That'd be like her giving the kids she teaches tshirts with my face on it so I'll pass.![]()
Are you saying that's not a good idea?
That'd be like her giving the kids she teaches tshirts with my face on it so I'll pass.![]()
The great thing about pulled pork is that you want it to fall apart so it's kind of hard to overcook it. I think 6 hours will be fine and I also think Tim's suggestion is good.True that.
Somehow at college I ended up with a College Republicans t-shirt.
Probably still back in the box-of-many-things from college at my parents house come to think of it.
Question: I'm trying to make oven-roasted pulled pork tomorrow and have the pork shoulder marinating, but I realized I don't have an oven thermometer to check internal temperature. It is about a 4 lb shoulder and the recipe says it should be in the oven for about 6 hours at 300, but my pork shoulder is smaller than the 5-7 lbs recommended. Does 6 hours sound about right, or should I cook it for less time? FWIW my oven tends to run a bit on the cool side.
How many do you have? When you get enough, sew them on to fabric squares and have a quilt made. We made such a quit with our daughters old (favorite) T shirt designs. It worked out nicely and was well received. We had hoarded over 30 shirts and pared them down to about 20 for the quilt.Anyone have any ideas what I can do with my mission patches?
I don't want to make a jacket with them. The only other thing I think I can do with them is put them in a frame or hang them individually. Anyone else got any other ideas for a craftsy project I could do with them?
I accidentally left a bottle of shower gel open and it all hardened to the bottom. I tried putting some water in the bottle and shaking it but it just made this weird foamy sludge that I couldn't really use. Aside from remembering to close the bottles, what should I do in the future?
Lots of people do have gardens, especially out of the cities. Not sure where you got the impression we don't... Even in the cities, community gardens are a thing, I used to live near one in Torrance.What do USians do with the compost they make (or grow, or whatever the word is) in their back yards? I have read a lot about composting but generally they don't seem to have orchards or allotments as people do in other countries.
Hobbs is basically right here. Many American suburban homes are fronted by a small garden used for horticultural display. Front gardens are often mandated by homeowners' associations. Gardens for produce are less common and usually at the side or rear of the house.What do USians do with the compost they make (or grow, or whatever the word is) in their back yards? I have read a lot about composting but generally they don't seem to have orchards or allotments as people do in other countries.
We have a big pile of compost in the back of the yard and keep adding to it. It gets used in various flowerbeds.What do USians do with the compost they make (or grow, or whatever the word is) in their back yards? I have read a lot about composting but generally they don't seem to have orchards or allotments as people do in other countries.
The compost collecting services are what I imagined might happen.Hobbs is basically right here. Many American suburban homes are fronted by a small garden used for horticultural display. Front gardens are often mandated by homeowners' associations. Gardens for produce are less common and usually at the side or rear of the house.Lots of people do have gardens, especially out of the cities. Not sure where you got the impression we don't... Even in the cities, community gardens are a thing, I used to live near one in Torrance.
Composting benefits both of those places, as well as the potted plants that Americans often keep in their homes. Some American neighborhoods also have compost collecting services.
How do you control the stink?We have a big pile of compost in the back of the yard and keep adding to it. It gets used in various flowerbeds.
It doesn't smell unless you get down on you hands and knees and sniff it. Mice live in it and our cats often go hunting there. Every once in a while I go out and mix it with a shovel.The compost collecting services are what I imagined might happen.
I'll explain. I had to translate various documents on composting and what-not including how to keep bears away some years ago -with what limited knowledge one can gather from US media I *know* about flowerbeds and such and I figured that there'd be excessshcompost left over to stink up the place.
So the logical question is: where do the compost collection services take the compost?
(sidenote: a homeowners' association can legally order people to have a flowerbed? In the land of the free?)
How do you control the stink?
It's not an order.(sidenote: a homeowners' association can legally order people to have a flowerbed? In the land of the free?)
That's more of a bioreactor for toxoplasmosis than a compost heap.It doesn't smell unless you get down on you hands and knees and sniff it. Mice live in it and our cats often go hunting there. Every once in a while I go out and mix it with a shovel.
If your compost heap stinks, you aren't doing it right.How do you control the stink?