Discussion:
Boiled Green Peanuts
Add Reply
jmcquown
2024-10-19 08:11:27 UTC
Reply
Permalink
What are "green peanuts"? They're freshly harvested peanuts. October
is just about the end of the season for them hereabouts. You can boil
regular raw peanuts in the shell, of course. Just don't try it with
roasted or otherwise already cooked peanuts.

Boiled Peanuts are a Southern snack I happen to love. Many people don't
understand or appreciate them. No matter!

Here's the basic method:

1-1/2 lb. fresh green peanuts in the shell, rinsed
1-1/2 c. salt

Add the peanuts in the shell to a large stock pot and add enough water
to cover 2 inches above the peanuts. Stir in the salt. Bring to a boil
then reduce the heat. Cover and simmer for 2-3 hours. (Note: You can
cook these covered in a crockpot on High for 5-7 hours.)

Stir occasionally and add more water as needed to keep the peanuts
covered. When the nuts in the shells are tender (take one out and crack
the shell and check the peanut for tenderness, you want them very soft),
turn off the heat. Let them cool, covered, in the brine until they
reach room temperature.

Use a slotted spoon to remove some of the boiled peanuts to a bowl.
Serve them unshelled with another bowl to toss the peanut shells in.
Store any leftover boiled peanuts in the brine in the refrigerator for
up to a week.

Jill
heyjoe
2024-10-19 15:12:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
What are "green peanuts"? They're freshly harvested peanuts.
Where do you buy fresh green peanuts? Never seen them in a grocery
around here, but all our peanuts are imported from the south.
--
Disposing of millions of EV batteries is going to make our
nuclear waste disposal problems look like child's play.
jmcquown
2024-10-19 17:41:11 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
What are "green peanuts"? They're freshly harvested peanuts.
Where do you buy fresh green peanuts? Never seen them in a grocery
around here, but all our peanuts are imported from the south.
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.

Jill
heyjoe
2024-10-19 19:25:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
--
The Green New Deal is simply a vehicle to put politicians and
bureaucrats in charge of our economy on the pretense of saving
us from bad weather.
jmcquown
2024-10-19 19:39:32 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.

Jill
D
2024-10-19 20:19:45 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not necessarily
"green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this delicacy as
well?
dsi1
2024-10-19 21:40:47 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily
"green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this delicacy as
well?
The Hawaiians love boiled peanuts too. I think they learned it from the
Chinese. My guess is that the people of the American South learned it
from their slaves.


Hank Rogers
2024-10-19 23:48:15 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by dsi1
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not necessarily
"green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this delicacy as
well?
The Hawaiians love boiled peanuts too. I think they learned it from the
Chinese. My guess is that the people of the American South learned it
from their slaves.
Da Hawaiians love lots of things. Especially da asians that took over da
rock.
Carol
2024-10-21 21:13:56 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by dsi1
Post by D
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled
the green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in
the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not necessarily
"green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this delicacy as
well?
The Hawaiians love boiled peanuts too. I think they learned it from
the Chinese. My guess is that the people of the American South
learned it from their slaves.
http://youtu.be/Tl-omDPPnSY
It's more likely they came from North Americans when they first got
there (they come from South America). Although they are used in many
Asian cooking dishes, they likely got to Asia from from traders from
South or North America.
Carol
2024-10-21 20:15:01 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-21 21:06:44 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
D
2024-10-22 08:33:52 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know how
old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been active in
those days?
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-22 15:17:20 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily  "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know how
old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been active
in those days?
Or her pappy perhaps...

https://trofire.com/2015/07/16/kkk-sets-up-neighborhood-watch-group-in-south-carolina/

https://www.robertkleingallery.com/artists/94-constantine-manos/works/19564-constantine-manos-ku-klux-klan-four-klansmen-columbia-south-carolina-1952/
D
2024-10-22 20:08:34 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily  "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know how old
Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been active in those
days?
Or her pappy perhaps...
https://trofire.com/2015/07/16/kkk-sets-up-neighborhood-watch-group-in-south-carolina/
https://www.robertkleingallery.com/artists/94-constantine-manos/works/19564-constantine-manos-ku-klux-klan-four-klansmen-columbia-south-carolina-1952/
I think we're getting closer and closer. I think that would explain the
heightened aggression and sensitivity lately.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-22 20:20:29 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily  "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Or her pappy perhaps...
https://trofire.com/2015/07/16/kkk-sets-up-neighborhood-watch-group-in-south-carolina/
https://www.robertkleingallery.com/artists/94-constantine-manos/works/19564-constantine-manos-ku-klux-klan-four-klansmen-columbia-south-carolina-1952/
I think we're getting closer and closer. I think that would explain the
heightened aggression and sensitivity lately.
Proxy laundry is amusing to air out...
Carol
2024-10-23 00:35:32 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).

The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
Bruce
2024-10-23 00:48:23 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:35:32 -0000 (UTC), "Carol"
Post by Carol
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
You're trying to reason with a troll, silly goose.
--
Bruce
<https://emalm.com/?v=SQqZJ>
Hank Rogers
2024-10-23 01:30:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:35:32 -0000 (UTC), "Carol"
Post by Carol
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
You're trying to reason with a troll, silly goose.
Don't worry Master. Her majesty will be here soon to ream out carol's ass.
gm
2024-10-23 08:45:10 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hank Rogers
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:35:32 -0000 (UTC), "Carol"
Post by Carol
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
You're trying to reason with a troll, silly goose.
Don't worry Master. Her majesty will be here soon to ream out carol's ass.
If master farts alone in the forest would "anyone" hear it...???

--
GM
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 14:51:34 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:35:32 -0000 (UTC), "Carol"
Post by Carol
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
You're trying to reason with a troll, silly goose.
No one reasons with you Bwuthe, it's pointless.
D
2024-10-23 09:24:14 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
Why did it fall out of favour? Was it that having salaried workers
tended to be more efficient in the end? Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
gm
2024-10-23 12:37:27 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on. Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
Why did it fall out of favour? Was it that having salaried workers
tended to be more efficient in the end? Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
"The heavier the saddle, the slower the horse..."

😎

--
GM
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 15:07:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
a.) YES!
D
2024-10-23 20:03:06 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
a.) YES!
I think I saw a paper on economics that argued the same thing. Imagine
where the US would be if that war never happened? Something for Harry
Turtledove to write about (unless he already did)!

At least, thanks to the genius of Philip K. Dick we know what would have
happened if the germans and japanese won WW2.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 21:43:14 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
a.) YES!
I think I saw a paper on economics that argued the same thing. Imagine
where the US would be if that war never happened? Something for Harry
Turtledove to write about (unless he already did)!
At least, thanks to the genius of Philip K. Dick we know what would have
happened if the germans and japanese won WW2.
Heh...and Antarctica is still an active base for:


D
2024-10-24 08:24:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
a.) YES!
I think I saw a paper on economics that argued the same thing. Imagine
where the US would be if that war never happened? Something for Harry
Turtledove to write about (unless he already did)!
At least, thanks to the genius of Philip K. Dick we know what would have
happened if the germans and japanese won WW2.
http://youtu.be/NG2utrMwTyY
Brilliant! It takes real creativity to come up with a story like that! ;)
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-24 15:48:39 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by D
Would the institution of slavery
eventually have disappeared of itself without the need for a war?
a.) YES!
I think I saw a paper on economics that argued the same thing.
Imagine where the US would be if that war never happened? Something
for Harry Turtledove to write about (unless he already did)!
At least, thanks to the genius of Philip K. Dick we know what would
have happened if the germans and japanese won WW2.
http://youtu.be/NG2utrMwTyY
Brilliant! It takes real creativity to come up with a story like that! ;)
Palin as reptile, hands down a weiner, lol!
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 14:50:41 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram. He's stupidly egging you on.
The sisterhood closes ranks again - this FRAUD who claims to be "above
the trolling" just pig-slopped herself right back into it.
Post by Carol
Slavery ended 1865. 159
years ago. Importing slaves ended over 200 years ago (1807).
Jim Crow laws (vigorously enforced by white southern Dems) went over
100 years longer, btw...
Post by Carol
The practice was falling out of favor long before except in pockets
with big cash crops brought in by slaves who didn't get paid. Mostly
cotton, tobacco, and sugar cane from what I've heard but could have
been rice involved too..
Nice wiki summary, but also quite beside the point under debate, oh
sycophant of Jilldo.
jmcquown
2024-10-23 22:31:21 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram.
(good advice)

This talk is pure troll crap. I was not born in, nor did I grow up in,
South Carolina. I was born on a Marine Corps base in San Diego (Camp
Pendleton).

Jill
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 22:52:19 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily  "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram.
(good advice)
This talk is pure troll crap.
Which is just what a bully bitch calls for.
Post by jmcquown
I was not born in, nor did I grow up in,
South Carolina.  I was born on a Marine Corps base in San Diego (Camp
Pendleton).
Jill
And spent your life mincing around the southland.

Since when does place of birth account for or predicate life afterwards?

Yer laundry's still damp.
D
2024-10-24 08:34:47 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram.
(good advice)
This talk is pure troll crap. I was not born in, nor did I grow up in, South
Carolina. I was born on a Marine Corps base in San Diego (Camp Pendleton).
Jill
But that's also in the south! Wasn't there a lot of imported chinese slave
labour to build railroads in those areas?
gm
2024-10-24 10:19:39 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram.
(good advice)
This talk is pure troll crap. I was not born in, nor did I grow up in, South
Carolina. I was born on a Marine Corps base in San Diego (Camp Pendleton).
Jill
But that's also in the south! Wasn't there a lot of imported chinese slave
labour to build railroads in those areas?
Yes, and also the US Marines used Chinese slaves to cook Chop Suey and
Egg Foo Yung at Camp Pendleton...

I remember Jill saying that her mother had written down those recipes...

--
GM
D
2024-10-24 13:45:16 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by gm
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are
hard to find. Many of the purveyors have already brined
and boiled the green peanuts and sell them in plastic
bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and
again in northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them
as an occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied
more to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
South Carolina was a slave state, Virginia too.
Ahh... so maybe there is some truth to it? After all, we don't know
how old Jill is, but she could very well be old enough to have been
active in those days?
Ignore Hiram.
(good advice)
This talk is pure troll crap. I was not born in, nor did I grow up in, South
Carolina. I was born on a Marine Corps base in San Diego (Camp Pendleton).
Jill
But that's also in the south! Wasn't there a lot of imported chinese slave
labour to build railroads in those areas?
Yes, and also the US Marines used Chinese slaves to cook Chop Suey and
Egg Foo Yung at Camp Pendleton...
I remember Jill saying that her mother had written down those recipes...
Grim news! If the evidence continues to pile on, it doesn't look too good
for the original story in terms of confirmation! =(
Post by gm
--
GM
jmcquown
2024-10-21 22:15:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Please stop feeding the troll.

Jill
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-21 22:49:35 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily  "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Please stop feeding the troll.
Jill
Please stop bullying her, bitch.
gm
2024-10-21 22:55:56 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Please stop feeding the troll.
Jill
Doesn't HRH Widder Jill have some of them Gullah womens coming in to do
her cleaning and empty her Royal Slop Jars...???

--
GM
D
2024-10-22 08:40:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Please stop feeding the troll.
Jill
Or is it you being defensive Jill? Did I get too close to the truth?
gm
2024-10-22 09:45:47 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Please stop feeding the troll.
Jill
Or is it you being defensive Jill? Did I get too close to the truth?
As mightily as she tries, Princess Jill will never " pass " as one of us
commoners...!!!

--
GM
D
2024-10-22 08:31:49 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
What about your plantation workers? Do they get to enjoy this
delicacy as well?
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more to
the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Again you shatter my fantasies like you did with cowboys in Texas! =( I
think I read in some thread about Jill that she has a big mansion in the
south, but maybe that was fake news? ;)
Carol
2024-10-23 00:13:17 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Carol
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more
to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Again you shatter my fantasies like you did with cowboys in Texas! =(
I think I read in some thread about Jill that she has a big mansion
in the south, but maybe that was fake news? ;)
Jill qyit a highly successful job (TN as I recall) to be caretaker of
her father and mother. Her siblings couldn't be bothered. Upon her
father's death, her mother got worse and finally passed on.

She, quite rightfully inherited the house in a gated community and
sounds like a nice one, but it is no 'plantation'. I don't know how
many bedrooms but likely 3-4.

Her siblings (worthless people who only decended on her to collect
stuff). She got rooked on the taxes too by them.

Jill really is a nice lady. Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.

It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
Bruce
2024-10-23 00:47:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:13:17 -0000 (UTC), "Carol"
Post by Carol
Jill qyit a highly successful job (TN as I recall) to be caretaker of
her father and mother. Her siblings couldn't be bothered. Upon her
father's death, her mother got worse and finally passed on.
She, quite rightfully inherited the house in a gated community and
sounds like a nice one, but it is no 'plantation'. I don't know how
many bedrooms but likely 3-4.
Her siblings (worthless people who only decended on her to collect
stuff). She got rooked on the taxes too by them.
Jill really is a nice lady. Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.
Making jokes about Jill is only human, who wouldn't, but nobody needs
the nastiness and the misogyny that trolls display.
--
Bruce
<https://emalm.com/?v=SQqZJ>
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 14:51:07 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
nobody needs
the nastiness and the misogyny that trolls display.
Yet here you remain, nasty-ass troll.
Cindy Hamilton
2024-10-23 09:07:43 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
On the other hand, I do come from slave owners. Way back when,
my ancestors owned a crappy tobacco farm in Virginia and a few
human beings. I saw the crappy tobacco farm (probably on the
same vacation where I tried boiled peanuts); owning people
doesn't seem to have made my family wealthy.
--
Cindy Hamilton
Dave Smith
2024-10-23 13:32:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
On the other hand, I do come from slave owners. Way back when,
my ancestors owned a crappy tobacco farm in Virginia and a few
human beings. I saw the crappy tobacco farm (probably on the
same vacation where I tried boiled peanuts); owning people
doesn't seem to have made my family wealthy.
They weren't cheap to buy. There are no slave owners in my family,
though I have a great great great uncle who was very high up in the Army
of Virginia. Growing up we new almost nothing about slavery in Canada.
We learned more about being a destination for the underground railway.
Over the last decade or so the revisionist history would have us believe
there were a lot of slaves here. Some Loyalists brought their slaves
with them. As soon as it became an issue the government put a stop to
it. Now we are faulted for not being fast enough. They were dicey times
we were a very new country and full of expat Americans and there were
fears that acting too quickly would lead to a revolt.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 14:48:15 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Jill really is a nice lady. Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.
1. She bullies people off here with a venom earely sen amongst elderly
women.

2. She rips the tar out of you at your slightest deviation from her
preferences.

3. And those preferences go right to what you as a sovereign being
choose to eat and cook and how.

4. Not one thing she may or may not have experienced regarding her
family can be taken as a "get out of jail" card for her bullying here,
not a one!

5. You relentlessly defend and carry water for her bullying, all the
while claiming to be uninvolved in it.

6. You are so desirous of her attentions (even the negative ones) that
you will be a willing sycophant and apologist for her at the drop of a hat.

7. I have lost well nigh all respect for you based on this manifest
hypocrisy.

8. Grow a spine and some morals, and lose the "holier than thou" act,
it's a sad performance you have made here.

-out
Rock Stolid
2024-10-23 16:45:42 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Jill really is a nice lady.  Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.
1. She bullies people off here with a venom earely sen amongst elderly
women.
2. She rips the tar out of you at your slightest deviation from her
preferences.
3. And those preferences go right to what you as a sovereign being
choose to eat and cook and how.
4. Not one thing she may or may not have experienced regarding her
family can be taken as a "get out of jail" card for her bullying here,
not a one!
5. You relentlessly defend and carry water for her bullying, all the
while claiming to be uninvolved in it.
6. You are so desirous of her attentions (even the negative ones) that
you will be a willing sycophant and apologist for her at the drop of a hat.
7. I have lost well nigh all respect for you based on this manifest
hypocrisy.
8. Grow a spine and some morals, and lose the "holier than thou" act,
it's a sad performance you have made here.
-out
It took her scant time to go from talking food with me (no politics
then) to a total shun once the almighty Queen Jilldo (of the inherited
Kingdom of Dataw) was held to task for her repeated new bullying forays,
several of which went off on Carol, of all people!

So she closes ranks and defends her now.

Sad.

But also a repeating pattern for the Sisterhood members.
Janet
2024-10-23 15:56:55 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.

D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.

Janet UK
Dave Smith
2024-10-23 16:36:45 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Rock Stolid
2024-10-23 16:42:49 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Dave Smith
  I know english is a second language to you
     You don't "know" that.
     D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
You have seen and read him speak of time he spent working and traveling
in America - the rest is pure rumor-mongering, not uncommon for a
pecksniff ex-cop like you btw!
Bruce
2024-10-23 19:05:07 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:36:45 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Someone who, for privacy reasons, doesn't want to tell you in which
country he lives, is a mental patient. Of course, all goose-stepping
trolls are mental patients :)
--
Bruce
<https://emalm.com/?v=SQqZJ>
Hank Rogers
2024-10-23 19:14:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:36:45 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Someone who, for privacy reasons, doesn't want to tell you in which
country he lives, is a mental patient. Of course, all goose-stepping
trolls are mental patients :)
Say, Master, when they start goose stepping, do you get a better whiff
from their asses?
Rock Stolid
2024-10-23 21:11:36 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:36:45 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Someone who, for privacy reasons, doesn't want to tell you in which
country he lives, is a mental patient.
That's a rather expansive definitive for someone who merely wants a
modicum of privacy here.
Post by Bruce
Of course, all goose-stepping trolls are mental patients :)
Of course most all absolutist trolls are just Godwins law acolytes.
Hank Rogers
2024-10-23 22:01:51 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Rock Stolid
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:36:45 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
   I know english is a second language to you
      You don't "know" that.
      D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Someone who, for privacy reasons, doesn't want to tell you in which
country he lives, is a mental patient.
That's a rather expansive definitive for someone who merely wants a
modicum of privacy here.
Post by Bruce
Of course, all goose-stepping trolls are mental patients :)
Of course most all absolutist trolls are just Godwins law acolytes.
Relax. He's pretty harmless. Just let him sniff your ass and post some
crap about eating meat. That's all he really does.
D
2024-10-24 08:16:19 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Bruce
On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:36:45 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
Someone who, for privacy reasons, doesn't want to tell you in which
country he lives, is a mental patient.
That's a rather expansive definitive for someone who merely wants a modicum
of privacy here.
Post by Bruce
Of course, all goose-stepping trolls are mental patients :)
Of course most all absolutist trolls are just Godwins law acolytes.
Ahh... such joy that Bruce is still suffering from this. In a way I feel
honored that I managed to get so deep under the skin of Bruce! =)

Anyone with a modicum of attention and intelligence should already know
approximately where i live by now. But I'll not make it easy for Bruce. ;)
gm
2024-10-24 10:01:39 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Ahh... such joy that Bruce is still suffering from this. In a way I feel
honored that I managed to get so deep under the skin of Bruce! =)
"Bruce" spelled backwards is "anal"...
Post by D
Anyone with a modicum of attention and intelligence should already know
approximately where i live by now. But I'll not make it easy for Bruce. ;)
She certainly IS rather "thick", to use a Brit term...

;-D

--
GM
D
2024-10-24 13:43:48 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by gm
Post by D
Ahh... such joy that Bruce is still suffering from this. In a way I feel
honored that I managed to get so deep under the skin of Bruce! =)
"Bruce" spelled backwards is "anal"...
You cracked it!
Post by gm
Post by D
Anyone with a modicum of attention and intelligence should already know
approximately where i live by now. But I'll not make it easy for Bruce. ;)
She certainly IS rather "thick", to use a Brit term...
This is the truth!
Post by gm
;-D
--
GM
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 21:27:09 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Dave Smith
  I know english is a second language to you
     You don't "know" that.
     D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
I have seen him use phrases that gave me the distinct impression he was
American raised.
I have seen anyone familiar with American movies and TV do the same,
Officer Pecksniff.

Better go sniff his handicap plate, you officious old git.
Rock Stolid
2024-10-23 16:41:18 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
Janet UK
And you're so knowledgeable on his actual particulars that you will sort
for us which of his narratives are accurate and which are false?

Have at then, and be very factual please, your reputation depends on it!
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 17:51:38 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
Janet UK
And I bet you know who D really is, doncha serf?

Well go on then, out with it!

Let's see some super-sleuthing from you Holmes...
D
2024-10-23 20:10:38 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
Janet UK
And I bet you know who D really is, doncha serf?
Well go on then, out with it!
Let's see some super-sleuthing from you Holmes...
Oh, this should be good! I'm eagerly waiting for the solution of the
mystery!
Mike Duffy
2024-10-23 21:34:23 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
And I bet you know who D really is, doncha serf?
Oh, this should be good! I'm eagerly waiting
for the solution of the mystery!
Easy. Pontificate Reuben sandwiches with horseradish.
Everyone will know right away you are Steve.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 21:51:14 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Mike Duffy
Post by D
Post by Hiram Freeborn
And I bet you know who D really is, doncha serf?
Oh, this should be good! I'm eagerly waiting
for the solution of the mystery!
Easy. Pontificate Reuben sandwiches with horseradish.
Everyone will know right away you are Steve.
Funny!
D
2024-10-23 20:07:06 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Janet
Post by Carol
I know english is a second language to you
You don't "know" that.
D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
Janet UK
This is incorrect. Carol is a caring and intelligent woman. You are very
nasty Janet. Repent, or Trump will deal with you when he wins! There is
still time for you!
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 21:48:38 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
 I know english is a second language to you
   You don't "know" that.
   D knows you're gullible enough to swallow any crap he
tells you about himself.
   Janet UK
This is incorrect. Carol is a caring and intelligent woman. You are very
nasty Janet. Repent, or Trump will deal with you when he wins! There is
still time for you!
Do they use automated ball washers at his Balmoral course?
jmcquown
2024-10-23 23:09:03 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Carol
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more
to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Again you shatter my fantasies like you did with cowboys in Texas! =(
I think I read in some thread about Jill that she has a big mansion
in the south, but maybe that was fake news? ;)
He's buying into troll crap.
Post by Carol
Jill qyit a highly successful job (TN as I recall) to be caretaker of
her father and mother. Her siblings couldn't be bothered. Upon her
father's death, her mother got worse and finally passed on.
My father had Alzheimer's; Mom needed my help. She died 6 months after
he did but she wasn't in the best of health to begin with and started
ditching her medications and cancelling doctor's appointments.
Post by Carol
She, quite rightfully inherited the house in a gated community and
sounds like a nice one, but it is no 'plantation'. I don't know how
many bedrooms but likely 3-4.
It's a 3 bedroom house built on a cement slab. 1700 sq. ft. They built
the house in 1987. One of the bedrooms has always been used as a TV
room/den. The kitchen still has the original 1987 appliances, formica
countertops, vinyl kitchen floor, wallpaper. It's hardly what I'd call
a "mansion".
Post by Carol
Her siblings (worthless people who only decended on her to collect
stuff). She got rooked on the taxes too by them.
Yes, I did get rooked on the estate taxes and neither one of my brothers
kicked in their share.

But as for the rest of it, to be fair, it was only my middle brother who
was a greedy asshole. He expected me to sell the house so he could get
yet more money from the estate. (We are not talking millions of dollars
here). I haven't spoken to him in years, not since he threated to
contest Mom's will. Her lawyer told him go ahead, waste your
inheritance money on useless court dates.

My oldest brother is the one who came here from TX and helped me pack up
all the stuff they wanted from the house. He drove the stuff back to
middle brothers house in (then TN) in a rented truck like a freakin'
delivery service.

Oh, and middle brother had me reschedule Dad's military funeral because
he was going to be "busy in meetings at work that day." Excuse me?!
Our father died. Our mother is upset. I'm pretty damn sure your boss
will let you off work to attend Dad's funeral. It's not easy to arrange
a military funeral, BTW. This is how self-centered my middle brother is.
Post by Carol
Jill really is a nice lady. Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.
Thank you, Carol. You're nice, too, I just don't understand why you
reply to the trolls so much.
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
Bill Green, the chef at Gullah Grub, is Gullah and decended from slaves.
And I do have some black friends who also are from this area. It's
just geography. I'm not a racist.

Jill
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-24 00:01:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
And I do have some black friends who also are from this area.  It's just
geography.  I'm not a racist.
Jill
All sounds 'plausible'...
D
2024-10-24 13:39:43 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hiram Freeborn
And I do have some black friends who also are from this area.  It's just
geography.  I'm not a racist.
Jill
All sounds 'plausible'...
But is there proof? After all, that is just hearsay. =/
gm
2024-10-24 13:52:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
And I do have some black friends who also are from this area.� It's just
geography.� I'm not a racist.
Jill
But is there proof? After all, that is just hearsay. =/
For many years now, Jill has *repeatedly* said, "I'm not a racist"...

What might "compel" a person to say that...???

NO one else here has ever proclaimed that...

--
GM
gm
2024-10-24 00:51:36 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by D
Post by Carol
Jill doesn't own any sort of plantation and that term applied more
to the long ago evil dys of slavery.
Again you shatter my fantasies like you did with cowboys in Texas! =(
I think I read in some thread about Jill that she has a big mansion
in the south, but maybe that was fake news? ;)
He's buying into troll crap.
Post by Carol
Jill qyit a highly successful job (TN as I recall) to be caretaker of
her father and mother. Her siblings couldn't be bothered. Upon her
father's death, her mother got worse and finally passed on.
My father had Alzheimer's; Mom needed my help. She died 6 months after
he did but she wasn't in the best of health to begin with and started
ditching her medications and cancelling doctor's appointments.
Post by Carol
She, quite rightfully inherited the house in a gated community and
sounds like a nice one, but it is no 'plantation'. I don't know how
many bedrooms but likely 3-4.
It's a 3 bedroom house built on a cement slab. 1700 sq. ft. They built
the house in 1987. One of the bedrooms has always been used as a TV
room/den. The kitchen still has the original 1987 appliances, formica
countertops, vinyl kitchen floor, wallpaper. It's hardly what I'd call
a "mansion".
Post by Carol
Her siblings (worthless people who only decended on her to collect
stuff). She got rooked on the taxes too by them.
Yes, I did get rooked on the estate taxes and neither one of my brothers
kicked in their share.
But as for the rest of it, to be fair, it was only my middle brother who
was a greedy asshole. He expected me to sell the house so he could get
yet more money from the estate. (We are not talking millions of dollars
here). I haven't spoken to him in years, not since he threated to
contest Mom's will. Her lawyer told him go ahead, waste your
inheritance money on useless court dates.
My oldest brother is the one who came here from TX and helped me pack up
all the stuff they wanted from the house. He drove the stuff back to
middle brothers house in (then TN) in a rented truck like a freakin'
delivery service.
Oh, and middle brother had me reschedule Dad's military funeral because
he was going to be "busy in meetings at work that day." Excuse me?!
Our father died. Our mother is upset. I'm pretty damn sure your boss
will let you off work to attend Dad's funeral. It's not easy to arrange
a military funeral, BTW. This is how self-centered my middle brother is.
Post by Carol
Jill really is a nice lady. Making jokes about her, only makes people
angry at you.
Thank you, Carol. You're nice, too, I just don't understand why you
reply to the trolls so much.
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
Bill Green, the chef at Gullah Grub, is Gullah and decended from slaves.
And I do have some black friends who also are from this area. It's
just geography. I'm not a racist.
That's right...

Widder Jill will be donating a bag of penny candy to the local
Pickaninny Orphans Home so's they can have a right Happy Halloween...

And at Christmas she tips the old Gullah woman that cleans her house a
WHOLE entire quarter...!!!

For all these good and selfless charity deeds the local coloured folk
call her "White Lady Bountiful"...

Even the local chapter of the NAACP is mightily impressed...

--
GM
Hank Rogers
2024-10-24 01:10:37 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Thank you, Carol.  You're nice, too, I just don't understand why you
reply to the trolls so much.
She truly loves your Majesty, no matter how much your highness shits on her.
D
2024-10-24 13:48:18 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out. I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct. You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation. The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
Bill Green, the chef at Gullah Grub, is Gullah and decended from slaves. And
I do have some black friends who also are from this area. It's just
geography. I'm not a racist.
Jill
Would you say it is real friendship, or a case where blacks want to brag
about having a white friend, or whites wanting to brag about having a
black friend? I have read that in the woke community, this is very
common.

The question is... since that type of friendship is instrumental, can it
be considered a form a racism? That would be highly troubling for the
woke movement.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-24 15:56:10 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by D
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
It's especially bad that you don't get a hint to leave the racist
comments out.  I know english is a second language to you so lets be
direct.  You just insinuated that Jill pwns slaves or comes from slave
owners and lives on a private plantation.  The only one near her is
Bill Green and he's black.
Bill Green, the chef at Gullah Grub, is Gullah and decended from
slaves.  And I do have some black friends who also are from this
area.  It's just geography.  I'm not a racist.
Jill
Would you say it is real friendship, or a case where blacks want to brag
about having a white friend, or whites wanting to brag about having a
black friend? I have read that in the woke community, this is very
common.
The question is... since that type of friendship is instrumental, can it
be considered a form a racism? That would be highly troubling for the
woke movement.
The term, which slightly rhymes with woke-ism is...token-ism!

Hank Rogers
2024-10-19 22:35:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are probably pretty hard to find outside of Gullah country, your
Majesty. Just another dish like baked possum that's lost to the modern
world.

Even publix no longer sells it.
gm
2024-10-19 23:08:30 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hank Rogers
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are probably pretty hard to find outside of Gullah country, your
Majesty. Just another dish like baked possum that's lost to the modern
world.
Even publix no longer sells it.
I never reckoned that HRH Widder Jill was a " soul food " type...

--
GM
Hank Rogers
2024-10-20 00:15:42 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by gm
Post by Hank Rogers
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to find.
Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the green peanuts
and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at a
roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are probably pretty hard to find outside of Gullah country, your
Majesty. Just another dish like baked possum that's lost to the modern
world.
Even publix no longer sells it.
I never reckoned that HRH Widder Jill was a " soul food " type...
--
GM
She's not, but loves to yammer on about the Gullah.
Carol
2024-10-21 20:13:45 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
jmcquown
2024-10-21 22:14:46 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.

Jill
Cindy Hamilton
2024-10-22 09:13:42 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
--
Cindy Hamilton
jmcquown
2024-10-22 23:13:59 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
No, the difference is that she boils *shelled* peanuts, not peanuts in
the shell. True, boiled peanuts is a Southern thing because that's
where they are grown. Cooked without the shells is not what I know as
"boiled peanuts". And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian
dishes and what is available in Asian markets.

Jill
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-22 23:55:34 UTC
Reply
Permalink
And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian dishes and what is
available in Asian markets.
Jill
You should probably have her caned for doing that, bully bitch.
Cindy Hamilton
2024-10-23 09:00:08 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
No, the difference is that she boils *shelled* peanuts, not peanuts in
the shell. True, boiled peanuts is a Southern thing because that's
where they are grown. Cooked without the shells is not what I know as
"boiled peanuts". And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian
dishes and what is available in Asian markets.
Jill
Ah. Easy mistake to make for a Damnyankee. I tried boiled peanuts
on a trip to the South, and concluded that God intended me to eat
them shelled, roasted, and crunchy.
--
Cindy Hamilton
jmcquown
2024-10-23 22:17:57 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
No, the difference is that she boils *shelled* peanuts, not peanuts in
the shell. True, boiled peanuts is a Southern thing because that's
where they are grown. Cooked without the shells is not what I know as
"boiled peanuts". And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian
dishes and what is available in Asian markets.
Jill
Ah. Easy mistake to make for a Damnyankee. I tried boiled peanuts
on a trip to the South, and concluded that God intended me to eat
them shelled, roasted, and crunchy.
Boiled peanuts are an acquired taste, that's for sure. I do love
roasted in the shell and crunchy peanuts, too. :)

Jill
Hank Rogers
2024-10-23 22:31:25 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery.  They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
No, the difference is that she boils *shelled* peanuts, not peanuts in
the shell.  True, boiled peanuts is a Southern thing because that's
where they are grown.  Cooked without the shells is not what I know as
"boiled peanuts".  And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian
dishes and what is available in Asian markets.
Jill
Ah.  Easy mistake to make for a Damnyankee.  I tried boiled peanuts
on a trip to the South, and concluded that God intended me to eat
them shelled, roasted, and crunchy.
Boiled peanuts are an acquired taste, that's for sure.
Jill
I reckon they're much like baked possum, your Majesty.
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-23 22:52:50 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Hank Rogers
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
Post by Cindy Hamilton
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery.  They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
No, the difference is that she boils *shelled* peanuts, not peanuts in
the shell.  True, boiled peanuts is a Southern thing because that's
where they are grown.  Cooked without the shells is not what I know as
"boiled peanuts".  And once again, she harks back to talking about Asian
dishes and what is available in Asian markets.
Jill
Ah.  Easy mistake to make for a Damnyankee.  I tried boiled peanuts
on a trip to the South, and concluded that God intended me to eat
them shelled, roasted, and crunchy.
Boiled peanuts are an acquired taste, that's for sure.
Jill
I reckon they're much like baked possum, your Majesty.
Or Diller on the half shell...
Carol
2024-10-22 23:22:47 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at >>>> a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern >>>> Georgia.
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American
Asian >> Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian
dishes? >> Cooked with the dish.
Post by jmcquown
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about
boiling salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
Jill is but probably wrong soil for peanuts.

Jill, is your soil a bit to the sandy side?
jmcquown
2024-10-22 23:48:02 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the
shell.
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold
at >>>> a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern >>>> Georgia.
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American
Asian >> Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian
dishes? >> Cooked with the dish.
Post by jmcquown
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about
boiling salted raw shelled peanuts.
That's because almost all of the rest of us are not in/from the South.
Jill is but probably wrong soil for peanuts.
Jill, is your soil a bit to the sandy side?
The soil in my yard is sandy, but the soil in Georgia where most of the
peanuts are grown is not.

Jill
Carol
2024-10-22 23:06:47 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled
the green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in
the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American
Asian Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian
dishes? Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
Jill
It's when I can only find them at Asian American. I decided to try it
and it worked. Self taught cooks tend to be like that.

It's like 'sounds good so try it. If it didn't work, google how to do
it to see what went wrong,,,
jmcquown
2024-10-22 23:17:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled
the green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in
the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared,
sold at a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in
northern Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American
Asian Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian
dishes? Cooked with the dish.
You are the only other person I've ever seen post here about boiling
salted raw shelled peanuts.
Jill
It's when I can only find them at Asian American. I decided to try it
and it worked. Self taught cooks tend to be like that.
You think I'm not a self-taught cook? There are no Asian markets around
here but that is also not the first thing I think of when I think of
Southern boiled peanuts as a snack.

Jill
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-22 23:56:12 UTC
Reply
Permalink
You think I'm not a self-taught cook?  T
Oh no, from every soft yellow squash onward that was abundantly clear.
songbird
2024-10-21 23:34:14 UTC
Reply
Permalink
...
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
the only thing i remember using raw peanuts for was cooking
peanut brittle around Christmas time many years ago. we've
not made anything like that in eons.


songbird
jmcquown
2024-10-22 23:19:30 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by songbird
...
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
the only thing i remember using raw peanuts for was cooking
peanut brittle around Christmas time many years ago. we've
not made anything like that in eons.
songbird
The ones I used for peanut brittle were small raw shelled Spanish
peanuts. I haven't been able to find any of those for peanut brittle
this far South in years. Not the same thing as used for boiled peanuts,
of course.

Jill
heyjoe
2024-10-24 12:30:11 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by jmcquown
The ones I used for peanut brittle were small raw shelled Spanish
peanuts. I haven't been able to find any of those for peanut brittle
this far South in years. Not the same thing as used for boiled peanuts,
of course.
Those are a seasonal item here. And the strange thing is, they're
only available at the farm/tractor supply store. hoodaguest?
--
If you gave Kamala a penny for her thoughts, she'd owe you change.
Graham
2024-10-24 14:32:36 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by heyjoe
If you gave Kamala a penny for her thoughts, she'd owe you change.
OTOH Trump would steal it from you.
Dave Smith
2024-10-24 15:18:08 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Graham
Post by heyjoe
If you gave Kamala a penny for her thoughts, she'd owe you change.
OTOH Trump would steal it from you.
I have to say that I can no longer despise Trump. The guy is a complete
fool. He is a sleazebag and a compulsive liar. What bothers me more than
Trump being such a despicable fool is that so many Americans think he is
great. He has made them an international laughing stock, but the fools
still like and support him.
Bruce
2024-10-24 15:37:01 UTC
Reply
Permalink
On Thu, 24 Oct 2024 11:18:08 -0400, Dave Smith
Post by Dave Smith
Post by Graham
Post by heyjoe
If you gave Kamala a penny for her thoughts, she'd owe you change.
OTOH Trump would steal it from you.
I have to say that I can no longer despise Trump. The guy is a complete
fool. He is a sleazebag and a compulsive liar. What bothers me more than
Trump being such a despicable fool is that so many Americans think he is
great. He has made them an international laughing stock, but the fools
still like and support him.
That's the big mystery. How can so many Americans be so stupid?
--
Bruce
<https://emalm.com/?v=SQqZJ>
gm
2024-10-24 15:15:37 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Graham
Post by heyjoe
If you gave Kamala a penny for her thoughts, she'd owe you change.
OTOH Trump would steal it from you.
Trump responds to ex-chief of staff after he's labeled 'authoritarian'
and the 'general definition of fascist'

Former Trump chief of staff John Kelly made the remarks in an interview
with The New York Times

FOX NEWS, 24 October 2024:

"Former President Trump responded to his former White House chief of
staff John Kelly — who in recent days said his ex-boss met the
definition of a "fascist" and had an affinity for Adolf Hitler and
dictators — saying he’s a "total degenerate."

"Thank you for your support against a total degenerate named John Kelly,
who made up a story out of pure Trump Derangement Syndrome Hatred!"
Trump wrote on his Truth Social account Wednesday.

"John Kelly is a LOWLIFE, and a bad General, whose advice in the White
House I no longer sought, and told him to MOVE ON!..."

😎 🇺🇸 MAGA 2024 🇺🇸

--
GM
dsi1
2024-10-22 19:34:23 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find. Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them. Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :) I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery. They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
Filipino garlic peanuts are getting popular these days. My guess is that
it'll get more popular than boiled peanuts. I'd make it but it's tough
to find raw shelled peanuts. That's not too much of a problem, I can
just buy it already made.


dsi1
2024-10-22 21:39:04 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by dsi1
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery.  They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
Filipino garlic peanuts are getting popular these days. My guess is that
it'll get more popular than boiled peanuts. I'd make it but it's tough
to find raw shelled peanuts. That's not too much of a problem, I can
just buy it already made.
http://youtu.be/2-AIWb7VA24
Nice!
I'd use some Taijin or even a smoked salt, but who wouldn't love these?
Impressive how the skins stayed on through the boiling and the fry.
And there was another of those cool hex patterned nonstick pans, must
get me one, maybe in a Wok size?


Or perhaps not...

Teflon's til teflon.
Maifan wins.
It is surprising that the peanuts skins stick on through all that. I
have 3 maifan skillets and 1 grill. I like how they're durable and easy
to clean up. I just spray them with hot water. One of the rfc'ers called
me a "filthy pig" for not using soap. Real classy.

The Korean pans have deep grooves which increase the surface area of the
bottom. My guess is that it increases it by 100%. They heat up very
fast. The one Pedrini pan seems to be of similar construction and weight
but it takes longer to heat up. As it goes, groovy pans heat up faster.

https://photos.app.goo.gl/sD9r8Zvvycr2yEBS9

https://photos.app.goo.gl/mNb9zntrfSd9VPRA9
Hiram Freeborn
2024-10-22 22:07:58 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by dsi1
Post by dsi1
Post by Carol
Post by jmcquown
Post by jmcquown
You have to go to a farm stand and even then they are hard to
find.  Many of the purveyors have already brined and boiled the
green peanuts and sell them in plastic bags, cooked in the shell.
That's the only way I've ever seen them.  Already prepared, sold at
a roadside stand in western North Carolina and again in northern
Georgia.
Well, now you know you can make your own if you find raw (not
necessarily "green") peanuts in the shell. :)  I love them as an
occasional snack.
Jill
They are also sold peeled (shell removed) and raw at the American Asian
Grocery.  They are used raw in some dishes, suspect Asian dishes?
Cooked with the dish.
Filipino garlic peanuts are getting popular these days. My guess is that
it'll get more popular than boiled peanuts. I'd make it but it's tough
to find raw shelled peanuts. That's not too much of a problem, I can
just buy it already made.
http://youtu.be/2-AIWb7VA24
Nice!
I'd use some Taijin or even a smoked salt, but who wouldn't love these?
Impressive how the skins stayed on through the boiling and the fry.
And there was another of those cool hex patterned nonstick pans, must
get me one, maybe in a Wok size?
http://youtu.be/-XYQnIQ8wjQ
http://youtu.be/VVKkr7XAFZ0
Or perhaps not...
http://youtu.be/OQoqlBog7UI
Teflon's til teflon.
Maifan wins.
It is surprising that the peanuts skins stick on through all that. I
have 3 maifan skillets and 1 grill. I like how they're durable and easy
to clean up. I just spray them with hot water. One of the rfc'ers called
me a "filthy pig" for not using soap. Real classy.
Than I'm a hog for using only a paper towel and hot oil in my carbon
skillet I guess.
Post by dsi1
The Korean pans have deep grooves which increase the surface area of the
bottom. My guess is that it increases it by 100%. They heat up very
fast. The one Pedrini pan seems to be of similar construction and weight
but it takes longer to heat up. As it goes, groovy pans heat up faster.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/sD9r8Zvvycr2yEBS9
https://photos.app.goo.gl/mNb9zntrfSd9VPRA9
Pedrini showing as not sold here, but plenty of maifan on the company store:

Loading Image...

Thx for steering me off hex clad - someone else is making ans where they
allege a steel laminate layer will resist a steel utensil - yeah right...
Carol
2024-10-21 01:28:33 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by heyjoe
Post by jmcquown
What are "green peanuts"? They're freshly harvested peanuts.
Where do you buy fresh green peanuts? Never seen them in a grocery
around here, but all our peanuts are imported from the south.
Suffolk VA (full of peanut farmers) or the local farmers market.
Loading...