Posted on 10/02/2014 10:49:41 AM PDT by maggief
In passing the TVs in public, I happened to see three different reports on the Dallas and Honolulu medical teams working to disinfect areas.
In each one, none of them were properly suitted up for the risk.
In Dallas around the apartment, workers were cleaning up hazwaste trash in Tyvex suits, with the sleeves rolled up to their elbows, forearms exposed, to keep a little cool while they worked.
In Honolulu, they were fitting their masks, with openings all along the edges and eyes, and the face masks wouldn’t even be approved for an Asbestos testing environment.
It’s nuts.
Frozen eggs thaw just like fresh. If you’re going to freeze them, might as well separate them at the same time. Pour the whites into ice cube trays. Each cube equals one or two whites depending on the size. Two yolks will fill a cube. Keep a wee bit of white with the yolk so it doesn’t dry out. When frozen, pop the cubes out and store in freezer bags. Thaw a room temperature. Easy.
Interesting. If I have any space left when we get our quarter of beef - might try it. Thanks.
Thanks for the ping!
They’ll know in a few days if they’re going to live or die.
Youre Welcome, Alamo-Girl!
I hear you Texas!
Sounds like that dupe pass is class warfare active.
I was once stationed remote in the Aleutians and we had no resupply for 3 months due to hellacious weather. We were TDY, and were used to cooking our own meals, but we ran out of everything. The only things left in the shoppette were fat-free cookies and canned asparagus. After weeks of no greens, I finally bought one, dusted it off and tried to cook it. I learned that I will starve to death before I can actually eat canned asparagus.
We ended up having food enough, but I was dreaming of lettuce and green beans. Laundry soap and toiletries were literally worth their weight in gold. This was on a military base supposedly prepared for an extended siege; something that no American city can say...
I just posted that to show that eggs and milk can be stored longer term for use in a SHTF situation.
They might not be as great as fresh, but they would be available for cooking and be better than not having them.
You can also buy canned milk that you add water to, or even powdered.
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- So the hugely disproportional violent crime rate of barracks in the USA is simply mere coincidence?
- I’d recommend an FR sidebar poll of all allegedly sane FReepers to check out your fantasy “darkside” theory -
- What is the percentage of male adult baracks In America that have a history of felony crime convictions?
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Thanks. I do have several cases of number 10 cans of powdered milk. I use it all the time in cooking, and when the jug is empty, I drink powdered, but hubby thinks he has to have fresh. He may have to learn to like it.LOL
I also have powdered eggs for cooking and scrambled and I’ll just buy some extra from our local farmer just in case.
We’ll all just have to make do, but I think we have adequate preps for a stay in.
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