Designed to be more childproof, I suppose -- but I'm always sending vitamins and paracetamol flying across the room these days. You need so much force now to bust the foil on the blister packs that they often pop out and go airborne! And I've sliced the tip of my finger too on some of them.
Ha, same. On more than one occasion mine have shot off and landed in the catfood bowl. Ugh. I have fished tablets out of several strange locations and consigned them to the bin. An expensive waste!Yes! This has been happening to me. Pills shooting off who knows where.
Once a small pill ended up under the fridge, I managed to get it out with a flat brush thing that goes under narrow spaces, but I couldn't bring myself to consume the tablet after it had been on the floor so I put it in the bin.
Anyway thank you for the confirmation.
Yeah, it's gorgeous, especially as we're going to be slow cooking the lamb today.
Dinner at our house isn't until tomorrow, so today is just cook, prep, and chill out for my partner and I. We'll probably do our annual watch of Arthur Christmas at some point. Mum is at one of my brothers' for lunch hanging out with her grandkids, my other brother is with his wife's family today, and our housemate is in Melbourne with her grandkids.
Tomorrow, we'll cook the chicken and all the veg and it'll be mum, me, my partner, second brother and his wife, and my cousin if she turns up.
We put up our tree yesterday. My partner and I paid $20 for it in 2003, when we first lived properly on our own, no family or housemates. It used to light up with fibre optic strands, but that hasn't worked in years, so now we just have three little strings of lights that are probably fifteen years old or older and a motley assortment of ornaments that are small enough and light enough for it to hold.
View attachment 632874
The lantern thing was a gift from my partner's mother a few years ago. It's full of glitter and a snow scene. It plays music, too, but we never turn that on except by accident.
It's an Aardman film with a cracking best of British cast. It's clever, and funny, and has a lot for all ages to enjoy, not just kids.What a seriously fond memory... your tree.
May it be with you forever!
And I must ask...
What is Arthur Christmas??
And is your slow cooking a leg of lamb, or some other body part???
It's an Aardman film with a cracking best of British cast. It's clever, and funny, and has a lot for all ages to enjoy, not just kids.
View attachment 632946
Partner's already tucked the lamb away in the fridge, so I'll take a picture of that tomorrow. We slow cooked it at 130C for six hours with olive oil and rosemary, and partner made gravy from the pan juices. It is a leg of lamb, bone in.
I love those Aardman films! But I’ve never heard of Arthur Christmas.. something to discover.phew..that lamb sounds delish.... honestly I feel I can smell it.
I'll have to look for Arthur....surprised it hasn't popped up scanning Prime or Netflix.
I do have Britbox..maybe there.
It's a digital film, not claymation like Wallace and Gromit, etc., but it retains a lot of the look, the humour, and the charm of those earlier films. You can still tell Aardman is the driving force and spirit.I love those Aardman films! But I’ve never heard of Arthur Christmas.. something to discover.
Merry Christmas, all! Wishing everyone Peace, love and deliciousness.
It’s beautiful!Yeah, it's gorgeous, especially as we're going to be slow cooking the lamb today.
Dinner at our house isn't until tomorrow, so today is just cook, prep, and chill out for my partner and I. We'll probably do our annual watch of Arthur Christmas at some point. Mum is at one of my brothers' for lunch hanging out with her grandkids, my other brother is with his wife's family today, and our housemate is in Melbourne with her grandkids.
Tomorrow, we'll cook the chicken and all the veg and it'll be mum, me, my partner, second brother and his wife, and my cousin if she turns up.
We put up our tree yesterday. My partner and I paid $20 for it in 2003, when we first lived properly on our own, no family or housemates. It used to light up with fibre optic strands, but that hasn't worked in years, so now we just have three little strings of lights that are probably fifteen years old or older and a motley assortment of ornaments that are small enough and light enough for it to hold.
View attachment 632874
The lantern thing was a gift from my partner's mother a few years ago. It's full of glitter and a snow scene. It plays music, too, but we never turn that on except by accident.
I have one of those pill containers too, but I really only use it on the rare occasions when I go out of town. I take a multitude of prescriptions and supplements, so I keep them in their bottles.I keep my vitamins and one prescription daily in a 7 day pill container which I refill when needed.
The vitamins are individually in their little foil pockets.
I have noticed that some have changed to much harder foil to break open with your fingers.
I wonder if it's for security reasons ?
I've taken to using tweezers to break through the foil but this time I told myself if only I pressed harder I could do it which resulted in being sliced underneath the top of my finger. Just the part where you press the keyboards.
I've seen there are plastic gadgets you can buy which are solely for this purpose.
I don't know if I could be bothered.
That leg of lamb is making me hungry! I haven’t had lamb since I left home 50 plus years ago.It's an Aardman film with a cracking best of British cast. It's clever, and funny, and has a lot for all ages to enjoy, not just kids.
View attachment 632946
Partner's already tucked the lamb away in the fridge, so I'll take a picture of that tomorrow. We slow cooked it at 130C for six hours with olive oil and rosemary, and partner made gravy from the pan juices. It is a leg of lamb, bone in.