Don’t make food without your glasses

Joined
Jan 7, 2017
Messages
3,166
Reaction score
10,462
Location
Whiskey Hill Ma.
Wife is away for 2 weeks in Florida and I made my track sandwich yesterday. Started to feel nauseated about 2:00 but figured must just be first day of the season sickness that happens when you ride shotgun at 150 mph. It was a long ride home and I collapsed in bed about 6pm. Not a good night. Woke up to find this in the bread box. At least the dog didn't get sick. Ug. 1 more week to go. I'd better be more careful :)
 

Attachments

  • IMG_9222.jpg
    IMG_9222.jpg
    60.1 KB · Views: 249
  • IMG_9221.jpg
    IMG_9221.jpg
    64.4 KB · Views: 205
Register to hide this ad
All natural Penicillin. Here in Buffalo area we put blue cheese on everything. You just have to build a tolerance……… my wife was in Baltimore for work this week. She sent me a pic of her dinner. Sushi and some sort of Japanese beer. I was eating venison hamburger helper and drinking Miller Lite…….. I confess to really liking Hamburger helper but it's not allowed when my wife is home.
 
That's just plain gross! Many years ago I was seeing a girl. She said in the middle of the night she got hungry and pulled out of the frige a piece of pumpkin pie and ate some in the dark. Next morning she saw the pie was covered in green mold. But, she never got sick from it.
 
I have accidentally ate many a piece of moldy bread. I do not recall ever feeling bad from it. Happened last week again as a matter of fact.
We eat so little bread moldy bread happens often around here
 
I have accidentally ate many a piece of moldy bread. I do not recall ever feeling bad from it. Happened last week again as a matter of fact.
We eat so little bread moldy bread happens often around here

It all depends on the mold and the person eating the mold.

Maybe if I had been hanging around the shop it would not have bothered me as much as being in a car (shotgun) at race track speeds for the day. I'd rather not find out if thats true or not. :)
 
Last edited:
What we do is keep bread in the freezer.

We buy bread that we like, typically in uncut loaves. I slice it up with a knife when we get it home, put it into or back into a plastic bag, seal the bag and put it in the freezer. When we want to make a sandwich, I pull out the number of slices we need, microwave them for about thirty seconds for a quick thaw, and proceed.

If making toast, straight into the toaster oven.

I think it was in the explorer Admiral Richard Byrd's book, Alone, wherein I read as a kid about finding some frozen bread from the year before that was just fine to eat.
 
Last edited:
If a food gets bacteria on it when out side the frig for air born particles to land on it,

there is a good chance that they will still grow inside of a frig that is set at 44 degrees.

I have seen deer hanging in 38 degree weather for five days and brought home to warmer 44 degree weather to hang for a few more days, that needed to be wiped down with vinegar, to remove "Growth" that was on the meat.

I also hate it when I see mold on my bread, and there is not enough good bread for me to have a sandwich !! Bummer.
 
Keep the bread in the refrigerator. It's too cold for the mold to grow.

Uh...no. I used to eat a lot of my favorite wheat bread. Always kept it in the fridge so it wouldn't get moldy or stale. Pulled the loaf out one day, removed a slice and started eating. Thought it tasted a bit unusual. Yeah, nasty blue mold does add a bit of flavor :eek:
 
Glasses can be helpful. I was once making home made apple sauce to go with some beautiful thick pork chops. Woopsie. Instead of cinnamon, I put in cumin! Not good, had to toss it.
 
Glasses can be helpful. I was once making home made apple sauce to go with some beautiful thick pork chops. Woopsie. Instead of cinnamon, I put in cumin! Not good, had to toss it.

My wife would sometimes put tarter sauce on my ham & cheese by mistake.
The worse when she would do a mix up and put horseradish on the H&C.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top