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Author Topic: What have you bought lately?  (Read 233543 times)

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Offline Lestat

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8550 on: June 25, 2018, 04:49:12 PM »
I'm sure I could help them manage to clear out. I'd be more than happy to take their CD lockup, and deal with it later once I got it home with the tools from the house machine shop.

And plenty of stuff on the shelves too, pseudoephedrine, dextromethorphan, and a lot of stuff in the back not locked up but rx only. I'd help them get rid of it, since I'm a big hearted guy like that. Would be only too happy to give them such a charitable act. I bet they'd love me for it. Maybe even a fridge if they have one, could use the pump for a vacuum line.

And I'm sure there are a fair few other things in an average pharmacy that I could make good use of. And an entire stores worth of each and every pseudo or ephedrine product would be worth a fair bit once it was recovered, purified and cured of that problematic -OH group shaped sidechain-zit. Just needs extraction, cleaning and then a little tender loving care from a helpful organic chemist and the aminoalcohol reducing to the hydrocarbon arylalkylamine, and simple as that, value skyrockets after that quick trim, just a bit off the side(chain), and there you go, and you and or the PR can have your pick of random big beer swilling hairy biker gangbangers too :LMAO:
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Offline renaeden

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8551 on: June 29, 2018, 04:22:01 AM »
A lot of groceries and some chocolate aniseed rings for my stepdad for his birthday. He can't get them where he lives out in the country.
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Offline Queen Victoria

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8552 on: June 29, 2018, 09:25:08 AM »
Groceries from the grocery thrift store.  Packaged ham at 50 cents a pound (frozen, so it will keep), yogurt 6 small containers at 17 cents each, and 2 pounds of shredded cheese for $2.  Also some Mansoor dal 2 pounds.  I'm hoping to buy some more after the first of the month.
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Offline odeon

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8553 on: June 29, 2018, 04:33:52 PM »
Bought a book about Danish.
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Offline Yuri Bezmenov

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8554 on: June 29, 2018, 07:15:02 PM »
I bought a Danish!   :zoinks:



Offline Parts

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8555 on: July 01, 2018, 06:33:50 PM »
Some tools and odd stuff at tag sales yesterday including a small alligator head
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Offline renaeden

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8556 on: July 01, 2018, 09:26:37 PM »
Cards for my sister's and stepdad's birthdays.
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Offline odeon

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8557 on: July 02, 2018, 12:38:14 PM »
Ice cream.
"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: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8558 on: July 02, 2018, 02:30:06 PM »
Shelf stable groceries for the pantry:  cans, beans, etc.
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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8559 on: July 03, 2018, 01:18:27 PM »
Lunch
"Eat it up.  Wear it out.  Make it do or do without." 

'People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.'
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Offline odeon

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8560 on: July 04, 2018, 01:06:31 PM »
Bought beer.
"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: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8561 on: July 06, 2018, 11:16:20 AM »
Cold beer, cold bubblegum fizzy pop in 2l bottles, 2 of those.

Two fillet steaks, big thick juicy fillet steaks I'm saving in the freezer until it rains for a couple of days, so I can then go out mushroom-hunting and bring me back something nice to fry up just before the steaks are ready to be served, in some nice salty butter, and poured all over my steaks.

I at least do have two kinds of dried mushrooms I need to doing steak. Chalciporus piperatus, the peppery boletus, which as it sounds like it might just be, has a delightful burning, fiery savour, quite peppy and zingy, but with a heat all of it's own, unique and different from other hot spices, just as how black pepper and chili pepper are different, or water pepper and tabasco sauce. Its all unto itself, a special fireyness and flavour, unlike any other spice. Got that and got fly agaric, dried and heat-cured to render it suitable for use as a condiment, cooking ingredient, intoxicant, herbal medicine and all manner of other wonderful uses this special mushroom has.

I make it into a spice blend for beef or lamb, as follows if anyone wants to try it:

Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria), dried and heat cured of course (instructions for that at the end of the recipe)

Peppery bolete, Chalciporus piperatus, again dried, so it can be powdered, and which conveniently is a parasitic species which parasitizes fly agaric mycelium so where you find IT, you find fly agaric, and where you find fly agaric, you are likely as not, going to find peppery boletus too. They grow with the fly Amanita, although only under silver birch trees not pines (fly agaric can grow in symbiosis with either silver birch trees, or pines, although silver birch is by far and away the more common of it's two host types)

Cubeb (Piper cubeba, a relative of black pepper) seeds, just a few , a couple of pinches is enough, 2-3 pinches for enough spice blend to make 2 steaks from lovely steaks into steaks you'd kill and eat the babies of your best friend in all the world just to have the privilege of SMELLING the steaks!.

Pink peppercorns (quite a goodly amount, a teaspoon and a half or so)

Black pepper, from whole black peppercorns not powder or freshly ground pepper, it has to be whole!

Water pepper (Polygonum hydropiper, a relative of the bistort plant, grows in boggy marshy areas at the edge of rivers which adjoin grassland or pasture, this cannot, like the peppery bolete, be bought, it MUST be hunted down and picked yourself), the blend can do without it if you can't get any, the leaves, 3-4 leaves dried.

Salt (use sea salt)

Szechuan pepper (no idea of the species binomial taxonomic name), but szechuan pepper, its the hulls, seeds absent of some sort of bush or tree, sold as szechuan pepper, and like the cubeb and pink peppercorns, they moderate the fiery searing heat of the blend, szechuan pepper has a weird, not hot effect, but cooling and anaesthetizing sensation if applied to mucus membranes such as those of the mouth and tongue, while pink pepper is..well...its pink pepper, but it isn't hot, has a cooling sort of aromatic flavour, and cubeb has a cooling, camphoraceous taste. Not too much to be used or it can overpower the flavours of the rest.

Also, chili pepper, something really hot, like scotch-bonnet, red savina habanero, or birds-eyes. They should be smoked peppers, for best results. These are to be gutted of the internal ribs and of the seeds, which carry much of the capsaicin, using gloves and washing hands thoroughly with detergent and water, VERY thoroughly. And before use, they need to be dry-fried. Heating up a frying pan without oil to really hot temperature and then searing the chili peppers each side on the pan (you want to wear a gas mask whilst doing this with an organic vapor cartridge or cartridges) and have ALL the windows and door  of the kitchen wide open, extractor fan on full blast, because the fumes from the chili peppers dry-frying is lethal stuff, choking asphyxiating virulent teargas basically. You don't want to get close without a mask and goggles. And keep animals out of the room, if you are asthmatic, then get someone else to do the dry-fry and wait a little bit before reentry to the kitchen.

And then make a marinade, consisting of:

Worcestershire sauce
Dark soy sauce
Tabasco sauce (the habanero kind, extra hot variety)
If you can get any, some mushroom sauce.
A little of that, and a little bit of teriyaki sauce
And finally, some brown sauce. Ideally 'devils brown sauce', a hot spicy kind of brown sauce. If unavailable, then Daddie's sauce or HP sauce. Use enough of this to make the marinade thick enough to adhere easily to the steaks once rubbed in. Somewhat thick, but still liquid and mobile to a degree.

The black pepper and pink peppercorns, are set aside, whilst all the other solid ingredients are whizzed up in a spice grinder to fine powder for sprinkling or for adding to a stew or curry or chili con carne. The black and pink peppers, they are pounded in a mortar, pink peppercorns first, because they are full of oil, and it needs squashing out of them and pounding like a 14yo hooker on her living room table when her parents are away on business :LMAO:

Then the black pepper is added to the mortar and cracked, pounded to a rough smashed up mixture, mixed up intimately with the pounded, cracked pink pepper. This gives the steak a nice surface texture, and pound ye also the sea salt, nice and fine but still grainy.

The rest, whizzed up to dust, fine as icing sugar, and then the two combined and shaken together to finely mix.

Slash crosscuts on both sides of the steaks, and stick 'em in the marinade of liquid ingredients. Let them soak it up, and when thats done, sprinkle my special spice blend all over them, both sides, don't be stingy with it, don't cover it in a mountain either, just generously spice it to fuck and back. Then you give it a thin brushing of olive oil (healthiest sort of oil easily available, doesn't taste iffy when its cooked either)

Heat up the frying pan, without the steaks in it, until very hot, and sear on both sides, then turn the heat down and slow fry them, until they are lovely and juicy and tender, browned all the way through them and they melt in the mouth.

The result, will be DELICIOUS. Serve with shiitake mushrooms, fried in salted butter. If you have the skills to take from nature what she provides, then wild mushrooms too, freshly harvested so they are as good as a mushroom can possibly be, lovely and fresh and juicy and tasty as they ever will be.

Then go out there to the woods and the forests, and pick yourself some good tasty species, nice premium specimens of the very best kinds to be had on the outing you go on.

All mushrooms, shiitake at a minimum, then  these need to be fried in butter, not when the steaks are started, but shortly before they are to be served. Fry 'em up, and have them ready exactly when you serve the steaks so both are hot and cooked and perfect, put them on your plate, and tuck in.

Maybe think of the inventor of the special spice blend for meatyness while you munch away and enjoy yourself with the best steak or chili con carne you will EVER taste :)

Oh, forgot one ingredient, 4-5 pods of cardamom, the leathery casings slit open so the seeds can be gouged out with a knife tip and added to the mortar, before pink and black peppercorns, you want the cardamom finely ground but not as ultrafine dust, more as little grains.

You'll have some spice left over actually, if you just do two steaks, so you can keep the remainder until you next have steak, or chili, or anything else with red meat.

Lastly, how to prepare fly agaric (Amanita muscaria):

Whilst most if not all guidebooks list it as poisonous, it is only a member of a genus which does contain deadly mushrooms, although it looks NOTHING like the deadly kinds, nothing at all, even to the most greenhorn amateur mushroom-picker. Even easier, far easier than to identify the only wild mushroom many brits are brave enough to eat, Agaricus campestris, the common field mushroom (quite a lot like shop bought mushrooms, Agaricus bitorquis). Very  distinctive red cap with white warts, and the rest of the fruitbody pure white, as are the spores. Unlike many Amanita, there is no volva, this being reduced to, not the sack-like volva of the deadly kinds, which are in a separate clade within Amanita, the stirps Phalloideae, whilst A.muscaria is located within the stirps Amanita.

The 'volva' of the fly agaric is reduced to a basal bulb, with a few irregular slight ring-ish protuberances or lines of warts above a slightly swollen stem base. It does have the large ring typical of Amanita mushrooms of all sorts (save for those in the stirps Vaginatae) which have neither ring, nor volva. (A volva is a structure ALMOST unique to the genus Amanita, its a large, usually, sack-like cup of tissue that the bottom of the stem appears to sprout out of. Near unique to the family, although the unrelated genera Volvariella, and also Battarea (quite coincidentally, the species Battarea also has the species epithet 'phalloides' as with Amanita phalloides, the death-cap, a single bite of which can kill a man. Although Battarea phalloides, is not poisonous. However it is woody, and the cap covered in spore powder, and presents absolutely zero redeeming features such as would commend it for the table. Totally inedible, and if it were not, it is unappetizing. But not, however, poisonous. Just nothing you want to eat because it has nothing about it that means you should. Including the fact that it is incredibly, vanishingly rare.

Volvariellas have a volva too, but not a ring. Many species, IF you can identify them correctly as a mushroom expert, are good eating. But given the volva and thus similarity to Amanita, if you choose wrong, you die horribly. Thankfully, Amanitacea are exclusively mycorrhizal mushrooms, growing in association with trees, and cannot grow without this symbiosis.

Volvariella, can grow without anything to do with trees, in treeless fields, I've seen V.speciosa do so in massive profusion, hundreds or thousands of them in a farmer's field. There are those that grow with trees, but not WITH them, not around the base and for a distance around them, they grow as parasites, ON trees, right up there in some cases, such as with Volvariella bombycina, which can be found, rarely, if you are lucky, growing up in the top of apple trees, or anywhere else the trees be wounded and a spore can gain entrance.

Amanita on the other hand are mycorrhizal. Growing in symbiosis WITH trees, not parasitically. And they NEVER grow ON wood. Only in association with the tree types the species of the genus favour, but never, ever, ever actually OUT OF the tree. So if it has a volva and grows OUT of a tree, you can be certain it isn't a deadly amanita, and is a Volvariella. Probably the rare and tasty V.bombycina)

I'm about to go on a chemical shopping spree with over a hundred quid to spend, and glassware spree. Got quite a few things in mind, although I might well end up spending more than I'd like to have to on a new vacuum pump.
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Offline Lestat

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8562 on: July 06, 2018, 11:32:52 AM »
Hm second thoughts I can manage for a little bit with my Venturi, rather than using a powerful motorized pump, then I get paid double this coming monday. So I can buy one or two then. Whilst using all my savings now to buy the diaphragm pump and the rotary vane pump, or something better still than a rotary vane  pump depending on what I can find. Obviously not a turbomolecular pump, I don't need one yet, and won't, until I can get house-space enough to build myself a particle accelerator (an isochronous cyclotron, to be precise), and for a turbopump that powerful as to be able to achieve the ultra-high vacuum required for the interior of the cyclotron, and  whilst 'baking it out' (they need to have the beamline and vacuum chamber, all the pipe and ductwork 'baked out' with a combination of heat and subjection to extreme vacuum, to remove stray handfuls of atoms and ions which are adsorbed upon the surface of the ultra-clean interior of the accelerator.

And turbopumps are so powerful they can't even start on their own, they need a very powerful 'roughing' pump to get them started, with liquid nitrogen or liquid helium traps hooked up to prevent air getting in in traces; so that the things you WANT in the cyclotron, various ions, or gases, are either, in the case of gases, injected into the vacuum chamber in controlled, tiny amounts, and increased slowly as the  ion beam is formed and ejected out of the quadrupole magnet or sextupole magnet used for strong-focusing of the electron, proton or heavier ion beam before it is slammed into the intended target of the ion beam. Or in the case of ions of metals or nongaseous elements, then an element is introduced into the vacuum chamber and heated electrically so as to ionize it into a low density plasma, which is accelerated and fired into your target of choice, be that whatever it may.
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Offline renaeden

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8563 on: July 06, 2018, 10:11:44 PM »
Dry cat food for Liam and some Royal Canin dinners for Kira.
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Offline Lestat

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Re: What have you bought lately?
« Reply #8564 on: July 07, 2018, 07:06:17 AM »
I was going to buy a tin of golden syrup, because I was making porridge and I wanted syrup on it not butter. (I made it by melting a big block of butter in whilst it cooks to make it uniformly distributed in a sol-gel phase throughout the bowlful.)

I asked my old man if I could borrow a couple of quid to buy a tin of syrup. Turns out he needed to go to the shop anyway so said he'd pick it up for me (I wanted to borrow just enough for the syrup, as its a tenner minimum to draw out from a cash point and I want as much money in my account as possible because I'll be spending it online on chemicals and glassware)

So he said he'd grab some for me. Brought it home, I asked him how much I owed him for it and he said I don't owe him anything for it, so I'm up by one tin of golden syrup. Might not be the most priceless object in the world, but its sure better than a poke in the eye with a forked stick :D
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