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|    AUTOMOTIVE    |    Anything to do with cars    |    2,177 messages    |
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|    Message 1,082 of 2,177    |
|    Roger Nelson to Roy Witt    |
|    Red Angel    |
|    18 May 12 08:40:45    |
      On Thu May-17-2012 09:37, Roy Witt (1:387/22) wrote to Roger Nelson:               RW> 17 May 12 06:55, Roger Nelson wrote to Roy Witt:               RN>> That is all too often the case with people who like beer. I'm        RN>> allergic to it now, but I will drink a small glass of Chardonnay        RN>> about once a year.               RW>> 8^) Harry doesn't drink anymore, now that he has a respectible job        RW>> and an obligation to be there, bright and cheery, by 7am...not that        RW>> he was ever late to work at his own shop the day after a beer        RW>> session the night before. Just grumpy as hell.               RN> BTDT. (-:               RW> I drank like that when I was a youngster, quit when I woke up one        RW> day with my first ever hangover. I was 40yo at the time. I've been        RW> sick before, but I never had a hangover that left me unable to move        RW> off the couch.               I quit long before I got marrried for the first time. The hangovers were       interfering with my responsibilities.               RN>> I discovered the trunk is a great place to put a new loaf of bread.        RN>> It comes out so fresh it'll slap you. (-:               RW>> How about a day old loaf of bread? Or a two week old loaf? I'm        RW>> keeping a loaf of Sarah Lee bread around to see how long it takes        RW>> for it to turn green. So far, it's over two weeks old and looks        RW>> fine. It's not bad if you toast it, but a little stiff if you want        RW>> a plain sandwich.               RN> With a day-old loaf, it should bring it back to its original        RN> freshness, but with a two-week old bread I'd be afraid of the        RN> ingredients that kept the mold from forming.               RW> They're just preservative chemicals. 8^)              Monosodium glutamate?               RN> Even farmers have to be sure their hay is absolutely dry, else mold        RN> will form on the damp part(s) and then the bale will catch fire from        RN> the heat generated by the mold as it spreads to the dry part.               RW> Hay in a silo will ferment and that makes the cows happy. The        RW> methane gas that accumulates in that silo can make you sick, but        RW> not before you breath so much of it that you get drunk from it. By        RW> then you're ready to pass out.              LOL! Did you know that the Kiwi government tried to tax cattle emissions? I       had the article from a NZ paper, but lost that in the storm of '05. The law       did not pass, strangely enough.               RN> When I was a child and after my dad died, we simply tore off the        RN> mold from the bread and ate the good part.               RW> The birds won't even eat that!              We did and I'm still here. Surely you don't think I ate the moldy part?               RW>> Some of the locally baked bread must be moldy on the shelf, since a        RW>> fresh loaf seems to turn green the day after you bring it home...               RN> It shouldn't be left there that long if that store wants to remain in        RN> business.               RW> Its fresh bread, brought in the same day it has been baked.              Something wrong with the dough, possibly.               RN> Something else could be wrong if the bread is only a day old. I've        RN> suggested to store managers here and everywhere I've lived        RN> to keep the bread aisle away from refrigerated aisles because the        RN> cold causes the bread to go stale faster, but they won't listen.        RN> They give me some baloney reason why the bread aisle is so close to        RN> the refrigerated aisle and it's nonsense and I told them so.               RW> Well, there you go. The bread isle (at Wal-Mart) is right next to        RW> the fresh veggies and fresh fish refrigeration units. Next to the        RW> fish is the fresh meat (beef) coolers...on the other side of the        RW> fresh veggies is the frozen ice cream cooler. There's also a        RW> (cakes, etc.) bakery in the bread isle.              We have two Wal Marts here and one of them is as you describe and the other,       oddly enough, is not. The Rouse super markets here have good management, so I       don't have to clue them in to what cold air does to bread.                     Regards,              Roger        --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+        * Origin: NCS BBS - Houma, LA - (1:3828/7)    |
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