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The more voters are educated the more likely they are to be negative about Johnson – politicalbettin

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  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,871
    TOPPING said:

    You need to check out Cambourne West to the West of Cambridge. That will even the stats out a bit.

    https://static1.cambourneparishcouncil.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/18905_taylor-wimpeybovis-homes-exhibition-boards-v4.pdf

    My parish. ;)

    There's lots more building going on: Wintringham in nearby St Neots, and a massive number of new homes on the Oakington barracks site.. It looks as though there's some going to be going up beside Loves Farm as well. Then there's the despicable architecture of Cambridge NW (Eddington).

    As for Cambourne; the airfield site to the east is also under consideration (unless they drive a railway line through it...), as is a putative new village to the north.

    The chances are there's eventually going to be one long linear town from just west of Cambridge to St Neots...
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,632
    Sco/Wal/NI Positives/deaths (Positives last week /deaths last week):

    Sco: 2086 / 19 (2802 / 2)

    Wal 861 / 0 (701 / 0)

    NI 1083 / 0 (701 / 0)

    Scotland continues encouragingly downards; Wales approaches the peak, NI continues to climb. But look at deaths in Scotland! 19! That's going to have quite an impact on today's UK deaths.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Leon said:

    I don’t know why you’d lie about this but ‘a few days of family meals’ from one £2.50 chicken is ridiculous

    Let’s say a family is four hungry mouths. They will devour an entire roast chicken in one sitting, easily. And they might still be hungry

    You’re then left with a few bones which you could boil down for stock (with vegetables) and make a HYUFDy hot broth which could furnish lunch I guess (with bread). That’s it
    Appetite surely depends upon your family but my daughters are five and seven so only have a small amount of meat plus their vegetables etc no we don't devour an entire chicken in one sitting.

    A family with some teenage boys their mileage may vary.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,836
    Leon said:

    I don’t know why you’d lie about this but ‘a few days of family meals’ from one £2.50 chicken is ridiculous

    Let’s say a family is four hungry mouths. They will devour an entire roast chicken in one sitting, easily. And they might still be hungry

    You’re then left with a few bones which you could boil down for stock (with vegetables) and make a HYUFDy hot broth which could furnish lunch I guess (with bread). That’s it
    As long as your kids are small, you can have roast chicken on day one, chicken risotto on day two, and soup on day three (or for lunch).

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,249
    TOPPING said:

    Yes that's true but on another level, when I am feeling up and happy with life, I might think nothing of creating some great culinary feast, perhaps I'll try pork belly or slow cooked shoulder of lamb, using those once every six months herbs, and preparing everything in neat little bowls before I cook it all, perhaps with a glass of fino sherry to hand and listening to some nice music. Me time in the kitchen.

    That is very far from every day for a family.

    When I am knacked and have had a shitty day I think fuck that let's get a MickeyDs/Dominos/out to the supermarket for something that I literally have to think no longer than 3 minutes about.

    And I would class myself as relatively (to the median income receiver) quite well off, etc.
    I find cooking quite relaxing.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,897
    TOPPING said:

    I bloody love that "use the bones for stock" total bollocks from esp. TV chefs.

    I doubt there are more than 10 people in the country who ever do that.
    I tried to do it once. Didn’t work and have never bothered again.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    I do genuinely respect Thatcher though, at least she had an ideology. Even if I think it terribly misguided

    Being in your 20s during the Thatcher years was a terrible double edged sword.

    On the upside, I had a wonderful time which has stayed with me ever since.

    On the downside, everything since has been an enormous disappointment.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    Everyone is in the same position if they want to be. Cooking may be a psychological hurdle for some people but its entirely doable if you want to do it. Its even more doable if you need to do it.

    If you want to be lazy then its entirely possible to do it without much 'skill'. Frozen prepared vegetables are available that can be popped into a microwave again for much cheaper than a takeaway.
    Mate. "Lazy" you say. I love you and your posts but you are on here 23.6hrs a day. When you go for a leg stretch and knock up something fantastic in the kitchen then that is great. Even the magic expanding (had a shitty life but still) chicken.

    But what if you are working X hours a day actually working. Perhaps doing a shitty job. As is your partner. And you come home at whatever time to be met by your smiling and hungry children who you have managed not to feed sugary snacks intravenously.

    What about those people?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,959
    edited July 2021
    Meal prep used to be what poorer people did to make meals stretch the week.....now meal prep is the trendy thing health obsessed and richer people do.

    I always used to chuckle in my gym at the number of young guys in their early 20s talking about doing their meal prep on a Sunday night. Good on them, but they talked about it in a really serious way, counting the macros, exact weighing of ingredients etc.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    TOPPING said:

    I bloody love that "use the bones for stock" total bollocks from esp. TV chefs.

    I doubt there are more than 10 people in the country who ever do that.
    It was what Elizabeth David hated most about English cooking. If a Frenchman wants chicken stock he takes one whole fresh chicken, boils it up with onions and celery,and throws away the carcase. What's the point of bone-flavoured water?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    rcs1000 said:

    As long as your kids are small, you can have roast chicken on day one, chicken risotto on day two, and soup on day three (or for lunch).

    Yeah risotto is one of the easier things to cook.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    Sean_F said:

    I find cooking quite relaxing.
    How perfectly charming.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    TOPPING said:

    Yes that's true but on another level, when I am feeling up and happy with life, I might think nothing of creating some great culinary feast, perhaps I'll try pork belly or slow cooked shoulder of lamb, using those once every six months herbs, and preparing everything in neat little bowls before I cook it all, perhaps with a glass of fino sherry to hand and listening to some nice music. Me time in the kitchen.

    That is very far from every day for a family.

    When I am knacked and have had a shitty day I think fuck that let's get a MickeyDs/Dominos/out to the supermarket for something that I literally have to think no longer than 3 minutes about.

    And I would class myself as relatively (to the median income receiver) quite well off, etc.
    When I'm knackered and had a shitty day then I'll typically be lazy and use frozen food. Prepared frozen veg, in the microwave. Frozen meat, pop that in our Airfryer. Frozen chips in the airfryer too. About 12-15 minutes for the airfryer to cook the meat and the meal is done.

    Lazy meal, quicker, cheaper and easier than going out for any takeaway.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261

    Unlike so many on the left it seems, I want a functioning Tory Party, just as I want a functioning Labour Party. I even think the Tory Party has done a few good things - and I respect hugely Thatcher despite my misgivings about her policies.

    I've just cut up my Labour membership card

    There will always be a functioning Tory party, as long as there are powerful interests to protect. I don't think you need to worry about that! It'd be nice if they functioned a bit better in office, and a bit worse at election time, though.
  • rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038
    Leon said:

    Yes, I didn’t even mention Covid

    I used to dismiss the coronavirus-as-bioweapon hypothesis as mad, paranoid nonsense. I’ve always thought it likely came from a lab, but I always presumed it was just a hideous accidental release of a naturally evolved bug

    Now, I am not so sure. The Wuhan lab was doing gain-of-function research. Accepted fact. It was making viruses nastier. The lab has strong links with the Chinese military. We know the Chinese army has taken an interest in coronaviruses as a potential bio-weapon

    ‘EXCLUSIVE: Chinese military scientists discussed the weaponisation of SARS coronaviruses five years before the COVID-19 pandemic https://theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/chinese-military-scientists-discussed-weaponising-sars/news-story/850ae2d2e2681549cb9d21162c52d4c0@SharriMarkson’

    https://www.indiatoday.in/world/china/story/china-investigated-weaponising-coronavirus-2015-media-reports-1800608-2021-05-10

    Step back and look at what China is already doing to its own minorities, and it does not seem so impossible it might launch a bioweapon on the world. Or inadvertently leak one.
    It's worse than that, given the 73 coronavirus patents uncovered by Dr. David Martin. They seem to be evidence of 20 years of malpractice under Fauci's control.

    However on PB I've been called childish names for the past 14 months for questioning any of the official narrative ... I perhaps stupidly believed it for 2 months, then a few sceptical friends said '*****, do you think we're being played?'

    Someone once said 'After eliminating the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, is likely to be the truth.' Lawyers are working away on this, incl Fuellmich, who won cases against VW and Deutsche Bank.

    It's such a malevolent plot that I think you should change the main names and write a novel on it before the truth comes out ... if it ever does.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261
    TOPPING said:

    Yeah risotto is one of the easier things to cook.
    You can do risotto in the microwave, it's about the easiest thing to make.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    When I'm knackered and had a shitty day then I'll typically be lazy and use frozen food. Prepared frozen veg, in the microwave. Frozen meat, pop that in our Airfryer. Frozen chips in the airfryer too. About 12-15 minutes for the airfryer to cook the meat and the meal is done.

    Lazy meal, quicker, cheaper and easier than going out for any takeaway.
    Of course, an Air Fryer. Let's keep piling up the capital expenses.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    When I'm knackered and had a shitty day then I'll typically be lazy and use frozen food. Prepared frozen veg, in the microwave. Frozen meat, pop that in our Airfryer. Frozen chips in the airfryer too. About 12-15 minutes for the airfryer to cook the meat and the meal is done.

    Lazy meal, quicker, cheaper and easier than going out for any takeaway.
    Shitty day for you = being bested by @HYUFD about who is more a genuine Tory.

    Not sure what Mr Dimbleby has to say about frozen food.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,197
    TOPPING said:

    I bloody love that "use the bones for stock" total bollocks from esp. TV chefs.

    I doubt there are more than 10 people in the country who ever do that.
    I used to until the rest of my family went vegetarian.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    You can do risotto in the microwave, it's about the easiest thing to make.
    How? You mean those packets of microwaveable 2mins rice?

    Don't breathe a word of what you just said to @Cyclefree I'm guessing.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,672
    Nigelb said:

    I used to until the rest of my family went vegetarian.
    Could the two be related?

    "Please dad, no more broth and bread"
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261

    Being in your 20s during the Thatcher years was a terrible double edged sword.

    On the upside, I had a wonderful time which has stayed with me ever since.

    On the downside, everything since has been an enormous disappointment.
    Too much coke?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Alistair said:

    Of course, an Air Fryer. Let's keep piling up the capital expenses.
    Very handy for flash drying psilocybin mushrooms, so they do earn their keep.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,907
    edited July 2021

    Unlike so many on the left it seems, I want a functioning Tory Party, just as I want a functioning Labour Party. I even think the Tory Party has done a few good things - and I respect hugely Thatcher despite my misgivings about her policies.

    I've just cut up my Labour membership card

    Why have you cut up your Labour membership card? (Apologies if you mentioned it earlier in the thread. I had a look but couldn't see anything).
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,961
    Opinions about food are like arseholes etc

    https://twitter.com/mickjagger/status/1415663842726584331?s=21
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261
    TOPPING said:

    How? You mean those packets of microwaveable 2mins rice?

    Don't breathe a word of what you just said to @Cyclefree I'm guessing.
    No, regular risotto rice. I think it's a Delia recipe. It's very easy and delicious.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912

    Yes I can. I don't know why you think I'd lie about that.

    But even if you just get one family meal from a whole chicken, its just as cheap as buying crap food and far cheaper than buying a McDonalds or other takeaways.
    Must be some chicken at 2.50 though, I thought you could get cheap one's for a Fiver but must be either a sparrow or radioactive.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    MaxPB said:

    Could the two be related?

    "Please dad, no more broth and bread"
    LOL
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Alistair said:

    Of course, an Air Fryer. Let's keep piling up the capital expenses.
    They can be bought for the same price as a microwave and almost every home I know has a microwave. An alternative at no capital expense is an oven since almost every home has one of those. But an airfryer is a good expense I'd recommend to anyone.

    My wife and I got our first one for £60 more than a decade ago and we use it most days of the week for a decade. We've just replaced that with a bigger one that can do rotisseries that cost £120 but that's great value for money when compared to buying takeaways etc.

    Plus its cheaper, quicker and easier to operate than an oven that costs a lot more to run and to heat up etc. We rarely use our oven nowadays.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    You can do risotto in the microwave, it's about the easiest thing to make.
    Here’s one you do in the oven. It is magnificent. But the comments are right, the flavouring needs punch - add garlic, white wine, mucho pepper, Parmesan at the end. Use rocket instead of spinach

    Mwah!

    https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/smoked-haddock-leek-risotto
  • BromBrom Posts: 3,760

    I don't know, it just looks like churn from which lefty / left of centre party, lefties / left of centre like.

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    CON: 44% (-1)
    LAB: 31% (-1)
    LDM: 12% (+4)
    GRN: 4% (-2)
    REF: 1% (-1)

    Via
    @Kantar_UKI
    , 7-12 July
    Changes w/ 7 June

    Tories still defying gravity. I just find it mind blowing they are still on ~42% (as an average of the past 4-5 polls). Huge scandal of Hancock, COVID cases rising, all the divisive culture war stuff, and 44% in this poll.

    The big thing in all these polls, Labour don't seem to be benefitting at all. I am guessing Stamer's approach of government are reckless, useless, waste of space, but I would basically do the same isn't helping Labour.
    Look forward to the header on this...!
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    malcolmg said:

    Must be some chicken at 2.50 though, I thought you could get cheap one's for a Fiver but must be either a sparrow or radioactive.
    https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/292278149

    My local Tesco always has this available at £2.50 with a clubcard. 🤷‍♂️
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,836

    Appetite surely depends upon your family but my daughters are five and seven so only have a small amount of meat plus their vegetables etc no we don't devour an entire chicken in one sitting.

    A family with some teenage boys their mileage may vary.
    When my daughter hit 13 and my son 11, it was like throwing a switch: you went from them eating like fleas to being able to devour an entire adult portion, grab an extra bowl of cornflakes, and then scour the freezer for ice cream.

    So there is definitely a YMMV element here.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912
    TOPPING said:

    I bloody love that "use the bones for stock" total bollocks from esp. TV chefs.

    I doubt there are more than 10 people in the country who ever do that.
    My wife uses the carcass to make stock and then soup every time. We only eat organic chicken and always
    use all that is left for stock.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912

    Oliver's 15 minute meals is an absolute massive con trick.
    Complete bollox for sure
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,907

    I don't know, it just looks like churn from which lefty / left of centre party, lefties / left of centre like.

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    CON: 44% (-1)
    LAB: 31% (-1)
    LDM: 12% (+4)
    GRN: 4% (-2)
    REF: 1% (-1)

    Via
    @Kantar_UKI
    , 7-12 July
    Changes w/ 7 June

    Tories still defying gravity. I just find it mind blowing they are still on ~42% (as an average of the past 4-5 polls). Huge scandal of Hancock, COVID cases rising, all the divisive culture war stuff, and 44% in this poll.

    The big thing in all these polls, Labour don't seem to be benefitting at all. I am guessing Stamer's approach of government are reckless, useless, waste of space, but I would basically do the same isn't helping Labour.
    Not surprised by these figures. Labour won't recover with the non-metropolitan working-classes unless it stops being so Woke, which is very unlikely to happen because it would upset their members in the big cities.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    No, regular risotto rice. I think it's a Delia recipe. It's very easy and delicious.
    Are you talking about "rice" which happens to be arborio rice?

    A risotto and microwaving risotto rice might be different things.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,537

    It's worse than that, given the 73 coronavirus patents uncovered by Dr. David Martin. They seem to be evidence of 20 years of malpractice under Fauci's control.

    However on PB I've been called childish names for the past 14 months for questioning any of the official narrative ... I perhaps stupidly believed it for 2 months, then a few sceptical friends said '*****, do you think we're being played?'

    Someone once said 'After eliminating the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, is likely to be the truth.' Lawyers are working away on this, incl Fuellmich, who won cases against VW and Deutsche Bank.

    It's such a malevolent plot that I think you should change the main names and write a novel on it before the truth comes out ... if it ever does.
    If I were going to develop a genocidal bioweapon I'd make sure I had a fully functioning vaccine in the fridge before releasing it. But there again, I tend to think like a project manager rather than a homicidal maniac.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    edited July 2021

    I tried to do it once. Didn’t work and have never bothered again.
    How very odd. I boil up the bones, skin, fat and an onion and have great jelly-like stock for a risotto, with as many bits of meat as I haven't eaten, and/or scraped off thje carcass. Been doing it for decades. And I've never got beyond the Scottish bourgeois c. 1920 plus Delia Smith level.

    Edit: but TUD has got in before me.

    Anecdata, but as with Brexit, maybe the Scots really are different ... that '10 people in the country' is absolutely astounding. Do you think they mean the Republic of Sealand or something?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/292278149

    My local Tesco always has this available at £2.50 with a clubcard. 🤷‍♂️
    As I said not sure that would have had the best life (look at the tiny legs) but if it helps with the outgoings.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,836
    edited July 2021
    Ummm... if Coronavirus was designed as a weapon by the Chinese, wouldn't the first step have been able to treat it? Yet, the Chinese vaccines have been late and crap. Their case fatality rates have been five times those in the West. And they've had to go to extreme measures (welding people in homes) to stop it killing hundreds of millions of their own citizens.

    Also, if you were going to design a weapon, the very last thing you'd want is something that could be hosted by over 200 mammalian species - because that basically guarantees you'll never be able to be rid of the bloody thing.

    Edit to add:

    There are certain characteristics you want for a good bioweapon:

    1. You don't want a long period from infection to being able to detect it, because then you'll never be able to stop it entering your country.
    2. You want a virus that isn't able to mutate, so that it won't be able to evade the vaccines you've prepared for your own citizens.
    3. You want it to take out or disable the young, while (ideally) leaving the old to their own devices.
    4. You want it to affect humans only.

    Covid 19 is a *terrible* bioweapon, that culls the old from places with terrible dependency ratios. That is hard to keep from your country. And which is hosted by hundreds of other species, and therefore will never be truly eliminated.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,907
    edited July 2021
    "Dutch crime reporter Peter R de Vries dies from shooting"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-57853004
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    edited July 2021
    malcolmg said:

    My wife uses the carcass to make stock and then soup every time. We only eat organic chicken and always
    use all that is left for stock.
    Blimey you and @Theuniondivvie showing the way culinarily north of the border. I wonder who are the other eight people who do it?

    Edit: and @Carnyx.

    The Magnificent Seven are out there somewhere (and seemingly north of Coldstream).
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261
    TOPPING said:

    Are you talking about "rice" which happens to be arborio rice?

    A risotto and microwaving risotto rice might be different things.
    Whatever, it works and is delicious (and winds up food snobs into the bargain so what's not to like).
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    TOPPING said:

    Blimey you and @Theuniondivvie showing the way culinarily north of the border. I wonder who are the other eight people who do it?
    Given the numbers of regular Caledonian commenters, and Malky quite rightly expressing his own suspicion of cheap chooks, maybe I could suggest it;s a different 'country'?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137

    When I'm knackered and had a shitty day then I'll typically be lazy and use frozen food. Prepared frozen veg, in the microwave. Frozen meat, pop that in our Airfryer. Frozen chips in the airfryer too. About 12-15 minutes for the airfryer to cook the meat and the meal is done.

    Lazy meal, quicker, cheaper and easier than going out for any takeaway.
    I have sympathy with your viewpoint (and in our family of four, we also can make a chicken, probably a bit bigger than the £2.50 one linked, last three days - one day roast, two days in a pie, with lots of other stuff - we normally work on three adult servings when using a recipe, so 8-9 adult servings equivalent).

    But there is a valid point (Topping, was it?) about investment. Your air fryer sounds great, but I expect it costs at least a few supermarket ready meals to buy one and why would you if you don't have any idea what to do with it? We have a slow cooker which is great for easy and big batch meals (not 'quick', obviously!) and they can be picked up for £30-£40, but we only got one, despite enjoying cooking, when a relative bought one for us - we hadn't realised the possibilities before.

    In our house, a quick really can't be arsed meal is omelette (bacon, cheese, mushroom) with spiced wedges and some frozen veg if there's nothing handy in the garden. Half an hour start to finish with only about ten minute of semi-intensive effort at the end. But an awful lot of people simply don't know how to do that and even using those few pans/trays can be a blocker.

    It's very easy for those of us with a little know-how, a reasonably well equipped basic kitchen and cupboards/freezers filled with basic ingredients to rustle up something tasty in no time for very little money. But it's know-how and time. Before I had a work-provided laptop, my last four laptops were fairly recent thinkpads bought broken on ebay, repaired by me with the aid of the thinkpad hardware maintenance manuals and all for less than the crappiest laptops in Currys. But most people don't do that - they go to Currys and, if on a budget, get something 'cheap' that is both poor quality, won't last, is hard to repair and is expensive for what it is. It's the same with food.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556

    Whatever, it works and is delicious (and winds up food snobs into the bargain so what's not to like).
    Yep go for it. If it works it works.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    Carnyx said:

    Given the numbers of regular Caledonian commenters, and Malky quite rightly expressing his own suspicion of cheap chooks, maybe I could suggest it;s a different 'country'?
    I edited my post to include you (and presumably countless others up there...).
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    rcs1000 said:

    Ummm... if Coronavirus was designed as a weapon by the Chinese, wouldn't the first step have been able to treat it? Yet, the Chinese vaccines have been late and crap. Their case fatality rates have been five times those in the West. And they've had to go to extreme measures (welding people in homes) to stop it killing hundreds of millions of their own citizens.

    Also, if you were going to design a weapon, the very last thing you'd want is something that could be hosted by over 200 mammalian species - because that basically guarantees you'll never be able to be rid of the bloody thing.

    Edit to add:

    There are certain characteristics you want for a good bioweapon:

    1. You don't want a long period from infection to being able to detect it, because then you'll never be able to stop it entering your country.
    2. You want a virus that isn't able to mutate, so that it won't be able to evade the vaccines you've prepared for your own citizens.
    3. You want it to take out or disable the young, while (ideally) leaving the old to their own devices.
    4. You want it to affect humans only.

    Covid 19 is a *terrible* bioweapon, that culls the old from places with terrible dependency ratios. That is hard to keep from your country. And which is hosted by hundreds of other species, and therefore will never be truly eliminated.

    Well, that's obviously what they want you to think... :wink:
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,897

    https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/292278149

    My local Tesco always has this available at £2.50 with a clubcard. 🤷‍♂️
    I’ve started buying chicken from a local farm shop. Admittedly it’s much more expensive but it tastes much better and more ‘dense’.

    It also smells nice raw, unlike supermarket chicken.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563

    Hold on. Cummings quotes Hodges quotes Guido. If Boris has lost Guido, what's going on?
    Fortunately for Johnson the BBC will substitute Boris' earlier levelling up train wreck for "his" wartime fight them on the beaches speech (as with the Cenotaph car crash in 2019) so no one will notice.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    TOPPING said:

    Are you talking about "rice" which happens to be arborio rice?

    A risotto and microwaving risotto rice might be different things.
    Naah.

    Fry onion till soft in a thick based pan, chuck in rice and dollop of stock and water, plus X, simmer without burning till cooked and liquid absorbed to taste. That's it.

    Basic approach to kedgeree, risotto, etc. Paella too. Only difference is X.

    Kedgeree - bit of curry with the onion. X = frozen peas and sultanas and (at end) separately boiled Finnan haddock and/or frozen NA prawns, and/or boiled egg.

    Risotto - red pepper fried with the onion. X= mushrooms, peas, carrots, plus chicken, egg, prawn, whatever.

    Paella - not too sure ...
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362

    That presumes this conservative government acts likes a traditional conservative government.

    The US have said they don't think inflation is going to be a problem, treat covid as a one off, going to borrow big and continue to do so, worry about it all in 10-15 years. Interests rates are low, good time to make big investment in state backed transition to green tech, infrastructure building etc etc etc.

    Now the above statement concerns me, but that is their stated position, as saying inflation isn't a problem is rather Brown I've abolished boom and bust. Who says this current government doesn't follow the same path. I mean who would have thought a conservative government would have done half the times they have in the past 2 years.
    I agree with you Francis. I think US gov are entering into a risky economic plan without a back up plan if things like inflation become a problem. The example that comes to my mind is Labour 74-79. They came in with expensive spending idea’s (promises) into a situation already a bit hot and going for growth, the economic humiliation which followed (removing them from power for a generation) was direct result of doing the wrong thing, spending so much, in their first couple of years back in power. The new US government, and Boris over here both keen keen to print, borrow and spend regardless.

    I think Philip Thompson supports them in this. And he is an economist. Maybe we can ask him what a back up plan would be if it becomes too inflationary and heated say two years down the line?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    I’ve started buying chicken from a local farm shop. Admittedly it’s much more expensive but it tastes much better and more ‘dense’.

    It also smells nice raw, unlike supermarket chicken.
    Same here - only it's pheasant and partridge (and admittedly pork and lamb aand proper mutton and hoggett).
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 33,907
    edited July 2021
    "South Africa is on the brink
    For the first time, people appear afraid for the future
    By Brian Pottinger"

    https://unherd.com/2021/07/south-africa-is-on-the-brink
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    TOPPING said:

    As I said not sure that would have had the best life (look at the tiny legs) but if it helps with the outgoings.
    To be brutally honest I don't particularly care about the birds 'life' as long as its reasonable. Its got the red tractor mark and that's good enough for me. 🤷‍♂️

    If others want to pay more for a birds life journey on an organic farm then they can do that.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912
    TOPPING said:

    Yeah risotto is one of the easier things to cook.
    Also easy to make a rubbery mess of it as well, you have to get it just at the correct consistency or it is horrible.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    rcs1000 said:

    Ummm... if Coronavirus was designed as a weapon by the Chinese, wouldn't the first step have been able to treat it? Yet, the Chinese vaccines have been late and crap. Their case fatality rates have been five times those in the West. And they've had to go to extreme measures (welding people in homes) to stop it killing hundreds of millions of their own citizens.

    Also, if you were going to design a weapon, the very last thing you'd want is something that could be hosted by over 200 mammalian species - because that basically guarantees you'll never be able to be rid of the bloody thing.

    Edit to add:

    There are certain characteristics you want for a good bioweapon:

    1. You don't want a long period from infection to being able to detect it, because then you'll never be able to stop it entering your country.
    2. You want a virus that isn't able to mutate, so that it won't be able to evade the vaccines you've prepared for your own citizens.
    3. You want it to take out or disable the young, while (ideally) leaving the old to their own devices.
    4. You want it to affect humans only.

    Covid 19 is a *terrible* bioweapon, that culls the old from places with terrible dependency ratios. That is hard to keep from your country. And which is hosted by hundreds of other species, and therefore will never be truly eliminated.

    Sean T, ex of this same manor, outlined one possibility here


    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/how-Id-write-covid-the-thriller

    Tl;dr: the virus IS a bioweapon, but it was in utero, and it leaked by accident, long before China was ready or willing to use it
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Carnyx said:

    How very odd. I boil up the bones, skin, fat and an onion and have great jelly-like stock for a risotto, with as many bits of meat as I haven't eaten, and/or scraped off thje carcass. Been doing it for decades. And I've never got beyond the Scottish bourgeois c. 1920 plus Delia Smith level.

    Edit: but TUD has got in before me.

    Anecdata, but as with Brexit, maybe the Scots really are different ... that '10 people in the country' is absolutely astounding. Do you think they mean the Republic of Sealand or something?
    Likewise, I do it fairly regularly - how can you miss? Pile everything in a pot, simmer for a couple of hours??
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Eh? Maybe it’s tight Jock syndrome but I’ve done it with every chicken I’ve roasted as an adult.
    Indeed. Now doing it with pheasant (as we can't get chooks proper in the local community shop, but pheasant and partridge are available). Only thing to watch out for is the shot obvs so strainijng is important.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,956
    felix said:

    They kind of are. In a GE they will not stand aside to help each other out. The membership won't put up with it. And if they do try it watch the voters respond.
    I think the Spanish sun is getting to poor old Felix. In the Chesham and Amersham byelection, Labour threw their Deputy Leader and hundreds of their MPs into the fight - hardly "standing aside" - and even so they lost their deposit. The voters did indeed respond. Definitely not the Conservative Party, as it has now evolved.

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    malcolmg said:

    Also easy to make a rubbery mess of it as well, you have to get it just at the correct consistency or it is horrible.
    Might I ask, what rice do you use?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,143
    Andy_JS said:

    "South Africa is on the brink
    For the first time, people appear afraid for the future
    By Brian Pottinger"

    https://unherd.com/2021/07/south-africa-is-on-the-brink

    There's a tragicomic interview with a looter who says it made him feel "free":

    https://twitter.com/pine_tree_riots/status/1415362917256646668
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    Likewise, I do it fairly regularly - how can you miss? Pile everything in a pot, simmer for a couple of hours??
    Excellent. That's 4 out of the 10 already, 3 in Scotland. What was that abotu subsamples again?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-GB/products/292278149

    My local Tesco always has this available at £2.50 with a clubcard. 🤷‍♂️
    Don’t wave to toil the point, but that chicken provides 2300 calories. The idea it could ‘feed a family for days’ is a stretch, unless you are feeding Rishi Sunak and his leprechaun sister
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    Carnyx said:

    Naah.

    Fry onion till soft in a thick based pan, chuck in rice and dollop of stock and water, plus X, simmer without burning till cooked and liquid absorbed to taste. That's it.

    Basic approach to kedgeree, risotto, etc. Paella too. Only difference is X.

    Kedgeree - bit of curry with the onion. X = frozen peas and sultanas and (at end) separately boiled Finnan haddock and/or frozen NA prawns, and/or boiled egg.

    Risotto - red pepper fried with the onion. X= mushrooms, peas, carrots, plus chicken, egg, prawn, whatever.

    Paella - not too sure ...
    Sounds like a Pilaf.

    I tend to soften the onion in butter, stir in rice and turmeric and cardamom before adding stock, and soften, not fry, tomatoes in evol and tarragon in a separate pan.

    so simple. The mix of buttery rice and grassy oil tomatoes creates a taste sensation.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,632
    Netherlands-watch: 10976 positives today, up from 5431 last week. Weekly increase down from six-fold to two-fold.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,959
    It wouldn't be the Tour de Drugs unless....

    French prosecutors have opened a preliminary investigation into doping allegations against Bahrain-Victorious after their team hotel was searched.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Carnyx said:

    Excellent. That's 4 out of the 10 already, 3 in Scotland. What was that abotu subsamples again?
    My sister and my ex regularly make stock. 2 more
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    Leon said:

    My sister and my ex regularly make stock. 2 more
    My brother does this as well.....
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    Leon said:

    Don’t wave to toil the point, but that chicken provides 2300 calories. The idea it could ‘feed a family for days’ is a stretch, unless you are feeding Rishi Sunak and his leprechaun sister
    In other words, it needs to be extended with cheap calories ... like a chicken nugget, only superior one hopes.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,118
    TOPPING said:

    Blimey you and @Theuniondivvie showing the way culinarily north of the border. I wonder who are the other eight people who do it?

    Edit: and @Carnyx.

    The Magnificent Seven are out there somewhere (and seemingly north of Coldstream).
    We do it too, and did so before we moved north of the border. It probably helps that we don't pick the carcass clean before boiling it, so it's not just the bones contributing to the stock.

    I wouldn't do it with a £2.50 chicken though.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    gealbhan said:

    Sounds like a Pilaf.

    I tend to soften the onion in butter, stir in rice and turmeric and cardamom before adding stock, and soften, not fry, tomatoes in evol and tarragon in a separate pan.

    so simple. The mix of buttery rice and grassy oil tomatoes creates a taste sensation.
    Thanks - that's interesting. Will explore that.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    Carnyx said:

    Naah.

    Fry onion till soft in a thick based pan, chuck in rice and dollop of stock and water, plus X, simmer without burning till cooked and liquid absorbed to taste. That's it.

    Basic approach to kedgeree, risotto, etc. Paella too. Only difference is X.

    Kedgeree - bit of curry with the onion. X = frozen peas and sultanas and (at end) separately boiled Finnan haddock and/or frozen NA prawns, and/or boiled egg.

    Risotto - red pepper fried with the onion. X= mushrooms, peas, carrots, plus chicken, egg, prawn, whatever.

    Paella - not too sure ...
    You lost me at "fry onion...."
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    gealbhan said:

    Sounds like a Pilaf.

    I tend to soften the onion in butter, stir in rice and turmeric and cardamom before adding stock, and soften, not fry, tomatoes in evol and tarragon in a separate pan.

    so simple. The mix of buttery rice and grassy oil tomatoes creates a taste sensation.
    I forgot to say we use arborio or 'risotto' rice for the risotto and Basmati for the kedgeree. What's in your pilaf?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766
    edited July 2021
    IshmaelZ said:

    It was what Elizabeth David hated most about English cooking. If a Frenchman wants chicken stock he takes one whole fresh chicken, boils it up with onions and celery,and throws away the carcase. What's the point of bone-flavoured water?
    The flavour, such as it is, is in the bones, not the flesh.

    Which brings me to a mini-bugbear. The WHOLE POINT of soup is the meat stock. Whether it's flavoured water or a hearty broth. Vegetarian soup is like frozen yoghurt. Sort of OK if for reasons, you can't have the real thing.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,632
    malcolmg said:

    Complete bollox for sure
    Why? Is it one of those cookbooks whose timings are based on the assumption that you have already prepped everything?
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    Andy_JS said:

    Not surprised by these figures. Labour won't recover with the non-metropolitan working-classes unless it stops being so Woke, which is very unlikely to happen because it would upset their members in the big cities.
    Or it might just be Covid/vaccine related, and the true gap if any between the parties not possible for polling companies to get right until things return to normal?
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    ClippP said:

    I think the Spanish sun is getting to poor old Felix. In the Chesham and Amersham byelection, Labour threw their Deputy Leader and hundreds of their MPs into the fight - hardly "standing aside" - and even so they lost their deposit. The voters did indeed respond. Definitely not the Conservative Party, as it has now evolved.

    You missed that I said GE not BE. Something for you to ponder.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 82,959
    https://order-order.com/2021/07/15/sadiq-khans-u-turn-on-controversial-statues/

    Will there be a plaque with this statue explaining his past actions?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912
    Carnyx said:

    How very odd. I boil up the bones, skin, fat and an onion and have great jelly-like stock for a risotto, with as many bits of meat as I haven't eaten, and/or scraped off thje carcass. Been doing it for decades. And I've never got beyond the Scottish bourgeois c. 1920 plus Delia Smith level.

    Edit: but TUD has got in before me.

    Anecdata, but as with Brexit, maybe the Scots really are different ... that '10 people in the country' is absolutely astounding. Do you think they mean the Republic of Sealand or something?
    3 of us so far all do it, wonder where the other 7 live.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,240
    MaxPB said:

    Unlikely given that I'm not in the party and tbh, I don't think I'll be tempted to join until the likes of HYFUD are made to feel unwelcome and move to some other party or go independent.
    Given we are on 40%+ in every poll you will be waiting a long time for that, I am actually on the moderate end of the current Tory Party
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    edited July 2021
    OK OK SO EVERY FUCKER ON HERE EITHER USES CHICKEN BONES FOR STOCK OR KNOWS/IS RELATED TO SOMEONE WHO DOES.

    Did you all really not read my post properly?? I said there are only 10 people in the country who _don't_ "use the bones for stock".

    Sheesh.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Leon said:

    Don’t wave to toil the point, but that chicken provides 2300 calories. The idea it could ‘feed a family for days’ is a stretch, unless you are feeding Rishi Sunak and his leprechaun sister
    You don't have vegetables with your meal? And I meant one of three meals a day not breakfast, lunch and dinner.

    ~250 calories of protein per adult, ~100 per child for your meat and that's ~700 calories per day. So 2300 can cover three days.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,168
    Leon said:

    Sean T, ex of this same manor
    Who? Never 'eard of 'im!!!
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,118
    Cookie said:

    Why? Is it one of those cookbooks whose timings are based on the assumption that you have already prepped everything?
    That you have a sous-chef to do the prep for you.

    The first couple of times my daughter cooked dinner we didn't end up eating until about 9pm. She was very careful when chopping an onion, say, and everything was unfamiliar, so took her much longer.

    I can sympathise with people who find it intimidating. I remember what it was like when I used to try to follow recipes exactly - using exactly half an onion, etc.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    edited July 2021
    Leon said:

    Don’t wave to toil the point, but that chicken provides 2300 calories. The idea it could ‘feed a family for days’ is a stretch, unless you are feeding Rishi Sunak and his leprechaun sister
    Further to that, some good ideas for feeding the poor here.

    http://www.workhouses.org.uk/life/food.shtml

    Look at the Abingdon workus menu.

    Dinner (some days): cooked meat with veg, 5 oz. That chicken wouldn't go far if that 5 oz (about 130g) included only meat with veg extra. Or if veg and water are included then that's more like being able to provide 'a family for a few days'. Not much of a comparison is it?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461
    TOPPING said:

    OK OK SO EVERY FUCKER ON HERE EITHER USES CHICKEN BONES FOR STOCK OR KNOWS/IS RELATED TO SOMEONE WHO DOES.

    Did you all really not read my post properly?? I said there are only 10 people in the country who _don't_ "use the bones for stock".

    Sheesh.

    11 billion SeanTs do as well, apparently...
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,556
    Cookie said:

    Why? Is it one of those cookbooks whose timings are based on the assumption that you have already prepped everything?
    Or have a pot of some obscure spice that you have never heard of from which you need a pinch.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,318

    Scottish Covid numbers well down again

    Can't be right, everyone keeps telling me that we'll be having 100,000 cases a day soon etc etc etc
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,137
    TOPPING said:

    OK OK SO EVERY FUCKER ON HERE EITHER USES CHICKEN BONES FOR STOCK OR KNOWS/IS RELATED TO SOMEONE WHO DOES.

    Did you all really not read my post properly?? I said there are only 10 people in the country who _don't_ "use the bones for stock".

    Sheesh.

    I, for one, do not boil up the bones.* Any more? :tongue:

    *Might try it though, my gran used to do it and she was a very fine cook...
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,632
    Leon said:

    My sister and my ex regularly make stock. 2 more
    I make stock once a year, after Christmas dinner. Because it's part of the routine. It's nice to do, but from a purely cost/benefit assessment it's a massive use of time to get a product you could buy for almost nothing.
    If you quite enjoy it or get satisfaction from using everything, fair enough. I find it a bit of a pain in the arse, to be honest.
    My mum and my mother-in-law make stock, of course. That generation do. And my mum's cooking is, of course, the standard to which everything else I taste needs to aspire.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 58,836
    Selebian said:

    I have sympathy with your viewpoint (and in our family of four, we also can make a chicken, probably a bit bigger than the £2.50 one linked, last three days - one day roast, two days in a pie, with lots of other stuff - we normally work on three adult servings when using a recipe, so 8-9 adult servings equivalent).

    But there is a valid point (Topping, was it?) about investment. Your air fryer sounds great, but I expect it costs at least a few supermarket ready meals to buy one and why would you if you don't have any idea what to do with it? We have a slow cooker which is great for easy and big batch meals (not 'quick', obviously!) and they can be picked up for £30-£40, but we only got one, despite enjoying cooking, when a relative bought one for us - we hadn't realised the possibilities before.

    In our house, a quick really can't be arsed meal is omelette (bacon, cheese, mushroom) with spiced wedges and some frozen veg if there's nothing handy in the garden. Half an hour start to finish with only about ten minute of semi-intensive effort at the end. But an awful lot of people simply don't know how to do that and even using those few pans/trays can be a blocker.

    It's very easy for those of us with a little know-how, a reasonably well equipped basic kitchen and cupboards/freezers filled with basic ingredients to rustle up something tasty in no time for very little money. But it's know-how and time. Before I had a work-provided laptop, my last four laptops were fairly recent thinkpads bought broken on ebay, repaired by me with the aid of the thinkpad hardware maintenance manuals and all for less than the crappiest laptops in Currys. But most people don't do that - they go to Currys and, if on a budget, get something 'cheap' that is both poor quality, won't last, is hard to repair and is expensive for what it is. It's the same with food.
    What an excellent comment.

    If you know what you're doing, and have a well equipped kitchen, it's easy to eat well cheaply: a portion of risotto is perhaps 40p, an omelette maybe only sightly more.

    But most people don't know what they're doing.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 43,912
    Cookie said:

    Why? Is it one of those cookbooks whose timings are based on the assumption that you have already prepped everything?
    I only saw it a few times on the telly. You would need a day to go buy the list of ingredients and then it was edited to hell as no way would it be done in 15 mins, lots of preparation etc. eg


    Ingredients out • Kettle boiled • Medium lidded pan, medium-high heat • Food processor (bowl blade) • Large frying pan, high heat
    START COOKING
    Put the quinoa into the pan and generously cover with boiling water and the lid.
    Put the chilli, spinach, trimmed spring onions and coriander (reserving a few leaves) into the processor, tear in the top leafy half of the mint, then blitz until finely chopped.
    On a large sheet of greaseproof paper, toss the chicken with sea salt, black pepper, the allspice and paprika. Fold over the paper, then bash and flatten the chicken to 1.5cm thick with a rolling pin.
    Put into the frying pan with 1 tablespoon of olive oil, turning after 3 or 4 minutes, or until blackened and cooked through.
    Deseed the peppers, cut each one into 8 strips and add to the frying pan, tossing regularly. Peel and cut the mango into chunks.
    Drain the quinoa and rinse under the cold tap, then drain well again and tip on to a serving board or platter. Toss with the blitzed spinach mixture, squeeze over the lime juice, add the extra virgin olive oil, mix well and season to taste.
    Sprinkle the mango chunks and cooked peppers over the quinoa. Halve and destone the avocado, then use a teaspoon to scoop curls of it over the salad.
    Slice up the chicken, toss the slices in any juices and add to the salad. Crumble over the feta, scatter over the remaining coriander leaves and snip over the cress. Serve with dollops of yoghurt.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,240
    edited July 2021
    MaxPB said:

    Chipping Barnet which borders on it will probably fall to the red team. My parents live in Enfield Southgate which is demographically perfect for the Tories as a leafy suburban area with average property prices in the high six figure range and an oversized proportion of City workers, it's now solid Labour, actually impenetrably so despite the MP being a complete joker.
    Enfield Southgate may have high average property prices but it is also a Remain seat with lots of renters.

    The most solid Tory seats now under Boris voted Leave and have high levels of home owners even if only average house prices ie more Harlow and less Enfield Southgate
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606

    You don't have vegetables with your meal? And I meant one of three meals a day not breakfast, lunch and dinner.

    ~250 calories of protein per adult, ~100 per child for your meat and that's ~700 calories per day. So 2300 can cover three days.
    Bit of news for ytou.

    Chickens have fat and skin. That's some of the calories unuseable.
    Lots of calories in the bone. Are you a lammergeier or a hyena?
    And how big are the hypothetical bairns?
This discussion has been closed.