Subj : Plan Aheads To : Dave Drum From : Ruth Haffly Date : Sat Mar 29 2025 12:18:15 Hi Dave, DD> I tend to be pedantic in my recipes. Capitalising all instances of DD> Cheddar (which is a proper noun) And correcting the cheese variety DD> that is meant by the generic "Swiss" cheese to it's proper name DD> (Ementhal), etc. RH> We tend to be more generic on a lot of things. DD> Diff'rnt Strokes and all that. RH> Very true, also depends on how you were raised. DD> By the boot straps mostly. Bv)= Same here--Dad had a white collar job but it didn't pay a lot. Mom did the "Local & Personal" column for the town's weekly newspaper until youngest sibling was in first grade, then went to work for the school. Those first 15 years or so of their marriage they were pinching every penny they could to make ends meet; they never did give up some of those habits when the finances improved. RH> OTOH, I very rarely cut myself when slicing/dicing. Guess I just RH> learned to be extra careful around knives when I was working with less RH> than ideal ones. My mom had a chef's knife she always kept on an upper RH> shelf in the pantry, away from us kids. Once I got older and more knife RH> savvy, I would pull it out and use it. I was using it one time when we RH> were at my parent's house, mom was in the nursing home by then and dad RH> didn't cook much for himself so I decided to make a beef stew. Started RH> cutting up the beef with that knife and Steve asked to take over, so I RH> let him, figuring I'd do other prep work. Warned him about the knife RH> but a few minutes later, he cut himself--not seriously but enough to RH> draw a bit of blood. I went back to cutting up the meat and later that RH> night for supper, I think both of my brothers had seconds, then thirds RH> of the stew. DD> I've come close a couple of times tomdoing something "blue stupid". DD> Like having a really sharp Santoku knife slip and head for the floor. DD> And stopped my grab for it just this side of disaster. RH> I've been good about letting things like that just drop. The instinct RH> is to reach out to catch it but that's what lands you in the ER, RH> needing stitches. DD> Or prosthetics I've not reached that point yet with my knife handling. DD> Last kitchen cut I can remember is when I first got the mandoline and DD> took a chunnk off the pad of my signalling finger. The cut didn't DD> hurt. But the juice\ of the onion I was slocing sure did sting. RH> I think the last kitchen cut I got was slicing something and didn't RH> have a finger quite out of the way--cut just deep enough that I needed RH> a couple of stitches to close it. DD> I've only just wrapped/bandaged tightly. No stitches in/on my hands DD> ever. I was amazed that when everything healed from the mandoline DD> slice the my fingerprint wqs totallly restored. Interesting, guess I never noticed it with my fingers but they are the same way. --- Catch you later, Ruth rchaffly{at}earthlink{dot}net FIDO 1:396/45.28 .... Multitask: make twice the mistakes in 1/2 the time. --- PPoint 3.01 * Origin: Sew! That's My Point (1:396/45.28) .