Tannin
Storage? I am Storage!
I thought I got to make the decisions around here? Oh well. Another weekend job for Tannin. At least I'll get to fix a couple of minor errors.
What you are seeing is an oxidation process
Tea said:...And speaking of taste, there ain't nuffin like the taste of chips with salt and vinegar. You can try this at home, but it won't work. Here is what you do: buy some chips (or make your own). Not those anemic little McChucks style of thing, real ones, like you get from a fish and chip shop. They should be about 1.5cm square. Now, go to your kitchen cupboard and pour some vinegar on them. Taste. White vinegar or brown, it doesn't matter. Yuk!
The secret is, you have to do it the same way they do it at the fish shop: you put it on while they are still really, really hot, and you wrap them up and let the flavour seep right through. That's the first part. The second part is, you have to think like a fish shop owner. These guys never buy vinegar. Why should they pay for it when those great big jars of pickled onions that sit on the counter, once you take the onions out, are full of vinegar? That is the vinegar you use. That, and only that, will give you the proper flavour...
slo crostic said:Didn't they try a $200 coin back in the late 80's? I remember hearing about it but I never saw one.
Tea said:I take it, then, that malt vinegar is the stuff they use to pickle onions in?
.Nut said:
slo crostic said:Didn't they try a $200 coin back in the late 80's? I remember hearing about it but I never saw one.
Are you talking about the South African Krugerrand?
mubs said:I've been in the U.S. 17 years, and have never seen a $2 bill. If i hadn't posted the link to the Bureau of Engraving, I'd never have believed it really exists......
fool said:
there are some days when my isp makes me wanna reprogram their servers with an axe. :frusty:
Tannin said:Complete the following verse:
I was wheelin down the freeway at just the cruising power
The state trooper clocked me at 90 miles an hour
.....
Dïscfärm said:
By the way, the US Treasury Department will be releasing $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, and god willing, $2 notes in various hues sometime next year. I can't wait to see a blue $20, a yellow $5, or a pink $50.
Dïscfärm said:By the way, the US Treasury Department will be releasing $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, and god willing, $2 notes in various hues sometime next year. I can't wait to see a blue $20, a yellow $5, or a pink $50.
blakerwry said:That's too bad...
Buck said:...I was under the impression that the $2 and $1 notes were not included in the NexGen series.
...They're actually going ahead with the $10 and $5 change too. That was just under consideration previously.
Dïscfärm said:...They're actually going ahead with the $10 and $5 change too. That was just under consideration previously.
That's a $10 and $5 coin (assuming change ± = "loose change"), correct?
I have not heard a peep from anyone about $5 and/or $10 coinage. I get those "bronze" $1 coins every now and then -- which is a bit more often than $2 notes. Will the $5 and $10 be larger in size or will they actually contain some real precious metals?
Navigation ist wenn man dennoch ankommt
Buck said:For my part, that should've read: "They're actually going ahead with the $10 and $5 banknote update too?"