The *NEW* Good Morning Thread!
I, like Chris, will eat most nuts, filberts included. We don't do pistacio much, my wife doesn't seem to like them. I made a simple chicken (kluskie) noodle soup today that was quite tastey. I'm probably going to make a Texes chili tomorrow. It should be good, following ArnieTex recipe. I guess I should link that.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUroaYA98UY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUroaYA98UY
I've got a gas fireplace now with a blower that puts out alot of heat without all the work, and my wife, our dogs, and I all love it. At my old house I had a large double door Carolina brand wood stove with a blower. I used to burn it 24/7 for about 3-days until it had to have the ash cleaned out. Tremendous amount of heat, and a tremendous amount of work. I would go thru 2 and half Cords (10 Rank) per Season.
Don - Soup & chili sound wonderful.
Grandfathered house I stayed in the Ozarks x5 years had big King Air wood burning stove with blowers. Only heat source. I went through lots of wood. Only nut I ‘hate’ is a Brazil nut - disgusting flavor.
Grandfathered house I stayed in the Ozarks x5 years had big King Air wood burning stove with blowers. Only heat source. I went through lots of wood. Only nut I ‘hate’ is a Brazil nut - disgusting flavor.
Mom’s brother and wife had a 4,000 sq ft two story farm house (built ~1872 Wisconsin) 9 bedrooms huge family room kitchen and one indoor outhouse. Entire house was forced air floor registers. They closed off rooms which were not occupied. Built into side of a hill so nearly a three story. They went through 10 cords/month. A cousin painted an art work piece of the house- won Wisconsin state fair, 1st place. Tornado came through lifted entire roof. Resulting lift twisted the roof & house had to be raised.
Let me just say, that crock pot cooking is a winner in the winter. Low and slow has always been a good method. I hear the instapot and the airfryer are taking over some of those duties.
I'm chief cook and bottle washer aroung these parts for most savory dishes but my wife exceeds expectations when it comes to desserts and sweets.
I should probably share a pic or two at some point.
Its making baking season or is it making bacon season?
Anyways, its warm in the kitchen this time of year.
Working your way around a kitchen is a life skill. Please share it, if you have young ones around.
I'm chief cook and bottle washer aroung these parts for most savory dishes but my wife exceeds expectations when it comes to desserts and sweets.
I should probably share a pic or two at some point.
Its making baking season or is it making bacon season?
Anyways, its warm in the kitchen this time of year.Working your way around a kitchen is a life skill. Please share it, if you have young ones around.
Mom’s brother and wife had a 4,000 sq ft two story farm house (built ~1872 Wisconsin) 9 bedrooms huge family room kitchen and one indoor outhouse. Entire house was forced air floor registers. They closed off rooms which were not occupied. Built into side of a hill so nearly a three story. They went through 10 cords/month. A cousin painted an art work piece of the house- won Wisconsin state fair, 1st place. Tornado came through lifted entire roof. Resulting lift twisted the roof & house had to be raised.
I may have this wrong but I believe the house was originally built to house two or several families - sharecroppers. It became for sale when he bought his first home which was that home. There was no indoor plumbing initially, so outhouses prevailed and original water well was a hand manual pump until an electric pump upgrade then came indoor plumbing. Huge house.
Norm - Here's a question for ya. If you're spiking your eggnog, what's your preference for the liquor you use to spike it? I think most the people I know like to use some type of Rum, but I actually prefer Bourbon.
I’ll spike it with Rum or Bourbon. I think key is a ‘smooth’ shallow/light Rum/Bourbon so as not to overburden the eggnog. Like yourself though, I think I prefer Bourbon. You ever had homemade from scratch eggnog? Stuff is to die for.
Please share, we all seem to enjoy seeing good meals, but not as much as eating them!
Norm, Sounds like a Hotel I'm tying to picture an indoor out house I hope it was well vented
FWIW I vote burbon Interesting [to me] a Dutch guy [after the Olympics] ]bought up my grandfather's town in the bible belt and started making rum Richland Rum. I bought a bottle but never cracked the sealhttps://richlandrum.com/
FWIW I vote burbon Interesting [to me] a Dutch guy [after the Olympics] ]bought up my grandfather's town in the bible belt and started making rum Richland Rum. I bought a bottle but never cracked the sealhttps://richlandrum.com/
Last edited by Jamesbo; Dec 6, 2025 at 07:01 PM.
Jim - It actually was NOT an indoor outhouse - it had sewage plumbing but it wasn’t like any modern day bathroom and it was upgraded several times over the years. I thought indoor outhouse would paint a picture of what old type bathrooms might look like at a place which had a manual pump water well then converted to an electric pump. Sure the hell wasn’t anything fancy that’s for certain.
I've always liked Mt Olive pickle products. I must admit the last jar of hamburger dill chips left something to be desired. I might have to go Vlascic on the next jar.
Any of you guys try Christmas crack cookie...snack stuff?
It looks like this.....
Any of you guys try Christmas crack cookie...snack stuff?
It looks like this.....
Norm, Sounds like a Hotel I'm tying to picture an indoor out house I hope it was well vented
FWIW I vote burbon Interesting [to me] a Dutch guy [after the Olympics] ]bought up my grandfather's town in the bible belt and started making rum Richland Rum. I bought a bottle but never cracked the sealhttps://richlandrum.com/
FWIW I vote burbon Interesting [to me] a Dutch guy [after the Olympics] ]bought up my grandfather's town in the bible belt and started making rum Richland Rum. I bought a bottle but never cracked the sealhttps://richlandrum.com/
I did a little research on the history of global community sanitation back before the Earth cooled - a course in Microbiology peaked my interest. Anyways, some of the first indoor outhouses had no flush boxes and the **** simply ran out downhill hopefully after carrying in water to flush out the turds. Next, came an assortment of various flush boxes which could hold water to flush the turds away. This was all manual, BTW. Then came electric water well pumps - a significant improvement. Of course this was during a time when sanitation was extremely rudimentary. Beats the hell out of a community cistern I guess. We’ve come a long way in our understanding of community sanitation and health.


