Good 46º clear sunny morning. Hit 93º yesterday late
afternoon.
"10-9" = Repeat ... or, "huh?"
Guess what.....
In one week of recreational marijuana sales in Oregon, dispensaries have
brought in an estimated $11 million!!!!!
Yesterday morning I ran '5 Miles'... saw activity at PJ and Dave's. It was
Dave and Tim aka Tim The Timenator on the roof working. They had removed a
skylight and were re-roofing. Haven't seen Tim in a while and he said he quit
smoking two years ago and quit drinking. CONGRATULATIONS TIM!!! That is a HUGE
accomplishment.
This is interesting about ostriches...
The ostrich is distinctive in it's appearance, with a long neck and legs,
and can run at up to about 43 mph, the fastest land speed of any bird. The bird
has just two toes on each foot (most birds have 4), with the nail on the larger,
inner toe resembling a hoof. The outer toe has no nail. The reduced number of
toes is an adaptation that appears to aid in the running, useful for getting
away from predators. The ostrich is the largest living species of bird and lays
the largest eggs of any living bird.
Historically this date...
Fleet
Week:
And in San Francisco:
This weekend Pattersons (Jeannie & Bill) and Yellins (Dee & Dale)
are in SF for the show.
1945 – Parade in NYC for Fleet
Admiral Nimitz and 13 USN/USMC Medal of
Honorrecipients
1992 – A 13 kilogram (est.) fragment of the Peekskill
meteorite lands in the
driveway of the Knapp residence in Peekskill,
New York, destroying the family's 1980 Chevrolet
Malibu
And births
this date include....
1940
– John
Lennon, British musician and songwriter (The
Beatles) (d. 1980)
1952 – Sharon Osbourne, English music manager and wife of Ozzy Osbourne
1953 – Tony
Shalhoub, American actor
1954 – Scott
Bakula, American actor
1975 – Sean
Lennon, American musician (born on his dad's
birthday!)
1981 – Zachery Ty
Bryan, American actor
This was posted on FB and I NEED to make these!
MOZZARELLA STUFFED MEATBALLS IN SLOW COOKER:
Cut low moisture mozzarella cheese into 3/4" cubes and store in
refrigerator while preparing the meat.
1 pound ground beef
1 pound hot or regular Italian sausage
2 t. salt
1 t. black pepper
1 cup bread crumbs
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese
2 eggs
1/2 cup whole milk
1/2 cup chopped parsley
(Ok, so this is someone's recipe, but whatever your favorite meatball
recipe is ... use it!)
Mix all ingredients well and roll into golf ball sized balls. Squish a
mozzarella cube into the center and pull the edges of the meatball around it so
it's round again. Arrange meatballs in slow cooker and cover with "tomato sauce"
(I will use canned pasta sauce or some of my own homemade.
Cook on high for 2- 2½ hours. For store bought pasta sauce I like Cucina
& Amore:
(up here it can be purchased at Gooseberries in GP, Sherm's Food 4 Less,
Safeway..) Click on the "where to buy" on the site.)
Sunset yesterday... pictures 1 & 2 about 5:20pm looking SE, 2 & 3
about 5:50 looking west:
Dinner was reruns. Chair, TV, wine. Then I got a text from Jeannie. She was
at a liquor store ... found these:
OMG, I love martinis, 'dirty' ones! .... and want some of this stuff! She
said it's on Amazon. Found it~! Oh boy oh boy!
Thursday night football scores: (yeah, Brian!)
All I know. Happy TGIF. Nuff said. Ciao.
xo Sue Mom
Bobo
October 9th
National Submarine, Hoagie, Hero, Grinder Sandwich Day
Submarine Sandwich
Variously called a grinder,hoagie, hero and torpedo
in other regions, the submarine or sub has at least two claims to invention, and
may have plausibly occurred in both places. One is in Boston at the beginning of
World War I, made by a local restaurant that served Navy servicemen stationed at
the Charlestown Navy Yard. The bread was a specially baked baguette intended to
resemble the hull of the submarines it was named after. Another claim credits
Dominic Conti (1874–1954), an Italian immigrant who started Dominic Conti’s
Grocery Store on Mill Street in Paterson, New Jersey in 1910, and named the
sandwich after seeing a recovered submarine in the Paterson museum Museum Of
History in 1918.
|
Conti’s granddaughter recounts that he was selling
traditional Italian sandwiches made on a long crusty roll, filled with cold
cuts, lettuce, tomatoes, peppers, onions,oil, vinegar, Italian herbs, spices, salt and pepper. The sandwich started
with a layer of cheese and ended with a layer of cheese so the bread wouldn’t
get soggy. See alsohero and hoagie.
Works with Fleet
Week!!!!