Posted on 10/11/2022 6:33:19 AM PDT by Red Badger
For sure.
Love an occasional B&T. Yuengling Light (light Lager) is my go to though. 12 oz cans poured into a frozen glass. On the beach in FL, you need to try to keep it light. Right?
I have not had the privilege to live on the beach....But I expect a dark beer would be too heavy.
I am so glad that Yuengling has surpassed Samuel Adams.
I used to enjoy an occasional Sam Adams but in 2016 they were venomously opposed to Trump...Figured they did not want me to drink their beer. Ever. Even if it was the last drink on the planet.
And this all started when biteme took office.🤔
No lube either.😵💫
"If you love to cook, this upcoming Thanksgiving may be a real challenge for you. Thanks to a resurgence of the bird flu, supplies of turkey are getting tighter and tighter.
Sadly, the same thing is true for eggs. And as you will see below, reduced milk production is sending the price of butter into the stratosphere.
Thanks to soaring prices, a traditional Thanksgiving dinner will be out of reach for millions of American families this year, and that is extremely unfortunate.
Of course all of this is happening in the context of a horrific global food crisis that is getting worse with each passing day. Yes, things are bad now, but they will be significantly worse this time next year."
"The bird flu pandemic that has killed tens of millions of our chickens and turkeys was supposed to go away during the hot summer months, but that didn’t happen.
And now that the weather is starting to get colder again, there has been a resurgence of the bird flu and this is “devastating egg and turkey operations in the heartland of the country”…
Turkeys are selling for record high prices ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday as a resurgence of bird flu wipes out supplies across the US. ..
As a result, prices for turkey hens are nearly 30% higher than a year ago and 80% above pre-pandemic costs.
..Avian influenza is devastating egg and turkey operations in the heartland of the country.
If just one bird gets it, the entire flock is culled in order to stop the spread. Millions of hens and turkeys have been killed in recent weeks..
"..Meanwhile, wholesale egg prices are at $3.62 a dozen as of Wednesday, the highest ever, up from a previous record of $3.45 a dozen set earlier this year,."
"Tight supplies have sent butter prices.. in August rose 13.5% during the past 12 months, the largest annual increase since 1979, according to the Labor Department.
Butter outstripped those gains, rising 24.6% over the same period… And most of us will continue to buy butter no matter how high it goes."
"David Beasley is the head of the UN World Food Program, and he is actually using the word “hell” to describe what is potentially coming in 2023…
“It’s a perfect storm on top of a perfect storm,” Beasley said. “And with the fertilizer crisis we’re facing right now, with droughts, we’re facing a food pricing problem in 2022. This created havoc around the world.” “If we don’t get on top of this quickly — and I don’t mean next year, I mean this year — you will have a food availability problem in 2023,” he said. “And that’s gonna be hell.”
(From the news website) :” Turkey hens are $1.82 a pound this week, according to Urner Barry, compared to $1.42 last year and $1.01 before the pandemic.
Meanwhile, wholesale egg prices are at $3.62 a dozen as of Wednesday, the highest ever, up from a previous record of $3.45 a dozen set earlier this year..
Consumers have seen prices for eggs at grocery stores triple this year, while turkey meat rose a record-setting 60%, according to a Cobank report."
H/T to BiteYourSelf
And yet, so many people mock preppers.
The lack of fertilizers, fuel, and the elimination of farms and farmers will also affect the seed production for future years, not just 2023, 2024, etc, etc.
That includes not just plant agriculture, but also livestock.
You can't have livestock (the highest source of protein) without adequate food supplies, otherwise we return to an historic scale of a feudal system of 'just survival'.
We have to eliminate this whole idea of self-sabotage, elite control over the population, and change our mind set.
Regarding eggs, the problem is more than the price increase, it is the quality. We buy eggs in a flat of 30 eggs. for the first time in over 50 years, we are getting 3 to 5 bad eggs in a flat. We no longer dare to crack an egg directly into the pan or mixing bowl. It goes first in to an “inspection” bowl so it will not contaminate the rest of the fixings. Our grocer is good about it in that he will replace the entire flat if we tell him about the problem but still......
Yup.
So many people are focused on this winter and 2023 and do not understand or realize the very long term consequences of this food disaster in the making.
People need to learn to garden and how to use heirloom seeds and save them. Yeah, lots of people couldn’t be bothered. The problem is, there is a learning curve to all that and it’s not going to happen in one growing season.
If they are expecting to do it when they have to, it’s going to be far too late.
As I understand it, when a chicken lays an egg, she deposits a film on the outside of the egg which allows the egg to slide out easier,
and this film protects an egg from putrefying prematurely when not refrigerated.
Most egg producers wash their eggs in order to clean them of any bacteria,
but the cleaning process actually washes away this protective membrane.
If you mind 'nasty looking eggs' with straw and bird feces (bacteria) on exterior of the shell ,
these eggs can be safely stored unrefrigerated for several weeks/ a month.
It sounds like you had gotten a couple of older washed eggs, or where refrigeration broke down, or some mis-placed or 'lost' eggs during production.
Eggs are 'candled' only if a rooster is present and there is a question of a fertile egg with a developing chick.
Egg producers routinely cull young chicks to remove any possibility of a rooster being present.
“The problem is, there is a learning curve to all that [gardening] and it’s not going to happen in one growing season.”
Exactly. It’s good to be ahead of the curve, and even though I’ve been gardening since I was a kid, I’m STILL learning.
People would be miles ahead if they just knew the basic mechanics of cooking a meal, too!
Butter is $4/pound and up, here in Wisconsin. I’ve never seen it that high in my entire life!
I’m still not going down to Illinois to buy Oleo, though, LOL!
Remember those days? Wisconsin passed a law to make it illegal to sell anything but butter.
Maybe we should do that again? Might right a lot of wrongs, these days. ;)
4.00 in Wisconsin!!! Wow, Us folks in South Jersey dont stand a chance.
I found some at the local Mennonite emporium the other day for $3.77 a pound on sale.
Mostly it’s over $5 here in NH.
Eggs can still be had cheaply enough from local roadside stands.
Isn't that the butter substitute that included a small "dye pack" to color it up to look somewhat like butter ?
Or, did I just date myself and my age ?
As I recall, oleo was a precursor to margarine use, rite ?
Yeah, I think you did just date yourself.
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