| 
	
		
			
				|  » Site Navigation |  
	|  |  
	
		
			
				|  » Online Users: 108 |  
| 0 members and 108 guests |  
		| No Members online |  
		| Most users ever online was 9,654, 05-18-2025 at 04:16 AM. |  | 
	
		|  |  |  
	
	
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 07:11 PM | #2041 |  
	| Moderator 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Podunkville 
					Posts: 6,034
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Oliver_Wendell_Ramone  I don't care what Don Draper does with it but keep your seltzer out of my old fashioned.  Not as offensive as muddled fruit cocktail, but still. |  A splash to help the bitters moisten the sugar cubes. You use still water (or nothing) for that? Genuinely curious.
 
True confession -- I got the old fashioned recipe from a Rachel Maddow YouTube series. The bartender at this whiskey cocktail joint a client took me to in [redacted city] after a mediation told me to look them up after I watched him make a few that way. She is apparently a classic cocktail snob, in addition to being a pinko commie lesbian sent from Mockba to destroy Western Civilization. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 07:18 PM | #2042 |  
	| Moderator 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Rose City 'til I Die 
					Posts: 3,309
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  A splash to help the bitters moisten the sugar cubes. You use still water (or nothing) for that? Genuinely curious.
 True confession -- I got the old fashioned recipe from a Rachel Maddow YouTube series. The bartender at this whiskey cocktail joint a client took me to in [redacted city] after a mediation told me to look them up after I watched him make a few that way. She is apparently a classic cocktail snob, in addition to being a pinko commie lesbian sent from Mockba to destroy Western Civilization.
 |  Still water, indeed.  I suppose a splash in that context would be okay.  But I see "seltzer" and think about the fizzy "old fashions" I've been served on more than one occassion.  Frequently with the muddled fruit cocktail.  Yuck.
 
And Hank is Atkins, right, so if he drinks G & Ts at all, he probably uses diet tonic.  
 
I like the new less-sugar "craft" tonics out there, but they are wayyyy to expensive for the quantity of gin and tonic I go through once the weather gets decent.
				__________________Drinking gin from a jam jar.
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 07:31 PM | #2043 |  
	| Proud Holder-Post 200,000 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Corner Office 
					Posts: 86,149
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  Ever look at the Nutrition Facts label on your bottle/can of Canada Dry tonic water ("with quinine" so that you can have a few and protect yourself from malaria while putting down the Sepoy Mutiny this summer).
 Never mind -- I will look for you. The bottle I have handy says my Canada Dry tonic has 29 grams of sugar (it's a 10 oz bottle). For comparison, look at a can of Coca Cola Classic. 39 grams for a 12 oz can. Thus, a G&T has about as much sugar as a Cuba Libre, NTTAWWT.
 |  I don't drink tonic or coke. or, if forced to drink a V&T there is so little T in it as to be non-insulin inducing. Now I'll just be that much more snobbish.
				__________________I will not suffer a fool- but I do seem to read a lot of their posts   |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 07:47 PM | #2044 |  
	| Patch Diva 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Winter Wonderland 
					Posts: 4,607
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  And, as I think I noted last year, the Official Not Bob Summer Drink..... |  The Official Fugee Summer Drink last year was lemonade with a healthy splash of my homemade strawberry liqueur.
 
Dangerous stuff on a hot day.  
 
Unfortunately the rainy weather last June meant the strawberry crop was gone before I got around to making another batch of the strawberry hooch, so will have to drink something else this summer. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 07:52 PM | #2045 |  
	| Moderator 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Rose City 'til I Die 
					Posts: 3,309
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Hank Chinaski  I don't drink tonic or coke. or, if forced to drink a V&T there is so little T in it as to be non-insulin inducing. Now I'll just be that much more snobbish. |  You are totally getting malaria.
				__________________Drinking gin from a jam jar.
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 08:10 PM | #2046 |  
	| Flaired. 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Out with Lumbergh. 
					Posts: 9,954
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Oliver_Wendell_Ramone  Still water, indeed.  I suppose a splash in that context would be okay.  But I see "seltzer" and think about the fizzy "old fashions" I've been served on more than one occassion.  Frequently with the muddled fruit cocktail.  Yuck.
 And Hank is Atkins, right, so if he drinks G & Ts at all, he probably uses diet tonic.
 
 I like the new less-sugar "craft" tonics out there, but they are wayyyy to expensive for the quantity of gin and tonic I go through once the weather gets decent.
 |  Dare I mention that I've taken to ordering my G&T's with half tonic, half soda? The, uh, skinnygirl gin and tonic. Bethanny can thank me for the involved recipe later.
				__________________See you later, decorator.
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 08:44 PM | #2047 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Jun 2005 
					Posts: 764
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  Ever look at the Nutrition Facts label on your bottle/can of Canada Dry tonic water ("with quinine" so that you can have a few and protect yourself from malaria while putting down the Sepoy Mutiny this summer).
 Never mind -- I will look for you. The bottle I have handy says my Canada Dry tonic has 29 grams of sugar (it's a 10 oz bottle). For comparison, look at a can of Coca Cola Classic. 39 grams for a 12 oz can. Thus, a G&T has about as much sugar as a Cuba Libre, NTTAWWT.
 |  I prefer the taste of diet tonic water anyway. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:03 PM | #2048 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 17,175
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  True, but with all the beer snobs around here, it will go from ridiculing my love of the Bucket of Rocks special at the Dew Droppe Inn to all sorts of pedantic hop barley yeast equations and obscure microbrew one-upsmanship. |  Beer served in a bucket gets special dispensation.
 
If its cheap. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:05 PM | #2049 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 17,175
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  A splash to help the bitters moisten the sugar cubes. You use still water (or nothing) for that? Genuinely curious.
 True confession -- I got the old fashioned recipe from a Rachel Maddow YouTube series. The bartender at this whiskey cocktail joint a client took me to in [redacted city] after a mediation told me to look them up after I watched him make a few that way. She is apparently a classic cocktail snob, in addition to being a pinko commie lesbian sent from Mockba to destroy Western Civilization.
 |  I share Hank horror at adding sugar to a drink, but not his hangover superstition.  
 
A drink ideally involves no more than booze, maybe ice, and maybe a small wedge of lime. If you require any more, you hold drink better booze. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:12 PM | #2050 |  
	| Proud Holder-Post 200,000 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Corner Office 
					Posts: 86,149
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Not Bob  A splash to help the bitters moisten the sugar cubes. You use still water (or nothing) for that? Genuinely curious.
 True confession -- I got the old fashioned recipe from a Rachel Maddow YouTube series. The bartender at this whiskey cocktail joint a client took me to in [redacted city] after a mediation told me to look them up after I watched him make a few that way. She is apparently a classic cocktail snob, in addition to being a pinko commie lesbian sent from Mockba to destroy Western Civilization.
 |  she's  not a pinko if she makes drinks just like the founders did back in 1776! But, you know their fish was almost 100% salted because it would otherwise spoil, and their spirits tasted like vomit because they had sub-par distilling and storing, right? that's why they put sugar in the whiskey. Do you only eat bacala when you drink old fashioned or are you throwing out half the old time pretension?
				__________________I will not suffer a fool- but I do seem to read a lot of their posts  
				 Last edited by Hank Chinaski; 05-22-2012 at 09:17 PM..
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:26 PM | #2051 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Appalaichan Trail 
					Posts: 6,201
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Hank Chinaski  she's  not a pinko if she makes drinks just like the founders did back in 1776! But, you know their fish was almost 100% salted because it would otherwise spoil, and their spirits tasted like vomit because they had sub-par distilling and storing, right? that's why they put sugar in the whiskey. Do you only eat bacala when you drink old fashioned or are you throwing out half the old time pretension? |  "Bacala" is the name of a Sopranos character.
 
Perhaps you're thinking of "bacalao"?  
 
Otherwise -- this is a pretty good smackdown. |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:38 PM | #2052 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Appalaichan Trail 
					Posts: 6,201
				      | 
				
				Good News and Bad News
			 
 Remember that "riddle" from long ago (I distinctly remember its being the subject of an All in the Family episode -- before I was born, of course) involving a father and son in a car accident?  The father is killed instantly, and the son is Medivac'ed to a nearby hospital and rushed to the O.R. for emergency surgery.  Upon seeing the boy's face when preparing for surgery, the doctor declares, "I can't operate on this boy... He's  my son!!"  So... how can this be?
 I asked this "riddle" of my family this evening - certain that the kids would know the answer right away, and would look at me as though I had lost my marbles for characterizing it as a "trick question".  I was pretty sure my husband wouldn't get it right away.
 
 Imagine my disappointment when my younger children guessed things like, "The father wasn't really dead!!"  "The father crawled into the helicopter...".  Sigh.
 
 My husband (perhaps predictably) said, "It had to be his step-father."
 
 So the bad news is obvious.  The good news, however, is that both my 9-year-olds and my 13-year-old (quizzed independently) immediately came up with, "The parents are gay, and the surgeon is the dad's husband!"
 
 We're so modern!
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 09:47 PM | #2053 |  
	| Proud Holder-Post 200,000 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Corner Office 
					Posts: 86,149
				      | 
				
				Re: Good News and Bad News
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by dtb  Remember that "riddle" from long ago (I distinctly remember its being the subject of an All in the Family episode -- before I was born, of course) involving a father and son in a car accident?  The father is killed instantly, and the son is Medivac'ed to a nearby hospital and rushed to the O.R. for emergency surgery.  Upon seeing the boy's face when preparing for surgery, the doctor declares, "I can't operate on this boy... He's  my son!!"  So... how can this be?
 I asked this "riddle" of my family this evening - certain that the kids would know the answer right away, and would look at me as though I had lost my marbles for characterizing it as a "trick question".  I was pretty sure my husband wouldn't get it right away.
 
 Imagine my disappointment when my younger children guessed things like, "The father wasn't really dead!!"  "The father crawled into the helicopter...".  Sigh.
 
 My husband (perhaps predictably) said, "It had to be his step-father."
 
 So the bad news is obvious.  The good news, however, is that both my 9-year-olds and my 13-year-old (quizzed independently) immediately came up with, "The parents are gay, and the surgeon is the dad's husband!"
 
 We're so modern!
 |  maybe the boys need better examples of modern professional females? 
zing!!!!
				__________________I will not suffer a fool- but I do seem to read a lot of their posts   |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-22-2012, 10:28 PM | #2054 |  
	| Hello, Dum-Dum. 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 10,117
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
	
		|  05-23-2012, 10:10 AM | #2055 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 11,873
				      | 
				
				Re: Stuck on Repeats
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Atticus Grinch   |  Not sure what's creepier, that ad or the fact that you posted it.
				__________________Where are my elephants?!?!
 |  
	|   |  |  
	
		|  |  |  
 
 
	| 
	|  Posting Rules |  
	| 
		
		You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts 
 HTML code is Off 
 |  |  |  
 
	
	
		
	
	
 |