Nope, you eat it
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@boomzilla About 200mg is my normal limit, occasionally 300. More than that gets unpleasant and/or ineffective (build up a tolerance).
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
*condition called long QT syndrome *
I'm torn between "that's what she said" and "AKA Morbus Trolltech".
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
@boomzilla About 200mg is my normal limit, occasionally 300. More than that gets unpleasant and/or ineffective (build up a tolerance).
I think I was well over 1.5g a day for a while.
I need more coffee.
I’m so hyper! I’ve had three cups so far today but I still think I need more for this.
well ain’t you cute. I measure my addiction in grams. We are nothing alike.
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@DogsB There's nothing inherently wrong with tofu; it's only when it's pretending to be something else that I have a problem with it. That seems like it might be tasty, maybe, but as a substitute for a Christmas ham/turkey/goose/whatever, no. That's just wrong.
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
@DogsB There's nothing inherently wrong with tofu; it's only when it's pretending to be something else that I have a problem with it.
Something else = "food".
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
@DogsB There's nothing inherently wrong with tofu; it's only when it's pretending to be something else that I have a problem with it. That seems like it might be tasty, maybe, but as a substitute for a Christmas ham/turkey/goose/whatever, no. That's just wrong.
On the other hand, there is a famous dish in China called "雞豆花" that makes effort to extract protein from chicken fillet to make something that completely looks like tofu pudding.(The state when you just put calcium carbonate into soyabean extract to make it clog. If you compress and squeeze water out from this state you'll get ordinary tofu block)
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OTOH, can't be worse than Jäegermeister.
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@MrL said in Nope, you eat it:
There's a joke about flames there, but
That's too bad. I was hoping a joke would come to light.
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
Shoulda called it "infra mild". "Infra" doesn't get used enough.
(Also, a heads up for other companies looking to name products: "ortho" and "cata" are criminally shortchanged prefixes.)
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@da-Doctah said in Nope, you eat it:
@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
Shoulda called it "infra mild". "Infra" doesn't get used enough.
(Also, a heads up for other companies looking to name products: "ortho" and "cata" are criminally shortchanged prefixes.)
I think "ultra mild" is more common grading though.
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@DogsB a short pour is about 40mg. you were ingesting 40 non-watered shots down a day, no creamer? . _ .
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@_deathcollege said in Nope, you eat it:
@DogsB a short pour is about 40mg. you were ingesting 40 non-watered shots down a day, no creamer? . _ .
I think I was on the black pods at the time. They were 120mg a pod. I can't afford that level of addiction anymore.
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
A bit of a failure of market analysis there. Not everyone in the UK wants their entire diet to be milder than their Christmas sprouts.
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Bland food for UK-born people isn't surprising, but Australians? I'd have guessed that people living in a country where the wilderness is out to kill you would appreciate spiciness.
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@Zerosquare They crave to have one thing in their lives that doesn't constantly aggress them.
Filed under: Et tu, cena?
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Seems a bit over wrought.
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could be extremely dangerous.
Could seems to be doing a lot of work there.
snow can hide small rocks and debris, creating a risk of choking or causing dental damage. These hazards are often invisible to the naked eye
I don't think rocks so tiny they're invisible to the naked eye pose a significant choking hazard and not much risk of dental damage, either.
As it falls, it can absorb pollutants from the air, including car exhaust and industrial emissions, posing health risks if ingested.
This one I'll give them, but I'd almost be willing to bet the risk is lower than the risk of being hurt by a car spinning out in the snow. Risk analysis, can you do it?
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@boomzilla I would also advise not eating snow, especially if it is yellow or you have huskies.
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@boomzilla
don't eat the yellow snow
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@Zecc said in Nope, you eat it:
@MrL said in Nope, you eat it:
There's a joke about flames there, but
That's too bad. I was hoping a joke would come to light.
I'm sure the manufacturer on fire for that.
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@dkf said in Nope, you eat it:
@boomzilla I would also advise not eating snow, especially if it is yellow or you have huskies.
Wait, if you have huskies but not yellow snow, what have you?
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@Tsaukpaetra Brown snow.
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
It's important advice when the wrapper tastes exactly the same as the bread.
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@LaoC my doctor tells me I should eat more fiber.
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
@LaoC my doctor tells me I should eat more fiber.
Make sure it's the good multimode one though, and do take off the plastic wrapping
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"You're all getting Gouraud-shaded carrots. Happy now?"
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@boomzilla So is the third one swearing off chocolate, then?
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@boomzilla said in Nope, you eat it:
My parents had a strict diet of "eat what's served or cook yourselves, you lazy fucks".
If implemented and carried through at a young age, the kids either learn to cook, or eat what is served.
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@Carnage My parents had a slightly different rule. If I didn't like something, I didn't have to eat it (but no alternative was available, either). However, I couldn't say I didn't like something without trying it; I had to eat at least one bite of everything on my plate, even if I'd tried it and disliked it in the past. This tended to be invoked mostly at holidays, when I might be eating at someone else's house and faced with things that were not part of our everyday fare, like green bean casserole or sweet potatoes. I could eat the turkey or ham or whatever and mashed potatoes and ignore the green bean casserole, but not until I'd tried it. (Unsurprisingly, our everyday fare consisted of things we all liked. I look back at my childhood with dismay at how small and bland that palate was, limited in part by my mom's allergies.)
That rule got relaxed somewhat when I was old enough to serve myself as dishes were passed around the table. If I put it on my plate, I had to eat it. There may still have been a rule that I had to put at least one bite of everything on my plate; this was all a long time ago, and I don't remember that with certainty.
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
If I put it on my plate, I had to eat it. There may still have been a rule that I had to put at least one bite of everything on my plate.
This is the house rule as well. You take it, you eat it, and you do not get up from the table until the plate is clean.
's probably why I'm fat...
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@Tsaukpaetra said in Nope, you eat it:
you do not get up from the table until the plate is clean.
I don't remember having this rule, or at least not strictly enforced. If we did have the rule, I'm pretty sure it only applied to food I served myself; it wasn't my fault if my parents served me more than I could eat. I do remember being guilt-tripped about not wasting food — starving children in India. I also remember my dad saying, "Your eyes are bigger than your stomach," so I learned fairly quickly to take small portions initially, then have seconds if I was still hungry, rather than taking too much at first.
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
I don't remember having this rule, or at least not strictly enforced
Yeah. In my house I remember an incident in which I was up until 10pm failing to finish some vegetables or whatever. Was put into a container for breakfast the next day.
Good times!
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@Tsaukpaetra said in Nope, you eat it:
@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
I don't remember having this rule, or at least not strictly enforced
Yeah. In my house I remember an incident in which I was up until 10pm failing to finish some vegetables or whatever. Was put into a container for breakfast the next day.
This is the way.
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@Tsaukpaetra said in Nope, you eat it:
In my house I remember an incident in which I was up until 10pm failing to finish some vegetables or whatever. Was put into a container for breakfast the next day.
And what did they do with the vegetables?
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@da-Doctah said in Nope, you eat it:
@Tsaukpaetra said in Nope, you eat it:
In my house I remember an incident in which I was up until 10pm failing to finish some vegetables or whatever. Was put into a container for breakfast the next day.
And what did they do with the vegetables?
They were breakfast. For the next day.
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@HardwareGeek said in Nope, you eat it:
Your eyes are bigger than your stomach
Huh, interesting. I didn't know that this exact saying also existed in English.