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Author Topic: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two  (Read 167600 times)

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Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6525 on: February 21, 2018, 11:13:22 PM »
Coffee happened.
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."

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Offline Lestat

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6526 on: February 22, 2018, 09:53:26 AM »
Here in the shops we mostly get various Agaricus, button mushrooms, chestnut mushrooms, portobello mushrooms, all the same old shit different day. Common is to find oyster (Pleurotus ostreatus) and shiitake (Lentinus edodes), and some places you can find shiimeiji, enokitake, honshimeiji, 'king oyster mushroom' which I think are Pleurotus eryngii, they look like it, and when really lucky what they sell, dishonestly as chanterelles, but in fact, aren't, they are Craterellus tubaeformis or C.lutescens. Not nearly so desirable or expensive in the mushroom trading world. And those aren't usually very good specimens either. Fucking cheapskates. They do taste alright but not anything special and  certainly not as good as anything that's been freshly harvested either. The 'chanterelles' are never good quality.

Although I admit, spending the day looking, does have a way of working up quite an appetite by the time I've gotten home.
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Offline Minister Of Silly Walks

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6527 on: February 23, 2018, 01:41:24 AM »
I like the huge edible mushrooms. The ones that are almost as big as a saucer. We found a box of them at the markets one time for $20. Must have been 5 kilos.

Even just sliced and cooked in butter, and eaten with bacon and eggs, they are really good.

I will eat them raw in a salad but usually don't bother as they don't seem to have much flavour that way. 

I've got some photos somewhere of a wild mushroom I found a couple of years ago. It was literally the area of a large dinner plate on top, and thick as well. Must have weighed a couple of kilos for just the one mushroom. I wasn't tempted to eat it.
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Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6528 on: February 23, 2018, 02:49:29 AM »
Coffee happened.
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."

- Albert Einstein

Offline renaeden

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6529 on: February 23, 2018, 02:51:46 AM »
I like the huge edible mushrooms. The ones that are almost as big as a saucer. We found a box of them at the markets one time for $20. Must have been 5 kilos.

Even just sliced and cooked in butter, and eaten with bacon and eggs, they are really good.

I will eat them raw in a salad but usually don't bother as they don't seem to have much flavour that way. 

I've got some photos somewhere of a wild mushroom I found a couple of years ago. It was literally the area of a large dinner plate on top, and thick as well. Must have weighed a couple of kilos for just the one mushroom. I wasn't tempted to eat it.
Was it definitely a mushroom and not a toadstool? ;)
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Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6530 on: February 23, 2018, 02:56:27 AM »
 :zombiefuck:

Not sure I should ask.
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."

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Offline Lestat

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6531 on: February 23, 2018, 05:53:41 AM »
There isn't any difference Ren. 'toadstool' just comes from the german 'todes stuhl' or 'death's seat'. And there is no botanical separate class, its just a colloquial term that people use.

And there certainly are edible kinds that can grow that big (or bigger in some cases, giant puffball for instance can end up weighing as much as either of us, and a meter and a half in diameter, although it doesn't have the traditional 'mushroom' shape. Just a big white, usually irregular shaped ball of tasty.) I've found plenty that are absolutely huge, though when it comes to normal mushrooms. Parasols in particular have a tendency to grow huge caps [Macrolepiota procera] and fried in salted butter they are truly delicious. And some of the wild Agaricus especially, relatives of the common shop button mushrooms, some of them, like A.macrosporus can grow REALLY big. Not just wide but squat and generally hefty, thick things, as well as the one known as the prince, A.augustus, can grow to over 20 inches in diameter (although the prince has a much thinner, taller stem than A.macrosporus.)  I've found A.macrosporus before, having a faint, delicate taste and smell of aniseed under its typically 'mushroomy' smell and taste, and they have been really heavy, stocky things that need to be sliced to be cooked properly because they are otherwise too thick and hefty to cook through and through easily.

And some of the edible boletes can grow to be a really considerable size, as can some Suillus, a relative genus to the boletes  proper, like the slippery jack, those can easily grow to be of a size that would take a side-plate to hold one large cap. (very tasty too, I love slippery jacks, once the slime layer on the cap is peeled away, and they are cooked in garlic butter and given a squeeze of lemon before eating, one of my  favourites actually), Boletus/Xerocomus badius, the bay bolete, can grow to a similarly huge size, and again is very good eating.

Found plenty of saffron milkcaps last year too that were almost the size of a side-plate, (Lactarius deliciosus, the 'milk cap' name for the Lactarius genus comes from the fact that when the flesh is broken or cut, then there is the exudation of a milky, sap-like liquid, that varies both in color, and in some kinds, the way, if any, that after exposure to air, the milk changes color, in the case of the saffron milk-cap, the entire thing is bright orange, and so is the milk, aside from when bruised, a slight greenish tinge develops, although that is more prominent in the quite similar, although more bitter and whilst still good eating, not quite so desirable L.deterrimus), and L.deliciosus more than lives up to its species epithet, meaning 'delicious', no surprise there. Very good fried, even better roasted and given a topping of mozzarella cheese over the gills with a little salt and sprinkling of black pepper, then grilled to melt the cheese until it bubbles up and goes nice and golden brown on the top. They aren't too common, but I do have one spot for them in a pine and mixed deciduous forest that tends every year to fruit L.deliciosus very prolifically indeed, along with plenty of various boletes, and both slippery jack and the similar, and just as tasty larch bolete/larch Suillus. Ceps, and bay boletes too, tend to fruit in abundance. And for some reason right near the car park, I almost always find just one, sometimes two individuals of Lepiota brunneo-incarnata, a quite rare species, although not one to be eaten, as it is full of the same deadly amatoxins as the notorious death cap (Amanita phalloides) and destroying angel (A.virosa, plus some of its relatives within the subsection Phalloidea of the genus Amanita, the group which contain those deadly white-spored Amanita species that produce amatoxins, and worldwide cause 90% of fatalities associated with people eating the wrong mushroom. Nasty little bastards that slowly destroy the liver via inhibition of RNA polymerase III and binding to the actin fibers that make up a large portion of the cytoskeleton, as well as targeting kidneys, fucking with the electrolyte levels in the blood and sometimes damaging the heart, usually if not treated both very quickly and aggressively, resulting in a very, very unpleasant and drawn out death for the poor unfortunate bastard to have eaten them, with even a single bite of a death cap or its relatives being quite enough to kill the biter.

But for some reason, although its usually just the one single fruit-body, or just occasionally I'll see two of them, I tend to find  these rare Lepiotas just on the entrance to the forest proper at the end of the car-park/start of the forest paths. Year after year, trip after trip, they seem to be there, close to where I'd have seen it the last year I went. Needless to say, those are most certainly staying off the menu of the mushrooms and wild bilberries I eat from there, not like theres any shortage of very good wild edibles from that particular forest. Big shopping bags laden with saffron milk-caps alone, and thats without even considering the large haul of boletes I find most trips I take to the place.
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Offline Queen Victoria

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6532 on: February 27, 2018, 07:19:19 PM »
While The PR didn't bowl any strikes today she managed to bowl 6 spares in a row.  Not sure how rare that is, but I'm impressed.

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Offline Lestat

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6533 on: February 27, 2018, 09:28:56 PM »
It's probably rarer than her NOT scoring strikes. Reading you post about PR's bowling outings, and doing a sort of unofficial averaging, haven't actually crunched any numbers for it, but it seems like she bowls turkeys more often than anything else. That girl is damn good!

Do congratulate her on my behalf, won't you, QV? Attagirl PR :)

As for me, got a really good deal on some CBD oil, which it seems holland&barrett recently started stocking. about a quarter, maybe slightly less, of the usual price per bottle.

And if I'm not very much mistaken, CBD looks like it ought to undergo a rearrangement and cyclization to a mixture of delta-8 and delta-9-THC under acidic conditions. Or possibly selectively depending on the specific conditions. Just..curious..intriguing... Now I can't help but wonder about the PH of the oil preparation....
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Offline Lestat

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6534 on: February 28, 2018, 06:04:32 AM »
Had a dr appt. Looks like we are making more progress with him getting the approval (my GP that is) from specialists in order to give me the off-label prescription for memantine. Hoping I might hear from my GP next week even. I  hope that means I finally get to start it next week, that would be fucking sweet, since I've been trying to get him to do this for me for probably more than five years now.

Used the spare time to pick up an antiseizure drug rescue pack as well since I was there in his office.
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Requiescat in pacem, Wolfish, beloved of Pyraxis.

Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6535 on: February 28, 2018, 08:55:50 AM »
Asked for a recommendation from a former boss and got a *glowing* one.
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."

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Offline Queen Victoria

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6536 on: February 28, 2018, 12:00:37 PM »
 :2thumbsup:

Wait.  Glowing as in good or glowing as in radioactive?
A good monarch is a treasure. A good politician is an oxymoron.

My brain is both uninhibited and uninhabited.

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Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6537 on: March 01, 2018, 01:15:37 AM »
:2thumbsup:

Wait.  Glowing as in good or glowing as in radioactive?

As in good.

Never had a radioactive recommendation yet.
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Offline Lestat

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6538 on: March 01, 2018, 09:33:31 AM »
Why, do you need one? Can get you thorium easily enough, uranium (depleted, or yellowcake, enrichment the responsibility of the buyer if required), technetium-99 and probably some tritium. As well as needle-sources  of polonium 210 and several other radioisotopes for the likes of cloud chambers, geiger counter calibration, the occasional assassination of KGB officers)

Plus beryllium for nucleosynthesis processes requiring a neutron-gun. Contact via PM, nobody of sweaty arab descent need apply.
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Offline odeon

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Re: Post something good that happened today, Parts Two
« Reply #6539 on: March 02, 2018, 02:19:23 AM »
Why, do you need one? Can get you thorium easily enough, uranium (depleted, or yellowcake, enrichment the responsibility of the buyer if required), technetium-99 and probably some tritium. As well as needle-sources  of polonium 210 and several other radioisotopes for the likes of cloud chambers, geiger counter calibration, the occasional assassination of KGB officers)

Plus beryllium for nucleosynthesis processes requiring a neutron-gun. Contact via PM, nobody of sweaty arab descent need apply.

:zoinks:
"Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."

- Albert Einstein