Any Home Bakers Here?

Wow did not know not sure how I knew who he was did not watch his shows
but darn very young to pass ... My brother had 5 massive strokes he was just 45
they took half his brain to keep him alive he was in a induced coma for 2 weeks
found the familial line we are on strokes are a given in the men
 
Wow did not know not sure how I knew who he was did not watch his shows
but darn very young to pass ... My brother had 5 massive strokes he was just 45
they took half his brain to keep him alive he was in a induced coma for 2 weeks
found the familial line we are on strokes are a given in the men
I am sorry about your Brother and the other men. Can they help improve their vascular health?
 
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I am sorry about you Brother and the other men. Can they help improve their vascular health?

We were gifted in minds as kids but never sat still he still had more left the average Joe and lives a life of his choosing now we are only 18 months apart I was 46 when I had a small stroke a warning breaking the mold of only Britton men having them
 
I still love watching SOAP. We recently go a "new" channel - actually, the local TV station added 2 channels - and we now have alot of the old TV shows being replayed: Black Sheep Squadron, Greatest American Hero, Soap, all the Star Trek shows, Wonder Woman, Dr. Quinn are some of the ones I can think of off the top of my head. I found that I still like them all alot better than all the "reality" TV crap that is on regular programming.

I need to make something special for DH's birthday. I have a week to figure out what. He turns 50!
 
I still prefer the old shows also saw Maude watch Mash made sourdough this morning but doing onion rings looked for a plain recipe found one on all recipes site
adding hot dogs but skipping my wrap of them with onion rings might be too much dough BF agreed
Onion Ring Batter

Ingredients
  • 2 large onions, cut into rings
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • vegetable oil for frying
Directions

1. Soak onion rings in a bowl of ice water for 1 hour; drain and pat dry with paper towels.
2. Whisk 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons flour, milk, egg, 2 tablespoons vegetable oil, and salt together in a bowl until smooth.
3. Heat oil in a deep-fryer or large saucepan to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C).
4. Dip onion rings in the batter, working in batches, until evenly coated and arrange in 1 layer on a plate.
Fry the battered onion rings, working in batches, until browned, about 5 minutes. Transfer fried onion rings to a paper towel-lined plate using a slotted spoon.
 
celery is hard to grow. I use a lot of it and have never been successful growing it.
I haven't had any trouble growing it. It does handle the cooler temps like lettuce likes and lasts well after frosts hit in the fall. I have also had it do well in pots. Aphids seem to really like it so I don't bring it back inside after the frosts.
 

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