
> > > 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
> > >
> > > --Bryan

> > My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive, super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> Just imagine if they had 8K 5G 60 frames per second back in 1996, wow.


Those consoles back then like the N64 wowed us when they came out. People are still being wowed by new games even today. OTOH, there's some popular games out there today that look pretty sketchy by even N64 standards. I don't get it myself but I suppose that's perfectly normal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cK-BfH1M6zM
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dsi1 wrote:
>
> My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger
> case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His
> computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always
> built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive,
> super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.


Sad to me how computer tech has progressed "too fast," imo.
I miss the original Nentendo Mario Brothers game.
And also the Super Nentendo Super Mario Bros.
IE - the first two generations of Nentendo/Mario bros

Cost was about $60 for each cartridge but each
one had several levels with several games in each.
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On Monday, September 7, 2020 at 1:26:56 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote:
> dsi1 wrote:
> >
> > My son ordered a new graphics card. He had to get a bigger
> > case and extra cooling to accommodate that monster. His
> > computer is relatively new and is super fast. I always
> > built fast computers that were cheap. He builds expensive,
> > super-fast, computers. That's gamers for you.

>
> Sad to me how computer tech has progressed "too fast," imo.
> I miss the original Nentendo Mario Brothers game.
> And also the Super Nentendo Super Mario Bros.
> IE - the first two generations of Nentendo/Mario bros
>
> Cost was about $60 for each cartridge but each
> one had several levels with several games in each.


I bought one of these TurboGrafx-16 minis. It's an emulator that's able to play a lot of 8/16 bit PC Engine games dating from 1989. That's pretty much my speed game-wise, these days.

https://www.pcmag.com/reviews/turbografx-16-mini
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On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 13:30:04 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Simmons wrote:

> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>
> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.


You have 96 gigabytes of ram in a PC?

-sw


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On 9/6/2020 4:50 PM, Sqwertz wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 13:30:04 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Simmons wrote:
>
>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>
>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.

>
> You have 96 gigabytes of ram in a PC?
>
> -sw
>



you bothered to read his post?
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Sqwertz wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 13:30:04 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Simmons wrote:
>
>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>
>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.

>
> You have 96 gigabytes of ram in a PC?
>
> -sw
>


Some have more than that.

Hell I have 24GB in an old dell that's almost 10 years old.

Did yoose know some folks have running water now? No shit ... even
some in texass.




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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 11:49:37 PM UTC-4, Hank Rogers wrote:
> Sqwertz wrote:
> > On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 13:30:04 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Simmons wrote:
> >
> >> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
> >>
> >> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.

> >
> > You have 96 gigabytes of ram in a PC?
> >
> > -sw
> >

> Some have more than that.
>
> Hell I have 24GB in an old dell that's almost 10 years old.
>
> Did yoose know some folks have running water now? No shit ... even
> some in texass.


That's quite a bit. Does it have a 64-bit OS?

Cindy Hamilton
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On Mon, 7 Sep 2020 03:07:57 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton wrote:

> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 11:49:37 PM UTC-4, Hank Rogers wrote:
>> Sqwertz wrote:
>>> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 13:30:04 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Simmons wrote:
>>>
>>>> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>>>>
>>>> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>>>
>>> You have 96 gigabytes of ram in a PC?
>>>
>>> -sw
>>>

>> Some have more than that.
>>
>> Hell I have 24GB in an old dell that's almost 10 years old.
>>
>> Did yoose know some folks have running water now? No shit ... even
>> some in texass.

>
> That's quite a bit. Does it have a 64-bit OS?


It would have to. 32bit OS's only support 4GB, IIRC.

96GB is for servers. There's no way a home PC would need that much.
I've never seen my usage go up over 4GB. And if he says he has a
cheapo graphics card, then at least 90GB of that is going to waste.

-sw
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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 3:30:10 PM UTC-5, Bryan Simmons wrote:
....

> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer. Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95. https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>
> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.
>
> --Bryan


I can't remember the year, but it was the late 1980's when Sue and I bought for 19.95 at a Schnucks in Fenton MO I'm pretty sure our first computer, a Timex Sinclair with 4K memory, plus the optional 16K memory expansion pack! It had a cassette tape interface to load or store programs on.

https://americanhistory.si.edu/colle...ct/nmah_334354

:-)

John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist, Suburban Renewalist and Vegetarian


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Bryan Simmons wrote:
>
> Ah, 1996. The year I bought my first computer.
> Pretty much exactly this one, with Windows 95.
> https://www.ebay.com/c/1120915907
>
> 24MB RAM. My current one has four thousand times more memory.


My first 2 computers were in the early 1980's.
Commodore Vic-20, then the C64 a couple years later.
I loved those kids. I still have them and all the
accessories including software purchased and software
that I wrote (stored on cassette tape)

Then around 1996, I bought my first PC. It was the last
year's model with Windows 3.1

It was an IBM and came with 4MB ram. 2 years later, I
added an 8MB ram chip that was on a good sale for
only $125.00. LOL

The one thing I miss is that old IBM keyboard.
Rather than mushy keys today, each key on that one
had a bit of resistance when you pushed and also
made an audible (and physical vs software) click.

It made a good transition from electric typewriter keys.
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On Mon, 07 Sep 2020 07:25:37 -0400, Gary wrote:

> My first 2 computers were in the early 1980's.
> Commodore Vic-20, then the C64 a couple years later.
> I loved those kids. I still have them and all the
> accessories including software purchased and software
> that I wrote (stored on cassette tape)


Here's my TRS-80 Space Invaders-type game written entirely in Z-80
Assembly Language. It was actually a state of the art game back
then. It has moving explosive shields and 160 x 96(?) graphics (The
max of the TRS-80)

https://postimg.cc/gallery/0S4QNQX

I mean. you can tell what it does just by reading it, right? I was
14 years old at the time. The last page is probably the most
"interesting". It has all the text from the game, but it succumbed
to a paper cutter at some point.

-sw
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Sqwertz wrote:
>
> On Mon, 07 Sep 2020 07:25:37 -0400, Gary wrote:
>
> > My first 2 computers were in the early 1980's.
> > Commodore Vic-20, then the C64 a couple years later.
> > I loved those kids. I still have them and all the
> > accessories including software purchased and software
> > that I wrote (stored on cassette tape)

>
> Here's my TRS-80 Space Invaders-type game written entirely in Z-80
> Assembly Language. It was actually a state of the art game back
> then. It has moving explosive shields and 160 x 96(?) graphics (The
> max of the TRS-80)
>
> https://postimg.cc/gallery/0S4QNQX
>
> I mean. you can tell what it does just by reading it, right? I was
> 14 years old at the time. The last page is probably the most
> "interesting". It has all the text from the game, but it succumbed
> to a paper cutter at some point.
>
> -sw


I'm impressed. I was just delving into assembly language
when I got divorced and full time care of daughter.
Let it go then as not much personal time left.

I did do several subroutines in Assembly in Basic programs.
Much faster and efficent. Just a simple JSR.

I had just started trying recreate a program I liked in
all assembly language when I had to stop. By time I got
back to it, Commodores were history and new stuff was
completely different.

This might be interesting. One Friday afternoon in
the early 1980's I decided to recreate the board game
"Scrabble" on the cheap Vic-20.

I copied the game exactly too. Same board, same tiles
with the values, etc. The only thing I couldn't do for
computer playing was to save tiles that you didn't use.
So I changed it to use whatever tiles then they all got
tossed back in the pile. Each turn you got all new unused
tiles.

Anyway, I did the graphics then all the coding for the
game. Spent about 10 hours making this all. Stupidly,
I was on a roll so I never saved copies on the slow
cassette tape machine.

Finally about 2am, and almost finished, my electricity
went off for a moment and the computer froze with no
hope of recovery. I sat there in disbelief. Oh SHIT!

After a few minutes, I just turned off and on the computer
and started over. As I had just written this, I was able
to do it again in about 4 hours that time.

Very nice exact version. Thought I might be able to sell it
so I contacted the Scrabble people (Selchow and Righter) or
something close.

They wrote me back thanking me but they had already sold
the computer rights to some other software company and
they gave me their address.

So I wrote to the software company and they wrote back
thanking me for the offer but...
"We already have a team of programmers working on this."

Really? A team of programmers working on it and I did it
myself in one night?

In hindsight, I should have changed a few things to avoid
copyright and tried to market it myself as "Scramble" instead
of Scrabble.

OH well.
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On 9/7/2020 9:46 AM, Gary wrote:
> Sqwertz wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, 07 Sep 2020 07:25:37 -0400, Gary wrote:
>>
>>> My first 2 computers were in the early 1980's.
>>> Commodore Vic-20, then the C64 a couple years later.
>>> I loved those kids. I still have them and all the
>>> accessories including software purchased and software
>>> that I wrote (stored on cassette tape)

>>
>> Here's my TRS-80 Space Invaders-type game written entirely in Z-80
>> Assembly Language. It was actually a state of the art game back
>> then. It has moving explosive shields and 160 x 96(?) graphics (The
>> max of the TRS-80)
>>
>> https://postimg.cc/gallery/0S4QNQX
>>
>> I mean. you can tell what it does just by reading it, right? I was
>> 14 years old at the time. The last page is probably the most
>> "interesting". It has all the text from the game, but it succumbed
>> to a paper cutter at some point.
>>
>> -sw

>
> I'm impressed. I was just delving into assembly language
> when I got divorced and full time care of daughter.
> Let it go then as not much personal time left.
>
> I did do several subroutines in Assembly in Basic programs.
> Much faster and efficent. Just a simple JSR.
>
> I had just started trying recreate a program I liked in
> all assembly language when I had to stop. By time I got
> back to it, Commodores were history and new stuff was
> completely different.
>
> This might be interesting. One Friday afternoon in
> the early 1980's I decided to recreate the board game
> "Scrabble" on the cheap Vic-20.
>
> I copied the game exactly too. Same board, same tiles
> with the values, etc. The only thing I couldn't do for
> computer playing was to save tiles that you didn't use.
> So I changed it to use whatever tiles then they all got
> tossed back in the pile. Each turn you got all new unused
> tiles.
>
> Anyway, I did the graphics then all the coding for the
> game. Spent about 10 hours making this all. Stupidly,
> I was on a roll so I never saved copies on the slow
> cassette tape machine.
>
> Finally about 2am, and almost finished, my electricity
> went off for a moment and the computer froze with no
> hope of recovery. I sat there in disbelief. Oh SHIT!
>
> After a few minutes, I just turned off and on the computer
> and started over. As I had just written this, I was able
> to do it again in about 4 hours that time.
>
> Very nice exact version. Thought I might be able to sell it
> so I contacted the Scrabble people (Selchow and Righter) or
> something close.
>
> They wrote me back thanking me but they had already sold
> the computer rights to some other software company and
> they gave me their address.
>
> So I wrote to the software company and they wrote back
> thanking me for the offer but...
> "We already have a team of programmers working on this."
>
> Really? A team of programmers working on it and I did it
> myself in one night?
>
> In hindsight, I should have changed a few things to avoid
> copyright and tried to market it myself as "Scramble" instead
> of Scrabble.
>
> OH well.
>



That sounds good, but it would not pass muster these days. It needs to
take up at least 50MB disc space to be considered suitable these days.
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On Monday, September 7, 2020 at 12:45:46 PM UTC-4, Gary wrote:

> I'm impressed. I was just delving into assembly language
> when I got divorced and full time care of daughter.
> Let it go then as not much personal time left.
>
> I did do several subroutines in Assembly in Basic programs.
> Much faster and efficent. Just a simple JSR.
>
> I had just started trying recreate a program I liked in
> all assembly language when I had to stop. By time I got
> back to it, Commodores were history and new stuff was
> completely different.


And that's why high-level languages were invented. You
can program in C (for example) and as long as you're not _too_
close to the hardware you can compile it for another
architecture/OS and it's all good.

The software my employer produces is two parts: one
runs on the target hardware and is mainly C with a
tiny bit of assembler where speed is of the essence.
The target hardware might be PowerPC, Intel, or ARM
running any of a variety of OSs. The other part runs
on an ordinary PC and provides the human interface
to the target software and it only has to be as fast as a
person, which isn't very fast (compared to the stresses
in a helicopter blade or jet engine).

Cindy Hamilton


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On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, bruce bowser wrote:
>
> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> >
> > Hi, the
> > Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> > I would love to give it a try.
> >
> > Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> >
> > Shirley Holtsmark
> >

>
> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling. I like marinading pork or beef ribs in a Worcestershire sauce - yellow mustard mix and then smoking them for two days before grilling with plenty of salt (I'm not particular about exact measurements) and I add peppers to the BBQ sauce.
> It's a very heart-stupid recipe, but your taste buds won't mind!
>

I'd bet a bottle of barbecue sauce that Shirley has not been hanging
around the group since November 1996 (23½+ years) wondering when you
dig up this thread and post to it.
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Hank Rogers wrote:
> I'll see your cherry cola, and raise yoose a box of depends.
>
> No, wait ... I'll throw in a pack of genuine marine ****ing rubbers
> from the navy base exchange.


In 1973/74, I lived with 3 army guys. One was a quartermaster
and stole stuff all the time.

One day he came home with a box of a gross/12 dozen/144 condoms.

Next weekend we had a big trashcan party and many of those
condoms were blown up into watermelon size balloons then
batted all around the living room.

This is your military (and Gary) on beer...easily amused!
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"Gary" wrote in message ...

Hank Rogers wrote:
> I'll see your cherry cola, and raise yoose a box of depends.
>
> No, wait ... I'll throw in a pack of genuine marine ****ing rubbers
> from the navy base exchange.


In 1973/74, I lived with 3 army guys. One was a quartermaster
and stole stuff all the time.

One day he came home with a box of a gross/12 dozen/144 condoms.

Next weekend we had a big trashcan party and many of those
condoms were blown up into watermelon size balloons then
batted all around the living room.

This is your military (and Gary) on beer...easily amused!


===

D. laughed about the quartermaster! Seems it was the same here too lol



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On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 19:14:14 -0400, jmcquown >
wrote:

>On 9/6/2020 7:02 PM, wrote:
>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, bruce bowser wrote:
>>>
>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>
>>>> Hi, the
>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>
>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>
>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>
>>>
>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling. I like marinading pork or beef ribs in a Worcestershire sauce - yellow mustard mix and then smoking them for two days before grilling with plenty of salt (I'm not particular about exact measurements) and I add peppers to the BBQ sauce.
>>> It's a very heart-stupid recipe, but your taste buds won't mind!
>>>

>> I'd bet a bottle of barbecue sauce that Shirley has not been hanging
>> around the group since November 1996 (23½+ years) wondering when you
>> dig up this thread and post to it.
>>

>Go all in, Joan. Bet a bottle of cherry cola.
>
>Jill


;(( You're making fun of my recent find for a marinade/baste for
chicken thighs. It was delightful. My husband especially made sure
that I put the recipe away so that I could do chicken that way often.
The thighs were moist and the sauce was just that, 'saucy' Lightly
sweet and made a nice coating for the chicken. I will make again.
So Easy, why not?
Janet US
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On Monday, September 7, 2020 at 12:09:21 AM UTC-4, U.S. Janet B. wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 19:14:14 -0400, jmcquown >
> wrote:
> >On 9/6/2020 7:02 PM, wrote:
> >> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, bruce bowser wrote:
> >>>
> >>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
> >>>>
> >>>> Hi, the
> >>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
> >>>> I would love to give it a try.
> >>>>
> >>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
> >>>>
> >>>> Shirley Holtsmark
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling. I like marinading pork or beef ribs in a Worcestershire sauce - yellow mustard mix and then smoking them for two days before grilling with plenty of salt (I'm not particular about exact measurements) and I add peppers to the BBQ sauce.
> >>> It's a very heart-stupid recipe, but your taste buds won't mind!
> >>>
> >> I'd bet a bottle of barbecue sauce that Shirley has not been hanging
> >> around the group since November 1996 (23ï½½+ years) wondering when you
> >> dig up this thread and post to it.
> >>

> >Go all in, Joan. Bet a bottle of cherry cola.
> >
> >Jill

> ;(( You're making fun of my recent find for a marinade/baste for
> chicken thighs. It was delightful. My husband especially made sure
> that I put the recipe away so that I could do chicken that way often.
> The thighs were moist and the sauce was just that, 'saucy' Lightly
> sweet and made a nice coating for the chicken. I will make again.
> So Easy, why not?
> Janet US


Yeah well, the more trans fat, the tastier. It's ashame, too.
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Default Best BBQ babyback ribs recipes needed...

On 9/7/2020 12:09 AM, U.S. Janet B. wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Sep 2020 19:14:14 -0400, jmcquown >
> wrote:
>
>> On 9/6/2020 7:02 PM, wrote:
>>> On Sunday, September 6, 2020 at 2:01:51 PM UTC-5, bruce bowser wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Nov 23, 1996, E & S Holtsmark wrote
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi, the
>>>>> Please e-mail me the best BBQ babyback ribs recipes you may have.
>>>>> I would love to give it a try.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you very much. Happy Thanksgiving!!!
>>>>>
>>>>> Shirley Holtsmark
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Back in 2015, heard them talking on MSNBC about soaking ribs in cherry cola for awhile, before grilling. I like marinading pork or beef ribs in a Worcestershire sauce - yellow mustard mix and then smoking them for two days before grilling with plenty of salt (I'm not particular about exact measurements) and I add peppers to the BBQ sauce.
>>>> It's a very heart-stupid recipe, but your taste buds won't mind!
>>>>
>>> I'd bet a bottle of barbecue sauce that Shirley has not been hanging
>>> around the group since November 1996 (23½+ years) wondering when you
>>> dig up this thread and post to it.
>>>

>> Go all in, Joan. Bet a bottle of cherry cola.
>>
>> Jill

>
> ;(( You're making fun of my recent find for a marinade/baste for
> chicken thighs. It was delightful. My husband especially made sure
> that I put the recipe away so that I could do chicken that way often.
> The thighs were moist and the sauce was just that, 'saucy' Lightly
> sweet and made a nice coating for the chicken. I will make again.
> So Easy, why not?
> Janet US
>

I wasn't, Janet. I was commenting on joan's reply to an ancient baby
back ribs post mentioning cherry cola.

Jill
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