Food and Recipes while under Coronavirus quarantine #8

  • #701
Since we are on the topic of slow cookers, several weeks ago I was cooking down cherry tomatoes from my garden to make pasta sauce and the bottom of the crock cracked. All the way through.

I have been using slow cookers ever since I was a teenager and can’t even think how many I have had over the years. But I’ve never had one crack.

This particular slow cooker was only a couple years old. I emailed customer service and they responded right away, asking me to send pictures of the inside and outside of the crock, a picture of the plug, a picture of the serial number, a picture of the manufacture date, and a picture of the case ID number written on a piece of paper and placed next to the slow cooker.

I sent all the pictures, and again they responded immediately. But this time they said some of my pictures were blurry and could I please retake them. They did not look blurry to me, but I did retake the pictures and send them again. Since then, I have not heard a word back from them, I emailed them again last week with the case ID number and still didn’t hear anything from them.
 
  • #702
Here is a recipe for slow cooker cookies

 
  • #703
At this time of year, Nino Salvaggio's features little pork roasts stuffed with apples and dried cherries or sage and onion bread stuffing. The cute little roasts are rolled and tied for easy roasting. They take only an hour at 350* to roast. We had an apple and cherry stuffed pork roast for dinner tonight. I seasoned the roast with salt and pepper then basted it with cherry barbeque sauce. Sauteed kale and oyster mushrooms for accompaniment. There's enough left over for tomorrow. When I make the sage and onion stuffed pork roast, I usually make a light gravy with the drippings, butter, flour, and a little chicken stock. Good with mashed potatoes or noodles.

I'm a little under the weather today and wonder if it might be a mild reaction to the flu shot last Friday. I'm sipping a hot toddy with Cognac, raw honey, and lemon juice. Need a good night's rest so this doesn't turn into a full out cold.
 
  • #704
I got a flu shot last week and had a reaction for the first time ever. About a day of not feeling well with a shaky tummy.
 
  • #705
Over the last 3 days I have raked, tilled and removed debris from my 5’ x 30’ bed out back. Found 4-5 more sweet potatoes too. When I was stacking those old concrete pieces, I didn’t realize how big it was. But I’ve made the best of it.

I have 3 blueberry bushes at one end. I refreshed them with some cow compost/soil and watered them in. I have a green Florida avocado tree that is about 5’ tall by the birdbath. Plus the aloe plants my kids inherited from their Gma.

I’ve added in 12 bags of cow compost, 6 bags of garden soil and some perlite. I’m tired and sore.

Tomorrow I will plant my Italian Flat Green Bean seeds, they are pole beans. I spent today scrounging whatever I could to fashion a tall trellis. It looks like garden junk and it is because nice trellises are expensive! Pretty sure the beans won’t complain.

Neeko was wore slap out after all that garden superviser work!
 

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  • #706
@BetteDavisEyes and @killarney rose I received my flu shot last week and it made my arm very sore. I thought it was very unusual, because my arm gets slightly sore after a flu shot. But normally it doesn’t feel sore until several hours after the flu shot, just a mild soreness in the place where the shot was given, and it doesn’t last long.

But this year my entire upper arm was very sore and it started within an hour after receiving the shot. It stayed sore for a couple of days.
 
  • #707
I always get a very sore arm for a few days after, but have never felt bad till this year. I had both.
 
  • #708
I always get a very sore arm for a few days after, but have never felt bad till this year. I had both.
That's freaky, honestly. I haven't had mine yet this year, but I've never had any response to them either (at least that I noticed). I wonder if the very "post" covid flu shots are formulated differently, maybe especially potent or something, no idea...?
 
  • #709
I got a flu shot last week and had a reaction for the first time ever. About a day of not feeling well with a shaky tummy.

@BetteDavisEyes and @killarney rose I received my flu shot last week and it made my arm very sore. I thought it was very unusual, because my arm gets slightly sore after a flu shot. But normally it doesn’t feel sore until several hours after the flu shot, just a mild soreness in the place where the shot was given, and it doesn’t last long.

But this year my entire upper arm was very sore and it started within an hour after receiving the shot. It stayed sore for a couple of days.
I started getting flu shots in 2020 and for the first few years had zero reaction I can recall, I don't even think my arm got sore.

Then a few years ago I had a one-day queasy/yucky reaction after the flu shot. I hadn't planned for that and was travelling on the day I felt icky, but fortunately it wasn't severe and only lasted one day.

But ever since then, I've been prepared for reactions. I think I had a mild reaction last year. This year I didn't feel weak or queasy, and my arm wasn't strongly sore (ie I could sleep on it), but it was indeed sore and that lasted almost five days!

Note: I have never gotten the flu shot combined with any other vax, so that is out as a possible cause of these differences.
 

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