Not sure what you mean by “a cavalier opinion“.Thanks for saying what I was thinking, Chris.
One of the things that got us to this point is a cavalier opinion by way too many people.
Tim
Not sure what you mean by “a cavalier opinion“.Thanks for saying what I was thinking, Chris.
One of the things that got us to this point is a cavalier opinion by way too many people.
Not sure what you mean by “a cavalier opinion“.
Tim
Opinion was a poor choice of words, cavalier actions would have been better.Not sure what you mean by “a cavalier opinion“.
Tim
Two local chains are putting in Plexiglas shields between customers and grocery store clerks.
Also distance markers for those in line.
Things are starting to improve here for seniors. You need to have a scorecard to tell which days and hours the various stores are catering to seniors. Albertsons was a little better today, again thanks to the independent vendors. Trader Joe's was like hitting the jackpot.... Fresh produce, dairy, some meat, and frozen vegetables. At this rate, I may try Costco on Thursday to pick up our Dunkin Donuts coffee and trash bags, both on sale and of course a chicken for supper if they have any cooked. So far though, very limited cleaning products and no TP in sight.
I guess we're all going to have different sets of opinions on this whole thing. Is caution required? I never said it wasn't. Caution IS REQUIRED. My friend also had it and is also a cancer survivor. And again, for him he thought it was a flu. And here too. Not saying flu is not serious, Heck my own Dr has told me flu for me with what I have could be fatal. So yes I am taking REASONABLE precautions. Against BOTH not just this Covid thing. When a vaccine is available I will make sure that just like flu and pneumonia I will be sure to get that too. So I will continue to be cautions when out in public, (shopping, conducting my business which BTW has picked up like crazy not that people have rediscovered cooking at home) so I am 15 days out on orders for mixer repairs and purchases. But, I refuse to live in fear cowered away in a locked room.You can't draw any conclusions based on the experience of ONE person. For every guy in lung cancer remission who has modest Covid-19 symptoms, there's the hospital nurse I saw on TV tonight who is the picture of health, NO underlying health issues, who's been HAMMERED by this disease. There's the young congressman Ben McAdams of Utah with Covid-19 who says his breathing feels restricted like he's got a belt strapped tight around his chest. There's the 7 month old baby Emmett Doster in South Carolina with a 104*F temperature with Covid-19.
Let's just say your brother-in-law's brother is one lucky dude.
Good to see you have your priorities in order.Vodka, paper towels, some frozen pizzas, nothing too disaster driven.
. Later in reading online helpful tips they indicated if freezing meat or fish to pre-freeze it on a sheet first to get a better seal and such. So we had some top sirloin cap steaks. So we did on those put them on a cookie sheet, after thoroughly drying them off. It does seem the meat portions sealed with fewer gaps around the meat than the way the fish looked. Anyone else seen this?
Larry, Barb and I freeze a lot of stuff with our vac sealer. Things like soups, sauces, we put those in the freezer bag and stand it up in the freezer when it's frozen we then vac seal it. Casseroles and the like we freeze on a cookie sheet then vac seal it. Spray a light coat of pam or something similar will keep the food from sticking to the cookie sheet. Almost anything that has moisture the vac will want to suck it out of the bag making for a complete seal difficultI just tried our hand at using our Vacu Seal or whatever it's called. I noticed after putting some portions of catfish fillets in the packages for my dad no matter how my wife set the machine there seemed to be air gaps (small but there) around the meat. After a couple tries wife said no more the stuff is too expensive to keep throwing it away (the plastic not the fish). Later in reading online helpful tips they indicated if freezing meat or fish to pre-freeze it on a sheet first to get a better seal and such. So we had some top sirloin cap steaks. So we did on those put them on a cookie sheet, after thoroughly drying them off. It does seem the meat portions sealed with fewer gaps around the meat than the way the fish looked. Anyone else seen this? Not wanting to load up a huge freezer as we only have the 2 refrigerators so all we can hold is maybe 10 or so packages of meat. So basically a "backup" for when the store shelves are empty. Just looking for assurance we're doing the right thing as we've not had much luck in the past. Though, in the past we did not pre-freeze the meats.
It's a great technique to get a better seal, and to avoid pulling meat juices out of the package that create a mess in the machine and make it harder to get a good seal. For example, when sealing thick slices of leftover prime rib, I will place a slice in a vac bag, fold over the top, and place the bags unsealed in the freezer for a couple of hours until they're solid (set a timer or you'll forget). Then run each through the vacuum sealer. Great seal, juices stay where you want them....in the past we did not pre-freeze the meats.
I've done this with leftover stock. Works great.I put them in those square glad storage containers to freeze before sealing