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Some Farage bets – politicalbetting.com

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  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,560

    I've been a postie for just under two years

    In that time I've walked just under seventeen million steps

    I wonder how many people have walked more than me

    Other posties.
  • .
    Eabhal said:

    The nature of most cycling (urban areas, densely populated, "London, Cambridge, Bristol, Edinburgh, Oxford") means that you are in close proximity to lots of pedestrians during short journeys in city centres. You would need to do a complex bit of modelling where you select only the kind of car journey that matches that profile.

    It's a silly argument anyway; the laws of physics are enough.
    Not just in close proximity to pedestrians but often on the pavement too, which cars aren't as often. Plus cycles lack a lot of safety features that cars - cars have gotten safer for pedestrians being designed with crash tests in mind to crumple if they impact a pedestrian to minimise the risk, which cycles don't, plus cars nowadays have automatic brakes etc which correct me if I'm wrong but cycles don't either.

    Either way though, the figures speak for themselves, on a per mileage basis there's no real difference between cars and cycles.
  • Cookie said:

    Nobody at all, car or cyclist, goes along a main road on which they have priority slowing down at all the side roads just in case some madman careers out of it and crashes into them.
    Yes, slow down at busy junctions like signal controlled crossroads where priority changes or is ambiguous. But the behaviour you're suggesting just doesn't happen, and nor need it.
    I do.

    I really do, not just saying this.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,560

    If it weren't for me and a few others, carbonara would just be creamy pasta

    Thank god for tradition

    Creamy carbonara followed by Hawaiian pizza. Italian cooking at it’s best. Mmm!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,716
    Cookie said:

    Nobody at all, car or cyclist, goes along a main road on which they have priority slowing down at all the side roads just in case some madman careers out of it and crashes into them.
    Yes, slow down at busy junctions like signal controlled crossroads where priority changes or is ambiguous. But the behaviour you're suggesting just doesn't happen, and nor need it.
    True. But the prudent will cover the brake with their foot as they approach such a side road.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited September 2024

    I've been a postie for just under two years

    In that time I've walked just under seventeen million steps

    I wonder how many people have walked more than me

    The Amazon minions? I did a summer job in a massive distribution centre (not Amazon) where you had to walk giant aisles often for 12+ hrs a day at a rapid rate pulling stuff into your cart. It was relentless as they tagged how long each order was taking and you had to keep up at a set number of picks / hour. So I imagine the full timers doing that are walking insane number of steps.

    I did finish the summer extremely fit after doing 7 days a week, averaging 60+ hrs a week.
  • Eabhal said:

    6,015,086 ;)

    17 million (/2) is quite something, BL. If you are anything like Edinburgh posties, your calves have together more girth than your torso.
    I can't easily get at the step count, but in 2021, when I ran every day, I did a total of 5,388 km in logged activities (so not general walking).

    The most I've done in a day (since 2016) is 59,054; I'll have done more on a hike, but I haven't been doing those recently. The most in a month during the same period is 985,260.

    So yes, BL's total is superb.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    TimS said:

    Oh mate.

    You definitely didn’t read the thread a few days ago.

    Carbonara was invented in 1944 for American GIs who wanted breakfast pasta.

    Banging on about the traditional Carbonara recipe is the gastronomic equivalent of pronouncing bucket bouquet.
    Tradition is surely a consensus, no more, no less? As most Italians do think "proper" Carbonara is spaghetti with eggs semi-cooked by the residual heat and dish as typically Roman as saltimbocca and artichokes, I would be happy to go with that as the authentic recipe.

    I actually prefer my eggs to be fully cooked so my Carbonara isn't the genuine version I guess....
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,097

    .

    Not just in close proximity to pedestrians but often on the pavement too, which cars aren't as often. Plus cycles lack a lot of safety features that cars - cars have gotten safer for pedestrians being designed with crash tests in mind to crumple if they impact a pedestrian to minimise the risk, which cycles don't, plus cars nowadays have automatic brakes etc which correct me if I'm wrong but cycles don't either.

    Either way though, the figures speak for themselves, on a per mileage basis there's no real difference between cars and cycles.
    Which makes it all the more telling that 98.9% of pedestrians killed on pavements are hit by drivers.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,629
    edited September 2024
    Those who will there will always remember the Great PB Carbonara War, which came so horribly soon after the PB Cat Battles that the wounded from one conflict were bayoneted in the next
  • Eabhal said:

    Which makes it all the more telling that 98.9% of pedestrians killed on pavements are hit by drivers.
    Which when about 98.9% of non-motorway mileage is by cars, what is it telling us?
  • Leon said:

    Those who will there will always remember the Great PB Carbonara War, which came so horribly soon after the PB Cat Battles that the wounded from one conflict were bayoneted in the next

    I bet no AI would have predicted it....
  • FF43 said:

    Tradition is surely a consensus, no more, no less? As most Italians do think "proper" Carbonara is spaghetti with eggs semi-cooked by the residual heat and dish as typically Roman as saltimbocca and artichokes, I would be happy to go with that as the authentic recipe.

    I actually prefer my eggs to be fully cooked so my Carbonara isn't the genuine version I guess....
    Pasta Salmonella.

    Beetlejuice is whimsical bollox with really lame 1980s SFX btw. Rewatching it as prep for the sequel, but it's work.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    FF43 said:

    Tradition is surely a consensus, no more, no less? As most Italians do think "proper" Carbonara is spaghetti with eggs semi-cooked by the residual heat and dish as typically Roman as saltimbocca and artichokes, I would be happy to go with that as the authentic recipe.

    I actually prefer my eggs to be fully cooked so my Carbonara isn't the genuine version I guess....
    And now we can move onto the traditional "sticky toffee pudding" invented in the 1970s along with the microwave oven as the go-to dessert in every British restaurant.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,664
    FF43 said:

    And now we can move onto the traditional "sticky toffee pudding" invented in the 1970s along with the microwave oven as the go-to dessert in every British restaurant.
    And the question of whether Brown Windsor Soup ever really existed.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    FF43 said:

    Tradition is surely a consensus, no more, no less? As most Italians do think "proper" Carbonara is spaghetti with eggs semi-cooked by the residual heat and dish as typically Roman as saltimbocca and artichokes, I would be happy to go with that as the authentic recipe.

    I actually prefer my eggs to be fully cooked so my Carbonara isn't the genuine version I guess....
    The point is you’re free to enjoy it however you want. I like carbonara the “traditional” way: it works. But I will defend to the death your right to cook it differently and still call it carbonara.

    That’s the joy of the open-source Anglo Saxon approach to stuff.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,629
    FF43 said:

    Tradition is surely a consensus, no more, no less? As most Italians do think "proper" Carbonara is spaghetti with eggs semi-cooked by the residual heat and dish as typically Roman as saltimbocca and artichokes, I would be happy to go with that as the authentic recipe.

    I actually prefer my eggs to be fully cooked so my Carbonara isn't the genuine version I guess....
    Re culinary tradition, I was told two days ago that the great traditional dish of lake skardar - cold marinated carp with hot boiled potatoes (absolutely delicious) was actually invented about 20 years ago

    They had the marinated carp (often horrible, it was just a way of preserving it for peasants) and some bright spark thought of mixing with the usual Montenegrin spuds n spinach n garlic

    Result: a noble national dish

    I was going to decry this but then I remembered that half of Italy’s iconic foods were invented in the last few decades. Tiramisu. Ciabatta etc
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited September 2024
    TimS said:

    Oh mate.

    You definitely didn’t read the thread a few days ago.

    Carbonara was invented in 1944 for American GIs who wanted breakfast pasta.

    Banging on about the traditional Carbonara recipe is the gastronomic equivalent of pronouncing bucket bouquet.
    Why is it being invented in 1944 a reason to make it badly using cream?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    edited September 2024
    FF43 said:

    And now we can move onto the traditional "sticky toffee pudding" invented in the 1970s along with the microwave oven as the go-to dessert in every British restaurant.
    The best pudding is fig tarte tatin, with a bit of crème fraîche. Sadly very rarely seen in actual French restaurants. I bet it’s a recent invention. Let me have a look..,

    Quite venerable actually (the Apple version). End of the 19th century in a restaurant in the Sologne.

    Which is a useful prompt to recommend you all read Le Grand Meulnes.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,287
    Why has such a bitter and angry tone emerged in recent years in the debate between cyclists and motorists?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,629
    edited September 2024
    biggles said:

    Why is it being invented in 1944 a reason to make it badly?
    I wouldn’t be surprised if a majority of iconic national dishes were invented after 1945

    Currywurst!

    Chicken tikka masala!

  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    TimS said:

    The point is you’re free to enjoy it however you want. I like carbonara the “traditional” way: it works. But I will defend to the death your right to cook it differently and still call it carbonara.

    That’s the joy of the open-source Anglo Saxon approach to stuff.
    Yes it’s a fine tradition of ours….
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited September 2024
    Andy_JS said:

    Why has such a bitter and angry tone emerged in recent years in the debate between cyclists and motorists?

    Jeremy Vine and his GoPro?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    Andy_JS said:

    Why has such a bitter and angry tone emerged in recent years in the debate between cyclists and motorists?

    Too few of them have access to proper carbonara.
  • BlancheLivermoreBlancheLivermore Posts: 6,257
    edited September 2024
    TimS said:

    Oh mate.

    You definitely didn’t read the thread a few days ago.

    Carbonara was invented in 1944 for American GIs who wanted breakfast pasta.

    Banging on about the traditional Carbonara recipe is the gastronomic equivalent of pronouncing bucket bouquet.
    I wrote the thread years ago!

    I know when carbonara was invented

    It's old enough to he be traditional now

    And cream never goes in it

    Call your creamy pasta something else, or put it in quotation marks when you call it carbonara

    You make creambaconcheddara

    And it's shit compared to carbonara
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    TimS said:

    The best pudding is fig tarte tatin, with a bit of crème fraîche. Sadly very rarely seen in actual French restaurants. I bet it’s a recent invention. Let me have a look..,

    Quite venerable actually (the Apple version). End of the 19th century in a restaurant in the Sologne.

    Which is a useful prompt to recommend you all read Le Grand Meulnes.
    All proper puddings come with custard.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,287
    "Prove you can’t afford private school fees, council asks parents

    Buckinghamshire council asks mother for evidence of her financial situation in order for her daughter to be considered for state school"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/09/06/parents-asked-prove-afford-private-fees-buckinghamshire/
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    biggles said:

    Why is it being invented in 1944 a reason to make it badly using cream?
    Appealing to “tradition”.

    As I’ve said several times, I like it the “traditional” way with egg because it tastes nice and intense, but tutting at the unwashed masses who like it with a bit of cream (not just here but throughout Europe) is misplaced snobbery of the bucket variety.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,664
    biggles said:

    Why is it being invented in 1944 a reason to make it badly using cream?
    At some point the world will have to realise that the 2nd world war was quite a while ago. 2045 maybe? I was born 40 years after it ended but it still sits as a sort of event in the life of people my age, even though it wasn't.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    edited September 2024

    Jeremy Vine and his GoPro?
    The idiocy of that most motorists also ride a bike, and most cyclists also drive cars. It’s confected.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,560
    carnforth said:

    And the question of whether Brown Windsor Soup ever really existed.
    I can imagine a goodly number of PB contributors regularly enjoying Brown Windsor Soup.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188

    I've been a postie for just under two years

    In that time I've walked just under seventeen million steps

    I wonder how many people have walked more than me

    If we assume 2,000 steps in a mile, that's 17,000,000/2,000 = 17,000/2 = 8,500 miles.

    Two years is 730 days. I assume you work five days a week and have two weeks holiday, so that's 5x50x2= 500 days.

    8,500 miles/500 days = 17 miles a day. Is that close?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842

    I wrote the thread years ago!

    I know when carbonara was invented

    It's old enough to he be traditional now

    And cream never goes in it

    Call your creamy pasta something else, or put it in quotation marks when you call it carbonara

    You make creambaconcheddara

    And it's shit compared to carbonara
    Gastronomic racism, essentially. Condemning the mongrel.

    The foodie far right.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    IanB2 said:

    I admit that before I visited the town museum here yesterday, I didn't know that the Japanese had ever invaded Alaska. But they did, occupying three of the Alaskan islands, assumed to be for use as airbases in order to bomb Alaska and western Canada.

    Naturally, the North Americans didn't fancy the Blitz experience, and so the US and Canadians planned an invasion to retake the islands, landing at different points so that the defending Japanese would be surrounded. The only flaw in the plan was that in the meantime the Japanese had clearly decided the occupation/bombing plan was unfeasible and had gone home, leaving the Americans and Canadians to meet each other mid-island, with tragic consequences

    I think referred to the Aleutian Islands Campaign.

    Even that has some even-more-obscure nooks and crannies.

    eg The Battle of the Komandorski Islands.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WOPbwg6hFQ
  • ManchesterKurtManchesterKurt Posts: 928
    edited September 2024
    viewcode said:

    If we assume 2,000 steps in a mile, that's 17,000,000/2,000 = 17,000/2 = 8,500 miles.

    Two years is 730 days. I assume you work five days a week and have two weeks holiday, so that's 5x50x2= 500 days.

    8,500 miles/500 days = 17 miles a day. Is that close?
    I've averaged about 24k steps a day for last 8 years, about 18km per day, whilst doing an office job

    But I have no car

    Last year did about 9m steps
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited September 2024
    carnforth said:

    At some point the world will have to realise that the 2nd world war was quite a while ago. 2045 maybe? I was born 40 years after it ended but it still sits as a sort of event in the life of people my age, even though it wasn't.
    I sometimes wonder how much the Napoleonic wars loomed over us in the run up to WW1. We all think of them as history, but I assume some WW1 generals had grandfathers who had fought at Waterloo. Our reference point (we all have it, I think) of “the post war era” does feel like it’s on the way out, as the global consensus breaks down.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,560
    TimS said:

    The idiocy of that most motorists also ride a bike, and most cyclists also drive cars. It’s confected.
    The ones that are arsey to other road users will be arsey whether in their car or on their bike. The ones that are considerate to other road users will be considerate whether in their car or on their bike. Some folk are just arseholes. Some folk are nicer.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    FF43 said:

    I wonder how much a problem for the Republicans that essentially all remaining sensible key people in that party are voting Harris?
    Dick Cheney was thrown out of the GOP when the Trump loyalists purged the party. As opposed to Tom Chaney, who was killed by Mattie Ross.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,097

    I've averaged about 24k steps a day for last 8 years, about 18km per day, whilst doing an office job

    But I have no car

    Last year did about 9m steps
    Always a bigger fish, ffs
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    TimS said:

    Gastronomic racism, essentially. Condemning the mongrel.

    The foodie far right.
    Although modern carbonara is a bit mestizo. They made it with powdered egg originally. They now use fresh eggs, the bastards.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,253
    "Sorry but… what sort of animal puts cream in carbonara?" A cow, possibly. Or amost any other female mammal. (I'm not sure about odd cases like platypuses.)
  • viewcode said:

    If we assume 2,000 steps in a mile, that's 17,000,000/2,000 = 17,000/2 = 8,500 miles.

    Two years is 730 days. I assume you work five days a week and have two weeks holiday, so that's 5x50x2= 500 days.

    8,500 miles/500 days = 17 miles a day. Is that close?
    My total includes days off when I walk the dog, and holidays when I walk 25 miles a day

    I think I do closer to 2,500 steps per mile, so about 80% of your distances
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,253
    On steps per day: Recently I saw a cartoon showing a centipede saying: "I've just gotten out of bed, and already I've taken 1,000 steps." (Or something like that.)
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    biggles said:

    I sometimes wonder how much the Napoleonic wars loomed over us in the run up to WW1. We all think of them as history, but I assume some WW1 generals had grandfathers who had fought at Waterloo. Our reference point (we all have it, I think) of “the post war era” does feel like it’s on the way out, as the global consensus breaks down.
    We actually have 4 quite big markers in the sand during the last couple of decades that act to divide history. Their significance will be judged later.

    1. The fall of the Berlin Wall, 1989
    2. 9/11, 2001
    3. The great financial crisis, 2007-9
    4. Covid-19, 2020-2021
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,191
    biggles said:

    I sometimes wonder how much the Napoleonic wars loomed over us in the run up to WW1. We all think of them as history, but I assume some WW1 generals had grandfathers who had fought at Waterloo. Our reference point (we all have it, I think) of “the post war era” does feel like it’s on the way out, as the global consensus breaks down.
    Someone who saw Abraham Lincon assassinated was interviewed on TV

    https://youtu.be/q4CCFObSEAU?si=Qa8YjAdra88RkzEb
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319
    Foxy said:

    Because they might die.

    The cyclist is in the right, but that's not much consolation if dead.
    Yes I cycle a lot to get from a to b and b to c every day, I would definitely slow down approaching any kind of junction unless I was 100% sure there wasn't some careless driver around who might kill me.

    I might have some sympathy for the driver here, we all make mistakes. Usually we get away with them and hopefully learn from them.

    But if @HYUFD thinks that the cyclist is to blame here then I'm afraid that makes @HYUFD a dangerous driver, and I'm alarmed to learn he has a licence.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,287
    Draper loses the first set 5-7.
  • TimS said:

    We actually have 4 quite big markers in the sand during the last couple of decades that act to divide history. Their significance will be judged later.

    1. The fall of the Berlin Wall, 1989
    2. 9/11, 2001
    3. The great financial crisis, 2007-9
    4. Covid-19, 2020-2021
    I feel like you do that those 4 things happened in the last couple of decades, but it ain't so.
  • TimS said:

    Gastronomic racism, essentially. Condemning the mongrel.

    The foodie far right.
    Why not call pasta with Dairylea and Pepperami carbonara?

    Ffs why not pasta, cheese whizz and bacon bits?

    In fact, fuck it. Make it all with green vegetables, soy, and almond milk

    I hope you enjoy it
  • DavidL said:

    Mother India is very good and the Tuk Tuk Indian Street food is also extremely tasty and excellent value. Tattu is possibly the best Chinese restaurant I have been to in this country. Simply superb.

    Dishoon is excellent but the refusal to allow bookings is an irritant. I have gone to the door a lot more often than I have gone in.
    Dishoom is over-rated!

    Jackfruit biryani? FFS!
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    edited September 2024
    mercator said:

    I feel like you do that those 4 things happened in the last couple of decades, but it ain't so.
    That’s an editorial glitch of me starting with 3, then adding 1989
  • Dishoom is over-rated!

    Jackfruit biryani? FFS!
    The soft shell crab that I had at at Dishoom was excellent

    Even they can't dress up a jackfruit to be worth what they have to charge for it
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564

    Which when about 98.9% of non-motorway mileage is by cars, what is it telling us?
    In these assumed circumstances, that if you want to reduce the cost to society and the NHS etc of dealing with pedestrian KSIs then the thing to be addressed is the number who are KSI'd by cars (in this case), since costs to society and the NHS are actual numbers rather than rates.

    Which is why the data collected / analysed has to vary depending on the question being asked, and here the rate of accidents by mode is not what we need to know to inform our policy decisions to meet our policy objective.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,969
    FF43 said:

    I wonder how much a problem for the Republicans that essentially all remaining sensible key people in that party are voting Harris?
    The GOP appeals to a different demographic now. It seems to me that the US is becoming more like Latin America. Due to more Hispanics? Dunno. But Trump is much more like a Latin politician than a traditional WASP in his demeanour, and appeal.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    Have a good evening all.

    I'm off to have a carbonara, and a piece of pineapple pizza, for supper.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,287

    I've been a postie for just under two years

    In that time I've walked just under seventeen million steps

    I wonder how many people have walked more than me

    For some reason I assumed you'd been doing the job for a lot longer than that.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    edited September 2024

    Why not call pasta with Dairylea and Pepperami carbonara?

    Ffs why not pasta, cheese whizz and bacon bits?

    In fact, fuck it. Make it all with green vegetables, soy, and almond milk

    I hope you enjoy it
    You clearly feel strongly about this.

    Without wanting to come over all barty bobs I think you could foresee someone doing pasta with cheese whizz and bacon bits and calling it carbonara. Like you get (delicious) tinned cassoulet in French supermarkets with chopped frankfurters.

    Or “cheddar” as sold in French supermarkets, which is plastic melty cheese for your burger in a nice plastic wrapper.
  • Never mind carbonara. Did you know that Kamala Harris is a diva when it comes to pens?

    https://x.com/dsamuelsohn/status/1415322973821624327

    Former Harris staffers said they were well acquainted with her preferred writing tool: Pilot Precise V7 Roller Ball pens. The pens are "seared into everyone's brain,” a former aide said
  • The GOP appeals to a different demographic now. It seems to me that the US is becoming more like Latin America. Due to more Hispanics? Dunno. But Trump is much more like a Latin politician than a traditional WASP in his demeanour, and appeal.
    "It's not your father's GOP" is certainly true in spades.
  • biggles said:

    I sometimes wonder how much the Napoleonic wars loomed over us in the run up to WW1. We all think of them as history, but I assume some WW1 generals had grandfathers who had fought at Waterloo. Our reference point (we all have it, I think) of “the post war era” does feel like it’s on the way out, as the global consensus breaks down.
    Not many from Waterloo. Say you are 20 in 1815, have children when you are 30 in 1825, they have children 1855, those children are 60 in 1915. But there's a lot of wars which loom more closely - Crimea and South Africa and Khartoum and China and the Indian mutiny.

  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,589
    Andy_JS said:

    Draper loses the first set 5-7.

    Striking how Sinner was able to get over the line at the crucial time. If Draper is to win a slam he needs to get that ability. Is it mental? Draper has the game, the serve, the power.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842

    Never mind carbonara. Did you know that Kamala Harris is a diva when it comes to pens?

    https://x.com/dsamuelsohn/status/1415322973821624327

    Former Harris staffers said they were well acquainted with her preferred writing tool: Pilot Precise V7 Roller Ball pens. The pens are "seared into everyone's brain,” a former aide said

    She’ll get on with our head of state then.
  • The GOP appeals to a different demographic now. It seems to me that the US is becoming more like Latin America. Due to more Hispanics? Dunno. But Trump is much more like a Latin politician than a traditional WASP in his demeanour, and appeal.
    Yes, this is also what I thought of the two, affluent and educated, but also clearly very bourgeois and insulated, Americans who I met.
    They were very nice and charming, but they also reminded me of the kind of the kind of slick, affluent Latin Americans who have supported their various iterations of military junta.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    TimS said:

    Although modern carbonara is a bit mestizo. They made it with powdered egg originally. They now use fresh eggs, the bastards.
    Maybe more important for authenticity than the ingredients is where the name carbonara comes from. I suspect that wasn't invented for the American army.
  • biggles said:

    Why is it being invented in 1944 a reason to make it badly using cream?
    Most 1944 cuisine consisted of using powdered egg as a poor substitute for cream which was unavailable except on the black market, so even if the recipe says egg it may have aspired to double cream.
  • I was somewhat abused on here a month or two ago for worrying about bird flu:



    BNO News Live
    @BNODesk

    BREAKING: Missouri reports human case of H5 bird flu with no known link to animals

    https://x.com/BNODesk/status/1832148899135680614
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,287
    The most confident prediction I would have for the next general election this far out is that the vast majority of seats won by the LDs from the Tories are going to stay with the LDs.
  • TimS said:

    You clearly feel strongly about this.

    Without wanting to come over all barty bobs I think you could foresee someone doing pasta with cheese whizz and bacon bits and calling it carbonara. Like you get (delicious) tinned cassoulet in French supermarkets with chopped frankfurters.

    Or “cheddar” as sold in French supermarkets, which is plastic melty cheese for your burger in a nice plastic wrapper.
    You only describe horrible things replacing better things

    If there were superior things coming in, I wouldn't care so much about the names

    But no "carbonara" is anywhere near as good as proper carbonara

    If there's a good cream dish, I'm sure it should have its own name
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    Andy_JS said:

    "Prove you can’t afford private school fees, council asks parents

    Buckinghamshire council asks mother for evidence of her financial situation in order for her daughter to be considered for state school"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/09/06/parents-asked-prove-afford-private-fees-buckinghamshire/

    As it would be highly illegal for the council not to provide education in that case, I sense bullshit but admit I didn't penetrate past the paywall.
  • I can imagine a goodly number of PB contributors regularly enjoying Brown Windsor Soup.
    Several enjoy bathing in a brown-nosing Windsors’ soup.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,629

    I was somewhat abused on here a month or two ago for worrying about bird flu:



    BNO News Live
    @BNODesk

    BREAKING: Missouri reports human case of H5 bird flu with no known link to animals

    https://x.com/BNODesk/status/1832148899135680614

    Why don't you just fuck off to Penarth?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842

    You only describe horrible things replacing better things

    If there were superior things coming in, I wouldn't care so much about the names

    But no "carbonara" is anywhere near as good as proper carbonara

    If there's a good cream dish, I'm sure it should have its own name
    This is a political site, so there needs to be a policy answer. Appellation contrôlée / DOC rules perhaps?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    edited September 2024
    mercator said:

    Not many from Waterloo. Say you are 20 in 1815, have children when you are 30 in 1825, they have children 1855, those children are 60 in 1915. But there's a lot of wars which loom more closely - Crimea and South Africa and Khartoum and China and the Indian mutiny.

    The classic Napoleonic one is that Jackie Fisher, the Admiral of the Fleet in WW1 who oversaw the early use of submarines and aircraft carriers, was introduced into the Royal Navy as a naval cadet by the last of Nelson's Captains to be in the service, in 1854. That was Admiral Sir William Parker, who had also been present at the Glorious First of June in 1794 as a Captain's Servant.

    We sometimes forget that Victorians could have children quite late. I read about one yesterday who was widowed twice and had his final child in his 70s with his third wife. Either dutiful or frisky.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    My son and his friend have got into French chansons. It’s weird, they’re downstairs in the kitchen at the moment cooking pear upside down cake (with no eggs, like bastardised carbonara) while listening to Edith Piaf on Spotify.
  • Never mind carbonara. Did you know that Kamala Harris is a diva when it comes to pens?

    https://x.com/dsamuelsohn/status/1415322973821624327

    Former Harris staffers said they were well acquainted with her preferred writing tool: Pilot Precise V7 Roller Ball pens. The pens are "seared into everyone's brain,” a former aide said

    Cheap date.
    Probably has a secret locker full of Montblancs.
  • FF43 said:

    As it would be highly illegal for the council not to provide education in that case, I sense bullshit but admit I didn't penetrate past the paywall.
    'The mother, who asked not to be named, had applied for a place at two schools via the council’s online portal amid fears she could be priced out of her daughter’s private school by the Government’s VAT raid.

    The email from Buckinghamshire council said: “Unfortunately we cannot offer any places at your preferred school/s as they are full”.

    The email continued: “In this circumstance, we would normally advocate that [the child] should remain at their current school. However, if you can provide evidence that you can no longer finance the independent school fees, please advise and we can make a local authority non-preference allocation.” '

    I hasten to add I have a pay wall buster extension in Firefox, would not want anyone thinking I shell out to read Das Torygraaf
  • Leon said:

    Why don't you just fuck off to Penarth?
    :lol:
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,454
    Evening all :)

    I'm listening to Love is Blue by Paul Mauriat (what a classic)

    This is of no relevance.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,664
    TimS said:

    This is a political site, so there needs to be a policy answer. Appellation contrôlée / DOC rules perhaps?
    Not clear if PDOs are a long-term net positive or negative food culture wise, whatever their economic and trade advantages.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,286

    You only describe horrible things replacing better things

    If there were superior things coming in, I wouldn't care so much about the names

    But no "carbonara" is anywhere near as good as proper carbonara

    If there's a good cream dish, I'm sure it should have its own name
    I love proper carbonara: pancetta, eggs, parmesan. Definitely no cream - save that for an age-old traditional Italian dessert like tiramisu.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,664
    FF43 said:

    As it would be highly illegal for the council not to provide education in that case, I sense bullshit but admit I didn't penetrate past the paywall.
    They said it, then admitted they shouldn't have said it.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    edited September 2024
    kamski said:

    Yes I cycle a lot to get from a to b and b to c every day, I would definitely slow down approaching any kind of junction unless I was 100% sure there wasn't some careless driver around who might kill me.

    I might have some sympathy for the driver here, we all make mistakes. Usually we get away with them and hopefully learn from them.

    But if @HYUFD thinks that the cyclist is to blame here then I'm afraid that makes @HYUFD a dangerous driver, and I'm alarmed to learn he has a licence.
    One of the lessons here is sightlines. Predictability is so much easier if everyone can see everyone in advance. It designs out much of the risk of blind corners, and the need to remember to anticipate all the areas that you cannot see are clear.

    If you read the Dutch CROW Manual going back a long, long way, minimums are specified depending on the design speed of the elements different networks intersecting, form of the junctions concerned etc.

    We have certain rules, but we are nothing like systematic about it, much is optional, and our road designers normally have little or no CPD required by employers, whilst Highways Authorities (I have FOId several on their policy pm various occasions) will say "we have no policy, as our engineers will take all the guidelines into account".

    There are any number of design elements we pay zero attention to making safe and fail safe (as opposed to fail dangerous) in this country.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    carnforth said:

    Not clear if PDOs are a long-term net positive or negative food culture wise, whatever their economic and trade advantages.
    They’ve been pretty useless for English wine so far but that’s because they are a. too broad, b. not rooted in meaningful geographic areas (Sussex doesn’t make sense, for example). But they could definitely play a useful role in future. We need a PDO for North Downs (or “Kent downs”), Surrey hills, Weald, South Downs, Thames Valley, Wye valley and a few other coherent bio geographical regions.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842

    I love proper carbonara: pancetta, eggs, parmesan. Definitely no cream - save that for an age-old traditional Italian dessert like tiramisu.
    Nice trolling.
  • I love proper carbonara: pancetta, eggs, parmesan. Definitely no cream - save that for an age-old traditional Italian dessert like tiramisu.
    Guanciale and pecorino, not pancetta and parmesan
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,286

    I was somewhat abused on here a month or two ago for worrying about bird flu:

    BNO News Live
    @BNODesk

    BREAKING: Missouri reports human case of H5 bird flu with no known link to animals

    https://x.com/BNODesk/status/1832148899135680614

    Is there a Chinese lab nearby?
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    carnforth said:

    They said it, then admitted they shouldn't have said it.
    Full article:

    https://archive.ph/XASmv

    The mother, who asked not to be named, had applied for a place at two schools via the council’s online portal amid fears she could be priced out of her daughter’s current private school by the Government’s VAT raid.
    The email from Buckinghamshire council said: “Unfortunately we cannot offer any places at your preferred school/s as they are full”.
    The email continued: “In this circumstance, we would normally advocate that [the child] should remain at their current school. However, if you can provide evidence that you can no longer finance the independent school fees, please advise and we can make a local authority non-preference allocation.”
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,286
    edited September 2024

    Guanciale and pecorino, not pancetta and parmesan
    Delia says pancetta* and parmesan, so pancetta and parmesan it is.

    (*Actually Delia says bacon and parmesan in her Complete Cookery Course but that was printed in 1981 when pancetta didn't exist.)
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,564
    edited September 2024

    Cheap date.
    Probably has a secret locker full of Montblancs.
    Aren't Montblancs a bit ... well ... the sort of thing JD Vance might have? Kind of like a Hugo Boss suit or a Tesla Cybertruck, worn or used by aspirational klutzes with no self-confidence.

    I remember far too many of them belonging to salesmen or consultants in shiny suits.
  • Delia says pancetta* and parmesan, so pancetta and parmesan it is.

    (*Actually Delia says bacon and parmesan in her Complete Cookery COurse but that was printed in 1981 when pancetta didn't exist.)
    Delia isn't cream wrong, but she's wrong

    Guaciale releases far more fat, and pecorino has a different flavour to parmesan
  • Pasta la vista, baby.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,629
    i recommend Netflix TV series The Turning Point, on the War on Terror since 9/11

    Our abandonment of Afhganistan was utterly shameful

    Lessons

    1. America should have eliminated, one way or another, everyone in Guantanamo right from the off. China would have done exactly that. Stop pretending we are "better than China", it is western exceptionalism and it cripples us

    2. We need to wise up re Islamism. Good fences make good neighbours. We need fences
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842

    Delia isn't cream wrong, but she's wrong

    Guaciale releases far more fat, and pecorino has a different flavour to parmesan
    Guaciale is an even more recent invention for Carbonara. Originally it was with bacon.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,842
    TimS said:

    Guaciale is an even more recent invention for Carbonara. Originally it was with bacon.
    This was the fun chap we were talking about in a previous thread.

    https://www.ft.com/content/6ac009d5-dbfd-4a86-839e-28bb44b2b64c
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,664
    MattW said:

    Full article:

    https://archive.ph/XASmv

    The mother, who asked not to be named, had applied for a place at two schools via the council’s online portal amid fears she could be priced out of her daughter’s current private school by the Government’s VAT raid.
    The email from Buckinghamshire council said: “Unfortunately we cannot offer any places at your preferred school/s as they are full”.
    The email continued: “In this circumstance, we would normally advocate that [the child] should remain at their current school. However, if you can provide evidence that you can no longer finance the independent school fees, please advise and we can make a local authority non-preference allocation.”
    Here's where they pretend they didn't mean to say it:

    "A spokesman for Buckinghamshire council said they wanted to “apologise for the choice of language” and insisted it does not reflect any formal policy.

    Anita Cranmer, the council’s cabinet member for education and children’s services, said: “We believe this wording was taken from an individual correspondence rather than being a formal policy and we apologise for the choice of language; we are happy to confirm this direct with the family and will not be seeking personal financial information from them or any other Buckinghamshire family.

    “The intention was to seek confirmation in this case as to whether the family was relinquishing the child’s current school place and would definitely be seeking an ‘in year’ school place even though their preferred school is full, or whether they would be staying at their current school which is often the case when families aren’t able to get a place at a preferred school.”
  • TimS said:

    Guaciale is an even more recent invention for Carbonara. Originally it was with bacon.
    Guaciale was invented to make the best carbonara, which takes slightly longer to cook

    Cream was mixed into other ingredients to make a quick carbonara substitute

    Your cream, bacon, (mushroom?) and cheese with pasta will never be carbonara to anyone that knows carbonara
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,783
    MattW said:

    One of the lessons here is sightlines. Predictability is so much easier if everyone can see everyone in advance. It designs out much of the risk of blind corners, and the need to remember to anticipate all the areas that you cannot see are clear.

    If you read the Dutch CROW Manual going back a long, long way, minimums are specified depending on the design speed of the elements different networks intersecting, form of the junctions concerned etc.

    We have certain rules, but we are nothing like systematic about it, much is optional, and our road designers normally have little or no CPD required by employers, whilst Highways Authorities (I have FOId several on their policy pm various occasions) will say "we have no policy, as our engineers will take all the guidelines into account".

    There are any number of design elements we pay zero attention to making safe and fail safe (as opposed to fail dangerous) in this country.
    But going back to that example in Coventry - that cyclist will have been able to see the car as she approached the junction. She didn't take evasive action because the car was stationary and she reasonably assumed that the car was going to wait for her to pass until pulling into the road.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    edited September 2024
    mercator said:

    'The mother, who asked not to be named, had applied for a place at two schools via the council’s online portal amid fears she could be priced out of her daughter’s private school by the Government’s VAT raid.

    The email from Buckinghamshire council said: “Unfortunately we cannot offer any places at your preferred school/s as they are full”.

    The email continued: “In this circumstance, we would normally advocate that [the child] should remain at their current school. However, if you can provide evidence that you can no longer finance the independent school fees, please advise and we can make a local authority non-preference allocation.” '

    I hasten to add I have a pay wall buster extension in Firefox, would not want anyone thinking I shell out to read Das Torygraaf
    If I understand this correctly the schools the parent applied for were oversubscribed and her child didn't meet the criteria for admission. The local authority then suggested a way they could jump the queue by claiming poverty on the school fees, which was also illegal. Presumably the parent could have got their child into a school that wasn't their preference and that is frequent outcome when parents apply normally. In general however you wouldn't move unless it's to a preferred choice, hence the normal recommendation to stay put if you don't get your preference.

    A bit different from what was implied by the summary.
  • There's some promising news from Ukraine. In recent days it is reported that they have stabilised the frontline near Pokrovsk, regained some of Niu-York, and continue to advance in Kursk. Meanwhile Russian soldiers are now apparently looting property from their own citizens in Belgorod Oblast (and making some advances in Vuhledar).

    The main contrary indicator is that Russian artillery losses appear to have dropped by about a third, back to the level of around for months ago.
This discussion has been closed.