Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Saturday, January 25, 2025

Anti-Government Rant

 Jackboot Thugs

Another story of the ATF doing a full scale raid on a couple’s home in the early hours and treating the man and wife like dangerous terrorists.  Why the heavy handed tactics when there was no need? 0800 go up and knock on the door. Second question, why wasn’t the county sheriff there? Two deputies in over their heads and likely not trained for that type of situation, would make me question why that sheriff needs to be reelected, if I were a voter in that county.

Hopefully the Trump administration will get this rouge agency under control.

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 It has happened before.

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And not just ATF

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But wait, there is more.

Slickers

Finally

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Butter

Once again I’m seeing articles on how butter is bad and various “spreads” are healthier. Maybe, but something that is one molecule away from plastic isn’t something I want to ingest.

 Not all butter in the supermarket is the same. I try to find “first churned”, usually Amish, roll butter. Expensive, but my health is worth it.

Pardons

I’m not a lawyer and haven’t stayed at a Holiday Inn Express in years. That said, I think SloJo’s handlers have made a huge blunder. Those “pardoned” can no long take the 5th, as I understand the way the system works. Slimy Milley didn’t just do it alone. He had aides, subordinates, who in the normal course of time will be promoted into higher position. They helped him, and they can be prosecuted. The head snake may escape but the pit of vipers can’t.

 There are scores of  MIlleys sitting on a Presidential pardon.

 Are these subordinates going to quietly accept their fate? Or, will they take out the threat to them? Will our national murder rate have an upswing?

 “If no one talks, we all walk”.

EV Blues

Trump pledges to target the EV industry, while Coloradans widely embrace their clean new cars

Typical leftist journalism click bait headline. Because of big subsidies (i.e. sucking at the taxpayer’s tit) some people buy electric vehicles. The rest of us paying for those subsidies are less enthusiastic.

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My view? Go President, Trump, go!

Speaking of American Mainstream Maggots (h/t BZ)

Anonymous source, not authorized to speak publicly, says………….

Which likely means the anonymous source is the reporter’s imagination.

 He wants to be your next President

Such a good smoke and mirrors job he has done to Colorado, just imagine what he can do for the country!

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Choice Pallet

I’m falling behind on the competition for the best pallet next to the stove with no fuel. LL, among others, is way ahead.

 As always, YMMV

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Wandering Thoughts from an Unfocused Mind

 

This is Embarrassing

 Fire Department

Electric Bill

Is anyone surprised that almost exactly ½ of my electric bill is for things other than electricity? That means every time I get an email from scumbag woke green power advocate Xcel telling me how to reduce my bill I get pissed.

This is an example of, instead of taxed to death, we are “fees” to death. Fee or tax, what does it matter? Hits my wallet exactly the same. Speaking of fees:

 At a morning news conference, members of the caucus announced a series of bills that Minority Leader Paul Lundeen, R-Monument, said would create an average annual savings of $4,500 per family if passed. The bills involve repeal of new fees and regulatory increases signed since 2019, rollback of regulations concerning homebuilding and new approaches to energy policy.

The announcement follows the December release of a study commissioned by the Colorado Chamber of Commerce that found Colorado is the sixth-most-regulated state and that 45% of its 170,000 rules are redundant or excessive compared to other states.

Has a snowball’s chance in hell passing, IMO.

Renewable Energy Aftermath

What a farce, these windmills. Petroleum fuel needed to construct them, petroleum lubricants in large quantities needed for their operation. Depending on the size, 60 to 700 gallons for a five mega-watt is needed for one generator.

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The areas strip mined for coat is reclaimed and the idea of covering these windmill parts in the pits before they are covered is sensible. An idea so sensible the federal government takes four years to approve the practice.

P.S. As I travel around these windmills I’ve yet to see an EV service truck.

Wolves

The stupidity continues. The area residents are getting wise. Flight tracking and map reading (state owned land) must irritate the mandarins.

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Friends of mine in Routt County raise, train, and sell Akbash guardian dogs.  Want to take odds on owners of these dogs being prosecuted when one of their dogs kills a wolf?

Now some feel good group is offering a $100,000 reward for the conviction of anyone killing a wolf.

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Secretary of State Jena Griswald (P) Colorado

Speculation is she intends to run for Governor. A recent comment about her from a polling firm says this:

SoS Jena Griswold (D) is thought to be interested, and is transparently ambitious, but also a somewhat polarizing progressive figure.”

 Adds Colorado Peak Politics:

No two words in polite English conversation describe Griswold better than “transparently ambitious,” yet we would throw in “ruthlessly” just for accuracy.

My guess is she will try for the United States Senate. I expect the incumbent saloon keeper won’t run again. She will lose, as Emperor Polis wants to be our next Senator.

Food Shortages

The Safeway I patronize frequently has noticeable shortages of eggs and dairy products. Not out, but seldom full shelves. Manufactured crap, yes. As an example, I put heavy cream in my coffee. No cholesterol. The cooler is seldom full. Next window over is “sweet creamer”. Reading the label you find a long list of ingredients but no dairy cream.

Pure Blood

Many of my neighbors in the apartment building are sick. Several are hospitalized. The common denominator seems to involve lungs and/or flu. Every one of them took the whole COVID regime shots.

One neighbor is militantly anti-vac. She and I seem to be the only ones in the building not afflicted. Lesson here?

 As always, YMMV

 

Friday, May 2, 2014

Beer, Wine, and Bull Berry Jelly



OldAFSarge prompted some trips down memory lane and serving in the Army, Germany, circa 1965.


My introduction to German beer was part of my unit’s welcoming tradition.  FNGs were treated to several beers at the EM Club. German beer, until you develop a tolerance, is an effective laxative. FNGs rapidly learned the latrine locations during the next several days. Such kind, welcoming comrades were in my engineer company, to be sure.

Bottled beer came in glass bottles with “flipper tops”. I can’t remember ever seeing German beer in cans.

The artillery battery on our Kaserne had a goat mascot. He learned to open flipper tops. At one of their organization days, he got into the beer supply and literally drank himself to death.

The principal beer around Hanau was Henninger, usually served in ½ liter glasses. Every bar seemed to have glass boots that held one to two liters. The challenge was to chug them. Please understand, we were 17-25 years old and really didn’t give a fuck about anything. Since I was already a veteran volume beer drinker, thanks to Colorado’s 3.2 beer, I could usually win any chugging contest whether the challenger was a local or a G.I. Perhaps this was a principal reason I was a regular on the First Sergeant’s “volunteer” extra duty detail (alternative to an Article 15). 

 One FNG with a high opinion of his high moral character (just ask him) called us a bunch of drunken assholes. No, we were assholes that drank.

The Henninger brewery in Frankfurt-am-Main was something of a landmark. There was a restaurant in the tower; way too rich for a bottom rung pay scale G.I.

One good duty then was payroll guard. The Army paid in cash. Once a month an officer, usually a Lt, and three armed guards would be taken by helicopter to Bremerhaven to pick up the payroll. The duty rotated among the companies in the battalion. Other than on a rifle range, this was the only time I had live ammo. This was always a three day trip which gave us two nights to sample the delights of Bremerhaven. One time the town was full of drunk US sailors. This was the 2nd day they were in port. The third night, only some hardy career sailors were on the town. These men had drunk every kind of swill around the world and were immune to intestinal distress. We asked them about the state of the heads aboard ship. Yep, ghastly, the German beer had cleaned the newbies pipes.

A beverage I grew to enjoy was apfelwein (hard cider). A case of ten one liter bottles ran about twenty marks including the bottle deposit of .80 phennings per bottle. $1.00 = 3.80 DM at the time. The State of Hesse (which includes Frankfurt and Hanau) was the center of apfelwein production. While German beer, by long standing law, has strictly maintained ingredients, apfelwein has many wonderful variations. German beer also has hundreds of variations, but cannot be called beer.

I’ve been blessed with many wonderful aunts. Only three remain, but all of them were warm, caring, and giving women. One would send me care packages of homemade pickles and bull berry jelly.

Bull berries grow on a bush, are extremely labor intensive, and small. A five gallon bucket will make little more than a quart of jelly. The taste is unlike anything else I know.


One of my good friends, Mike, was one of the company cooks. I clued him in on the bull berry jelly. He arranged to bake a couple of loaves of bread and acquire some butter. We made a small feast of the bull berry. He liked it to the point he wanted to move to Colorado and marry my aunt. Mike liked to eat, as did I, and we would ride our bicycles out to the surrounding towns that seldom saw an American. We would eat at the local restaurants, and had many wonderful meals. Sadly, over the years, food has become fuel, and not an adventure.

Amsterdam was a popular destination for a three day pass. I could never get buzzed on Dutch beer. Amstel was the common brand then, and the ritual of pouring it was a delight. Poured until the foam overran the glass, the bartender would take a wooden straight edge, and cut the foam off at the tope of the glass.

Saw the Beetles live  in Amsterdam. Didn’t know who they were. I was with a crazy Scot serving in the Army to shorten the time to become a citizen. Don’t know if all Scots are crazy, or it was just Stuart, but he got us thrown out of the place for checking out all the women to see if they were wearing bras. He could be annoying. Liked Shirley Bassey singing, “Goldfinger”. He would pay it twenty times in a row on a jukebox.

When we were in the field, which was 65% of the time, we had a beer trailer. The First Sergeant devised a plan to keep me somewhat sober. He put me in charge. My qualifications were I wouldn’t steal, and few men in the company would challenge me. The profits went into the First Sergeant’s mox nix fund. He would use the money to buy floor wax, light bulbs, and the like. If some soldier needed to go home on emergency leave, he would help them. Trust me when I say every damn penny was accounted for.

One beverage that had a following in our company was cognac. Easy to pack and hide when we went to the field. Not 5 Star Hennessy or even one star. About 3 DM at the local Trinkhalle. Drink enough of it over time, and the expensive stuff didn’t taste right.

For the macho types, and popular with the black troopers, was a concoction called “Motherfuckers”. Take a ¾ full glass of fortified wine (Thunderbird, Night Train, M.D. 40-40) and top it off with Everclear. Sip the wine through the Everclear.

Towards the end of my tour, my drinking went way down. Don’t know if the novelty wore off, I started maturing, or other factors, but by the time I rotated out, it was one to two a day, no more. Another factor had to be seeing all the alcoholics, and the negative consequences of their drunken behaviors. It’s one thing for an E-3 draftee to mess up. Something else when it is an E-6, fifteen years in, with a family, suddenly a Spec 4.

I did enjoy the food. Berliner brand curry wurst with a hard roll and side of mustard. Pommes Frites in a paper cone with mayonnaise. Ox tail soup. Obviously, I’m no food snob.


The very best meal? Quart canteen cup inside a canteen carrier, freezing morning, with layers of toast, potatoes, bacon, scrambled eggs, and hamburger gravy washed down with boiled coffee. Bless Mike and all the cooks!