your going to need to explain it about 3 more times lolBut your a VWNer. So you don’t have a vote.....
and we have been through this before, how most of Alaska are really southies masquerading as northerners.

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your going to need to explain it about 3 more times lolBut your a VWNer. So you don’t have a vote.....
and we have been through this before, how most of Alaska are really southies masquerading as northerners.
your going to need to explain it about 3 more times lol![]()
The weekly OSHA hour?My honey bees have more sense than to go to Okra trees.
I actually, have a sit down with my bees once a week where I tell them what they can harvest pollen or nectar from and which ones to avoid.
I remember seeing Okra plants in FL and thinking they were really strange hibiscus. I was surprised as a young adult to learn they were a food crop.I have never seen an okra plant before... Now that I have seen one, I would describe it as a cactus flower stuck onto some weird mutant greenbean-jalapeno mix. Is that what they taste like? Seriously though, I've never tried okra and now I am curious...
Getting use too!I remember seeing Okra plants in FL and thinking they were really strange hibiscus. I was surprised as a young adult to learn they were a food crop.Okra is the seed pod of that pretty flower. The thing people usually object to in okra is that it is very mucilaginous. Oddly it is this characteristic that makes it so helpful in a gumbo as it adds body. It's also very healthful (the mucousy stuff) for some reason I have long ago forgotten.
But yes, unless you fry it so crisp that the mucous is no longer a factor and it tastes like any other fritter, it does take some getting used to.
Yes, it thickens soups nicely. If cooking it as a vegetable dish, I only use very small tender pods, under 2", sauteed in olive oil. Okra is one thing we can grow that the varmints, birds, and bugs don't bother. One year we grew the most lovely sweet corn. Despite fencing it in, we never got one ear. So that's partly why we eat okra.Oddly it is this characteristic that makes it so helpful in a gumbo as it adds body.
Thinner?
Yes, it thickens soups nicely. If cooking it as a vegetable dish, I only use very small tender pods, under 2", sauteed in olive oil. Okra is one thing we can grow that the varmints, birds, and bugs don't bother. One year we grew the most lovely sweet corn. Despite fencing it in, we never got one ear. So that's partly why we eat okra.
Thinner?
(thought the book was better than the movie)
Getting use too!
as if that can ever happen.
I’ll stick to normal food like headcheese.