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Ivor Nidea

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Everything posted by Ivor Nidea

  1. First time back here for a few months. Thought I would add a humorous way of dealing with bureaucracy, but maybe you have seen it before. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wtbQUaC9mE Having spent the last 12 years in France it was with a certain amount of reluctance that two months ago I decided to move back to the UK. So far I am enjoying picking up from where I left off, now living in a place where I grew up and spent my teenage years. Most of you will not be aware that 8 years ago my life was turned upside down when I lost my dear wife, which was when I joined the forum in an attempt at grasping at straws to keep going. In doing so I was able to take part in some lively exchanges, during which I count myself lucky at having made friends with some of you, albeit a few of which have never (sadly) been face to face meetings. Having now made my life back again in the UK I doubt very much whether I will continue to look at the forum as I have now got out of the habit, but I would like to thank you all for making the forum an interesting place to visit, often for me late at night. If at times I got under anybody's skin for being so blooming annoying with some of my postings it was all done in a friendly manner. Kind regards to all, Ivor (who was weedon until I forgot my password) but really Peter.   
  2. [quote user="Quillan"] Not wishing to point the finger at any one particular individual but rather just a general observation but it seems there is a little bit of self righteousness in the thread from those who never eat pre packed meals frozen, tinned etc meals. I am glad that some have the time to cook meals from scratch using only the best ingredients but as I said before not all of us have that time. [/quote] No need to worry about pointy fingers, I am used to it as I have always been a know-all, so over many years it's water off a ducks back. Think of me as the bloke in the corner of the bar who chips in on every subject as if he has the definitive answer. I have lost count of the number of posts on forums that have come to a shuddering halt whenever I make a post. Now back to the wider issue on what I am coming to think of as another of my "Zulu Principles." The Horse meat/Obesity scandal. For Rabbie.  Look up how Jim Slater came to call his book of the same name. The dobbin issue is the culmination from many years of the proliferation of eating places in the high street.  Nowadays it's impossible to walk many yards without falling into somewhere selling drinks or food and it appears to be almost obligatory to snack or have a meal whenever anybody goes shopping,  a lot of which is consumed without bothering to even sit down to eat or drink.  So is it any wonder that more and more people are obese, or that more children appear to suffer from allergies and have behavioural issues. As more and more eating and drinking establishments flood our town centres and out of town shopping malls so the relentless drive to be cheaper and tastier than the next place. It's not a question of having the time to cook meals from scratch, or using the best ingredients, it's about what we think of as being important to our own well being.  If you want to eat a slice of "meat" carved from something that looks like an elephants leg, or give your children cans of fizzy drink dreamed up by a chemist in a laboratory then I would suggest they are just a couple of tiny examples from the tip of the huge obesity problem tied in with what goes into ready meals and processed food. I accept that I maybe have fixed views  about food, which is probably because it has been gained over a very short period in an otherwise longer life as cooking for myself is a relatively new experience. But to my mind food doesn't need to be complicated and simple meals that are healthy enough can be easily made from raw ingredients in less than 30 minutes, which is probably quicker than it takes to get another tattoo or to wait for the take-away to be delivered, probably cheaper as well. If more and more people decided to be self-righteous it might be a start to a healthier life-style with no need to be concerned about processed food .    
  3. [quote user="Rabbie"] [quote user="Ivor Nidea"]So the flat-pack furniture warehouse has withdrawn its meat-balls and something called a Wiener sausage (must be a spelling error there?). I am pretty sure that it was an oversight on the part of the PR department not to mention that customers to their furniture store can continue to be reassured that sausages and meat-balls will contain only the finest cuts of Swedish meat abbatoirs can re-cycle. In fact it wouldn't surprise me to know that in every flat pack of balls there is a list of ingredients in fifteen different languages.[/quote]Ivor, Once again you keep an old pedant like me happy by posting without knowing your facts[:)] Wiener is not mispelled - it is the Swedish name for what in the UK we call a Frankfurter. It means coming from Wien(Vienna).  In fact you will find that dachshunds are nicknamed Wiener dogs in America. I have also checked on a packet of ikea meatballs  The ingredients are listed in 16 languages so you were close but no cigar[:D] So remember check yiour facts before posting[:)]   [/quote] Oh Rabbie, bless you [:D] Just as you bumped into the dogs dingly dangles previously, you also missed the wiener one, if you ask Wooly he will explain. In future I shall try to make them a little more obvious.  Perhaps a little more tuning is required on my part. Actually for years in our family the chipolata has been know as LBW's and the Frankfurter/Wiener as BBW's. Thanks for the geography lesson, who would have guessed about Wien being Vienna [Www] Next you'll be telling me you chose your forum name after a sputnik-like vegetable!
  4. So the flat-pack furniture warehouse has withdrawn its meat-balls and something called a Wiener sausage (must be a spelling error there?). I am pretty sure that it was an oversight on the part of the PR department not to mention that customers to their furniture store can continue to be reassured that sausages and meat-balls will contain only the finest cuts of Swedish meat abbatoirs can re-cycle. In fact it wouldn't surprise me to know that in every flat pack of balls there is a list of ingredients in fifteen different languages.
  5. [quote user="Rabbie"][quote user="Ivor Nidea"] Well I reckon you have more courage than me as Ikea would not be any sort of place that I would ever dream of going too for food. The one and only time I have ever been in one I only saw furniture. The more that developes over the meat scandal just confirms that we get what we deserve. If I ever had to serve up a meal for somebody I like to think I could do better than a ball made from sludge blasted by high pressure from animal bones with a side dish of powdered smash. [/quote]Ivor, all the IKEA shops in the uK have a separate Swedish Food shop which we patronise because there are no other outlets near us. Where else do you think we can buy swedish crispbread, cheese etc. BTW Meatballs are not served with mashed potatoes but with boiled ones unmashed so no sign of smash there[:)] However I do enjoy your posts even when obviously ill-informed so keep on posting [/quote] That's because I live in a very old time warp where nothing of the modern world apears very relevant. When I was a kid the only exotic food we had was liver sausage or Shippams fish paste in very small jars, for all I know they both might well have been whale blubber. But at least a carrot will always be a carrot whether it grew up in Sweden or somebody's allotment.  
  6. Well I reckon you have more courage than me as Ikea would not be any sort of place that I would ever dream of going too for food. The one and only time I have ever been in one I only saw furniture. The more that developes over the meat scandal just confirms that we get what we deserve. If I ever had to serve up a meal for somebody I like to think I could do better than a ball made from sludge blasted by high pressure from animal bones with a side dish of powdered smash.
  7. [quote user="LBV Charente"]I don't think it's fair to blame the newsreader individually as Mo Farah isn't a huge name in the USA . Plus, it should have been down to the programme researchers to find out who he was - just a simple google search would have made the interview far more interesting...[/quote] First of all the woman was devoid of any sincerity. Orville the duck would have sounded better. She didn't even get the event correctly, marathon? It was a half-marathon. "Haven't you run before?" What did she imagine, that he had been on holiday and just decided to strip off to run with others he saw running along and happened to beat them.  Mo was so good about it he failed to mention the small point that he just happened to be the best runner in the world over two distances.
  8. Just listen to this stupid women speaking to Mo Farah. http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2013/feb/26/mo-farah-new-orleans-interview She's probably never heard of the O L Y M P I C S.
  9. Just as I had wondered who it was that bought so many ready-made meals I am even more baffled as to who buys meat balls from Ikea? I went into Ikea once, it was in Mallorca. I went in there to please a family member who said I would like it, I didn't realise they knew their father so well that they have since amused their friends by telling them how annoyed it made me as I tried to find my way out. And people go in there to buy bags of meat balls...blimey!! I am just waiting for somebody now to tell me that they buy them..and they are the dogs *******s.
  10. If you are happy with the veg that is delivered in your farm box there is nothing wrong with that at all, and if it helps the grower to keep doing what he does then so much the better for all concerned. Probably by the time the soup is ready for the bowl a spoonful of that would not be a lot different in taste from somebody elses bought from veg at Carrefour imho. Rating fruit and veg is rather like celebrity ratings, courgette's being on the C list, down there alongside most of what passes for a celebrity these days. I seem to remember that when I once grew tomato's the little cherry ones were really nice eaten straight off the plant, whether that was because they were from my garden or because of the variety I will never know, now that I only buy them from the supermarket they taste much nicer when they have been left for a few days. I read somewhere that toms were one of the very few veg that were better for you once they were cooked, so I do cook them quite often. Whether I live longer for doing that, who knows?
  11. I wonder how many people could actually tell the difference in taste from "farm fresh" produce to "Joe Soap" stuff. When I first came to France I went in for growing my own veg and couldn't believe how much work was involved so I gave up after a couple of back breaking years and now just buy what's in the supermarket. I am a sucker for buying the top price eggs because it says the chickens live in a holiday camp but I imagine one yolk is the same as the next. In my cynical opinion Bio is just an excuse for upping the price. Funnily enough, the news about horse meat being mixed up with donkey reminded me that in our family, for years we have referred to Bovril and Marmite as "Donkey Jam". Years ago when I had a business and went through some periods of shortages I remember hearing about somebody had put a sign in their window that said "Panic buyers welcome here".
  12. My concerns are over. Spoke to a helpful young man this morning who advised that my bill coming out shortly is just a few euros underpaid, so he agreed that as EDF has a little more wonga than me we could leave the monthly payments as they were.
  13. The ones who never made the Olympics! http://www.sparkpeople.com/mypage_public_journal_individual.asp?blog_id=5007694
  14. Just had notice from EDF that they propose increasing my monthly payments from €63 to €93 a month! Seems a bit of a hike to me? I have a wood burner that heats the whole house and is still warm enough in the mornings for me to shamble about in my scants and the only electric heating I use is in the kitchen when it's really icy cold....for the dog. So a 50% rise seems a bit excessive doesn't it? Wood round here varies between €50 and €65 a stere, depending I reckon on how well I am able to order in French, and whether I fail to recognise that the delivery of oak was similar to the horse for beef switch.
  15. Perhaps it is an extension of the dumbing down in programmes nowadays. I have to confess to being the archetypal pleb and never choose to watch anything close to being "arty", so if the programme is chaired by Melvyn Bragg types then it is one to avoid as far as I am concerned, so the references made to art by MD went <woosh> over my head. I did think though that when he was dressed by the costume department in his straw hat, baggy pants and jacket, and the braces borrowed from Bobby Ball, what came to mind was Dirk Bogarde in "The Spanish Gardener". On the whole I thought the series of programmes failed to impart in me a need to visit any of the gardens, even the ones nearer to where I live. Please don't blame me for my lack of any appreciation of art or to my lack of ability in the French language as I went to a bog standard secondary modern school where to be thought of as a swot or in any way having an art "bent" invited a wedgie, dead leg or being hung by the back of your collar to a peg in the cloakroom at break time[:D].
  16. I am sorry to disagree with you Mrs Tooting because all of your posts are normally so charitable but as the programme is aimed at English speaking people I don't think his lack of proper pronounciation should be held against him. With my lack of knowledge of either French, gardening or indeed any sort of fashion sense I can only hear him having a go at speaking, what I assumed was, good enough French. The braces though are a different matter. Perhaps Carol Klein could take a tip from him and add it to her wardrobe. Isn't she brilliant! I like her complete disregard for any attempt to make herself look presentable for the camera, which only serves to make her look damned attractive, if you don't mind me being sexist? I do agree about the "seed tray" garden, blimey! Looked like something out of Blue Peter.
  17. It would appear that the horse meat scandal is nothing new. It's easy to condemn Romanians as primitive but only 60 years ago........ http://www.britishpathe.com/video/the-horsemeat-scandal  
  18. Well done Gary, glad you got it going. Just interested to know if your ground is dry enough to walk on, let alone cut the grass? Around here, in Normandy, I could grow rice or water cress!
  19. Further to my post yesterday about the effect of drugs in the water supply, I looked on the internet today to see what there is about it. At my age I don't have any worries, but should we be concerned for our grandchildren? That's unless the big rock, reckoned to just miss us tonight, catches the earth a glancing blow to send us toward the moon or sun. It could be the first 149 snooker break in space. The very least it would do is to knock the horse meat scandal off the front pages. http://www.law.fsu.edu/journals/landuse/vol26_1/gorman.pdf  
  20. Good, I am pleased we can all give each other a man hug [B] Doesn't get poor old Louise's mower going though. I posted about the spark plug just in case it stopped Gary sending Louise off to get another plug for the mower.
  21. After reading Louise/Gary's last post I see that the internet has already been searched for a comparison. But the rest of my info about plug performance remains correct. It may well be that the Champion is not an absolute 100% swop for the NGK but provided it's near enough it will not be the cause for it not starting.
  22. Louise/Gary Without a comparison chart I couldn't tell you whether or not the Champion is a direct replacement for the NGK but if you do a search on the internet you will no doubt be able to do so fairly easily. What I can tell you is that a plug only delivers a high tension spark across the electrodes. The different numbers on the plug denote the reach/length of nose, heat range and length/size of thread.  When you offer up the plugs side side by side if they look similar then whatever plug you use will be capable of starting the engine. If the new one you have is a slightly different heat range it will still start the engine. It's not as if the engine is highly tuned and will melt the plug once the engine gets hot. The main thing to make sure of is that the nose of the plug does not extend any further than the old one, which could then foul the piston and/or the valves if it is too long.
  23. In the great scheme of things finding Phenylbutazone in a burger (imho) is just a tiny drop in the ocean. For many years I have wondered about the effects of the escalation of drug taking, apart from anti-biotics, swilling about in the human system then ultimately being passed  into the water we drink. I read something years ago that a glass of water from the tap had been passed through the human system 6 times. In our family we (well it was me that actually started it off) used to joke about having a glass of Mrs ***** s water, after an old lady who lived opposite. I can still picture her bent double in her garden legs akimbo and showing what she had for breakfast.
  24. Although you changed the fuel maybe you have some stale petrol in the carb. Take out the plug, pull the cord a few times to get rid of any excess fuel in the engine.  Then try a little neat petrol tipped down the plug hole, put the plug back in and pull the cord. By a little bit of petrol I mean about half a tablespoon full. I don't suppose it's a self-propelled jobby is it, and you have forgotten to pull up the lever? On mine I have two levers at the handlebars, one is to engage the drive and the other one you have to pull it up to start it and let go to stop the engine. I did forget to do that once and couldn't understand why it wouldn't start. Doh! Rule out the battery as you use a pull cord to start it and you have already said you have a spark.
  25. Gentile ladies might prefer to do some knitting whilst curious lads discover all about the Japanese slug. Gentlemen, I give you the Nudibranch!
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