Community > Posts By > SuzinVA

 
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Wed 09/16/09 07:32 AM
:thumbsup: :thumbsup:

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Wed 09/16/09 07:25 AM
Lord I need a nap asleep asleep asleep

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Wed 09/16/09 07:25 AM

I have a cat, and it does nothing to lower the bug and spider population in my house. Not all cats are mousers. I had one cat that never caught a mouse in its life, he just brought bunnies home ( big bunnies). He was kept in the house after that.

Yes, caulk is less expensive, but the foam in a can is easier to use for novices that might not own a caulk gun.


That is a problem with cats. One of mine is a mouser, the other one, not so much. Neither one could care less about bugs. But, many times just having a cat in the house will keep mice out. Dogs too. I had a cat, too, that would bring home his own "pets." Can't tell you how many bunnies, birds, snakes, etc I had to catch growing up and put back outside laugh laugh laugh

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Wed 09/16/09 07:22 AM
Here's an article in this morning's Washington Post that I found rather interesting and thought I'd share:

Dude, It Adds Up
A Mom Proves Fast Food Made at Home Is Cheaper and Better

By Sally Sampson
Special to The Washington Post
Wednesday, September 16, 2009



I am sick of reading about how the obesity epidemic is being fueled by fast food. I can't stand that poor people are eating it because they think it's their only option. And I am sad that Ben, my otherwise endearing teenage son, squanders his allowance on pizza and burgers, both of which make him feel rotten. I've always known that fast food is inferior in flavor and nutrition to its home-cooked counterpart, but I also suspected it couldn't really be as cheap as people think it is.

So I sought proof.

First I assembled a panel of teenage experts: eight boys and one girl, all of them fast-food connoisseurs, if there can be such a thing. They range from food prodigies who ask for apples by variety to the more typical teenage boy who eats what is put in front of him. Because part of their mission is to eat cheaply, they were thrilled to be tasters, and all agreed to be brutally honest.

Although cheap and fast have become synonymous, I didn't believe that food bought in a fast-food restaurant (or any restaurant, for that matter) could be cheaper than the same food cooked at home -- and, as it turns out, neither should you. Not only is homemade food almost always more nutritious (lower in calories, fat and sodium), fresher and better for your family in most every way, but it's also significantly less expensive and, in most cases, once you have your ingredients on hand, no more time-consuming. And in all honesty, if I can keep Ben (and his posse) in front of my eyes rather than roaming, I am happy to spend my money instead of watching him spend his.

A few caveats: You must have a functioning kitchen, access to ingredients and the money for staples. That might be a problem for a lot of people, but it's one that can solve itself. If you curtail your fast-food consumption, you can save money fairly quickly to buy staples as well as inexpensive equipment such as cast-iron skillets and wooden spoons.

Although only one of my experts is a real coffee drinker, I was curious about the cost of coffee bought at Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts, the two largest and most competitive coffee purveyors. I also chose to compare the prices of the three national fast-food restaurants the tasters frequent the most, then picked one item from each that I could reproduce at home. I didn't include burritos, bagels or doughnuts or anything else that requires a lot of time, many steps or esoteric equipment.

I started with breakfast, of course. McDonald's Sausage McMuffin With Egg, beloved by the teenagers, is a great concept with an imperfect execution and lousy ingredients: an English muffin topped with American cheese, a large, overcooked (perhaps twice-cooked) egg fried in liquid margarine and a greasy yet dry sausage patty (a perplexing, almost-impossible-to-achieve feat of cooking). When I prepared a homemade version for my experts, they were impressed. When I substituted cheddar and fresh mozzarella for the bland American cheese, different types of sausage, bacon and ham for McDonald's overcooked sausage, and whole-wheat for the white English muffin, they were still impressed. In fact, they routinely preferred all of my versions. (Dieters can use egg whites and Canadian bacon.)

If you make a McMuffin according to McDonald's specifications, you consume about 28 percent fewer calories, 37 percent less fat and 34 percent less sodium. You also spend only $1.27, on average less than half the cost of buying it at McDonald's, and you won't end up with a McHangover. The only pieces of equipment needed to make it are a skillet (less than $20 for cast iron) and a spatula.

If you want coffee with that McMuffin, buy Dunkin' Donuts or Starbucks beans and brew your own, and you will save well over $1 per cup. You don't even need a coffee maker: Do what I do and use a Melitta single-cup coffee cone (about $3).

For lunchtime, my experts' burger of choice (chosen entirely for its geographical proximity) is the Burger King Double Whopper, defined by Burger King as "America's Favorite Burger: Two flame-broiled beef patties stacked high with red ripe tomatoes, crisp lettuce, creamy mayo, ketchup, crunchy pickles, and onions all on a toasted sesame seed bun."

According to the BK Web site, at http://www.bk.com, the company uses "100% USDA inspected Ground Beef," which sounds like something but actually means almost nothing. John Dewar, Boston's preeminent butcher, said he would guess that "close to 99 percent of all beef consumed in the U.S. is USDA inspected, which means that the beef can come from any country, any kind of beef animal -- veal, cow, bull or steer -- and any muscle part of any or all of these sources combined."

To duplicate BK's burger, I had to figure out what was in it. It was easy to weigh the burgers and count the pickle slices, but I didn't know what grade the meat was and couldn't get that information from a company spokeswoman. I had to work in reverse, matching the company's own nutritional information with information on different grades of meat.

It's almost impossible to do a real comparison between a Double Whopper and a homemade version because Burger King's beef appears to contain somewhere between 30 and 35 percent fat; it's so high in fat and sodium, you can't buy a facsimile in a store. To end up with the 5.4 ounces of beef (two 2.7-ounce patties ) found in a Double Whopper, you need to cook 6.7 ounces of store-bought 85/15 or 80/20 beef (recommended by most burger experts), which has 20 percent shrinkage (compared with BK's 33 percent).

A Double Whopper starts with a 4 1/2 -inch sesame seed bun spread with 21 grams of mayonnaise; that's the one bit of unpublished information I gleaned from the BK spokeswoman. Twenty-one grams translates to nearly five teaspoons (this is where the obesity epidemic comes in), more than anyone I know actually puts on a burger. Not one of my experts cared whether it was there or not, and although the mayonnaise doesn't significantly increase the cost, it surely makes the nutritional analysis ghastly, to the tune of another 145 calories, 16 grams of fat and 145 milligrams of sodium. I can only assume that all that mayonnaise is meant to compensate for the lack of flavor in the frighteningly overcooked, gray meat.

So what does it add up to? Digest this: Making my equivalent of a Double Whopper at home, even when using the most expensive beef I could find, was less expensive than buying one at Burger King.

And then there was the taste. I made several versions of Double Whoppers -- using two patties, one larger patty, every grade of beef, sometimes with a slice of cheddar, sometimes fresh mozzarella -- and there wasn't a kid who wasn't amazed at the difference. Every single one, from the prodigy to the neophyte, noticed the dramatic tenderness and juiciness, both totally absent from Burger King. If that isn't enough to convince you, the Burger King Double Whopper has almost one-third more calories, 38 percent more fat and 35 percent more sodium, a combination with no redeeming benefits.

It isn't cheaper. It doesn't taste better, and it isn't more nutritious.

Pizza, the dinnertime experiment, was more of a challenge. Domino's describes its smallest, simplest pizza as "Hand Tossed: The traditional, hand-engineered crust that started it all," a 12-inch crust topped with tomato sauce and mozzarella. First, I replicated it using jarred tomato sauce and a premade crust; in a side-by-side comparison, the teenage experts said they preferred Domino's. My version was certainly cheaper, but since it wasn't as good or better, I tried again, this time making my own sauce but still using a premade crust. They still preferred Domino's. Even though the topping was superior, the texture of the crust wasn't. Finally I increased the oven temperature and, still using a premade crust, baked the pizza on the floor of the oven, which did the trick. Then, just for fun, I made my own crust. My experts unanimously agreed that if I made it regularly they would never order pizza again.

Pizza surprised me in another way. It turns out that while pizza is much less expensive to make yourself, especially if you make your own dough (which is easier than you might think), the nutritional information doesn't differ considerably. Having had to blot the oil off many a slice, I would have guessed the fat content of a Domino's pie to be through the roof, but it wasn't. However, homemade pizza is certainly tastier. And if you have all the components at hand, including sauce that you can make in advance, it's faster than delivery, even if you make the dough, which takes about 10 minutes (not including the rising time). Dominos famously promises to be ringing your doorbell within 30 minutes, at least 10 minutes longer than it took me.

Restaurant fast food is rarely as convenient as you expect. There are hidden costs everywhere. True, when you cook at home you use electricity, soap, water and so on, but when you buy fast food, really all you get is imagined speed: You still have to get there, wait in line and wait for your food. And what you get is second-rate.

If you eat fast food or grab a cup of coffee with a friend, be sure you understand both the nutritional and financial costs, and don't kid yourself that you are saving money or time. The lesson here is that food can be fast -- and cheap -- no matter where it's cooked. Besides, wherever you live, it's probably a cozier place than McDonald's.

Sally Sampson's most recent cookbook is the "100-Calorie Snack Cookbook" (Wiley, 2009). She lives outside Boston.

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Wed 09/16/09 07:08 AM
Morning (((Mikey)))

I swear, I don't know what was wrong with my phone when you called yesterday, it happened a couple more times too. Seems to be ok now. flowerforyou

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Wed 09/16/09 07:07 AM

Oh, for Pete's sake! It's a mouse, not Godzilla! Seriously, get yourself a young kittycat. Mine is constantly on the job. There ain't even so much as a bug in my house.


Works for me, we get the occasional mouse, my cats kill them or chase them out.

Yes, they can carry disease, so do humans. You're far more likely to catch a disease from your co-workers than a mouse. It's just a mouse, far more afraid of you than you are of it. There are a million humane traps, there's poison, you can whack it with a pan if you're not squeamish. You can chase it into a corner, throw something over it to scoop it up and put it outside (my preference). Seriously, it's not going to hurt you.

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Wed 09/16/09 07:01 AM
laugh laugh laugh laugh

Yeah, I thought about that but I figure we have plenty of time to worry about that, a whole lot can happen between now and July. Best time, I don't know. I'm exhausted, I took a day off to run a few errands yesterday, I left at 8:30 yesterday morning, didn't get home til 7, then had to pick Steve up at 9. I got Boo a new laptop yesterday so OF COURSE that had to be set up right away laugh And we decided to get a wireless router so that Steve and Boo will have internet access on their computers which Steve tried setting up but was having problems. Just a long day and we didn't get to sleep til about midnight. I guess call me about 5:10 or so, I'll be waiting for Steve to pick me up and I know I'll be awake then bigsmile

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Wed 09/16/09 06:44 AM

(((((Suz))))) flowerforyou missed you also. I was spoiled rotten by Linda and Pat. We had a blast. I am now more determined than ever to see all 50 states. I fell in love with Washington. Mountains, lagoons, bays, ocean...etc. whatever you want that state has it.

Looking forward to talking to you more about the cruise. Becca got us new phones while I was gone that work nation wide. A little company called T-mobile is what we are with now. The old company gave out wrong information when they tried to port the numbers, so I will call you this evening with my new number.


I am not sure if I will drive to Miami, take a bus, train, or fly yetlaugh laugh


T-mobile's supposed to be pretty good, I think, but it'll be nice to be able to use your phone anywhere. Make sure you do call me! We're flying, though I think I'm going to wait til Spring to get tickets. I'm hoping I can get a decent price through Southwest, they don't charge for luggage (yet), you're allowed 2 bags per person still without charge. But they only book 6 months in advance. Unless I can get such a good deal on another airline that will offset what they charge for bags. Which is doubtful.

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Wed 09/16/09 06:36 AM
Don't you hate that! ((((Pam))))

I've missed you flowerforyou

I have some things about the cruise to tell you :banana: :banana: I found a couple of hotels in Miami for about $60/night that include breakfast, shuttles from the airport and a free shuttle to the cruise port :banana: :banana: And I found a tour operator in Roatan that's $25/person (for a group of 4 or more) that will take you all over the island all day. The only extra would be for admission charges to some of the places (Iguana farm, admission to beach resorts, lunch etc). They come highly recommended and they'd be far cheaper than cabs. We could go to shipwreck sites, free beaches, they'll take us to the shopping areas, etc. :banana:

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Wed 09/16/09 02:36 AM
yawn yawn

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Tue 09/15/09 04:27 PM
waving waving

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Tue 09/15/09 05:27 AM
Not to mention the timewasters, scammers and liars are sources of great amusement laugh

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Tue 09/15/09 05:26 AM
Yes flowerforyou

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Tue 09/15/09 02:50 AM
flowerforyou

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Mon 09/14/09 04:18 PM
(((Pat))))

Did you get my e-mails? ohwell

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Mon 09/14/09 04:02 PM

Well I ALWAYS opened the car door for her and patched her up when she blew a gasket!!!noway laugh :banana:


This is true, he did rofl rofl

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Mon 09/14/09 04:00 PM
That is so true. And only 2 miles away. That is awesome

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Mon 09/14/09 03:49 PM




My doll is officially retired after this weekend!!!:banana: :banana: :banana: :banana:


The best example of a man treating females as an object.


Mikey is the very last man on earth to objectify women flowerforyou
thank u Suzin and U have even met me!!!flowerforyou flowerforyou


Yes I have. And you didn't even make me go to Hooters laugh laugh laugh

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Mon 09/14/09 03:47 PM
Yeah, no kidding bigsmile But, that is really cool, I'm really happy for you flowerforyou

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Mon 09/14/09 03:45 PM


My doll is officially retired after this weekend!!!:banana: :banana: :banana: :banana:


The best example of a man treating females as an object.


Mikey is the very last man on earth to objectify women flowerforyou

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