Month: November 2010

  • For WildWoman - The Things That We Collect.

     

     

    Tamy (wildwomanofthewest) has asked us to show off what we collect.

    Karen loves these Nutcracker figures!

    Pictures 108

    I seem to have an affinity for picking up cigarette lighters.

    lighters 001

    We have a complete service for 12 with most of the serving pieces of Royal China's Currier and Ives blue pattern.

    collections 002

    Slightly smaller collection of the pink Memory Lane pattern.

    collections 001

    Karen's amber Tiara dinnerware collection. I built the china cabinet, btw.

    collections 005

    collections 006

    Don't know if you'd call it a collection, but we have a heck of a lot of cookbooks!

    Collections 017

    I have a few shotglasses.

    Shot glasses 016

    I've managed to pick up a few guns in my 62 years. Some of them were handed down from my father and grandfather.

    I had a Federal Firearms License for a few years when I was younger and am still licensed to carry concealed.

    Pictures 053

    These are the two that I carry.

    S&W's 002

    collections 004

    collections 003

    May be time to put these things on the market to start my final collection.

    Large stacks of crisp $100 bills!

    Whadayathink?

     

     

     

  • Spoon Bread for the Thanksgiving Smorgasbord!

     

     

    Just in case you've been living under a rock somewhere here in Xangaland, Lena (ItsWhatEyeKnow) is hosting a Xanga Thanksgiving Smorgasbord.

    Get on over there and tell her you want to come so she can assign something for you to bring to the party!

    http://itswhateyeknow.xanga.com/734975590/a-xanga-thanksgiving-and-youre-invited

    I'm taking good old southern spoon bread. If you've never eaten it, you just don't know what you've missed.

    It's basically a cornbread souffle, sinfully delicious, and so easy to make!

    First things first, we got new cookware. T-Fal! WOOHOO!

    spoon bread 003

    Now, to the recipe.

    Combine one cup conmeal and two cups milk in a saucepan, and cook over low heat til the consistency of mush, stirring frequently.

    spoon bread 001

    Should be moderately stiff, like this.

    spoon bread 005

    Remove from heat and transfer to a mixing bowl.

    Mix in one cup milk, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon baking powder, three beaten egg yolks, and two tablespoons of salad oil.

    With a mixer, beat three egg whites til stiff peaks form.

    spoon bread 006

    Gently fold the egg whites into the batter.

    spoon bread 007

    Pour batter into a well greased 2 1/2 quart baking dish.

    spoon bread 008

    Bake in a preheated 325 degree oven for 1 hour.

    While it was in the oven, Karen slow braised some breaded pork chops and fixed a little fresh asparagus.

    spoon bread 011

    spoon bread 010

    It's been in the oven for 30 minutes and is rising perfectly!

    spoon bread 009

    *ding*

    It's done, and it's dinnertime in Kentucky!

    spoon bread 002

    Mmmmmmm!

    Pork chops, spoon bread smothered in sweet cream butter, and asparagus.

    I feel a nap coming on soon!

    spoon bread 012

    As good as spoon bread is with pork, it's even better with roasted turkey, stuffing, and gravy!

    Thanksgiving will be here before you know it, so get on over to Lena's and sign up.

    I'm really getting curious as to how she's going to work all these entries into one Xangan Thanksgiving post!

    You can see an update on who's coming and what they're bringing here.

     

     

  • American Pie

     

     

    It's easy to say "buy American" but it's getting harder and harder to find American products to buy!

    **********

    From Yahoo Finance -

    Another American icon has bit the dust: Pontiac.

    GM is canceling the 84-year-old brand after winding down production over the past few years. Like other American automakers, it is restructuring and rebranding to compete with foreign companies.

    Pontiac joins a long list of iconic products that aren't made anywhere in America.

    Meanwhile, plenty of beer is still made here, but many of America’s most-iconic beer brands, including Miller, Coors, and Budweiser, are owned by foreign companies. In 2008, Anheuser-Busch, the St. Louis-based company that has a nearly 50 percent market share in the U.S., was sold to InBev, a Belgium-based conglomerate run by Brazilian executives. In the accompanying video, Julie McIntosh, author of Dethroning the King: The Hostile Takeover of Anheuser-Busch, an American Icon, discusses the deal with Yahoo! Finance economics editor Daniel Gross.

    Here are 18 Iconic Products That America Doesn't Make Anymore:

    Rawlings baseballs

    Last production date: 1969

    Rawlings is the official supplier of baseballs to Major League Baseball. The St. Louis shop was founded in 1887 by George and Alfred Rawlings. In 1969 the brothers moved the baseball-manufacturing plant from Puerto Rico to Haiti and then later to Costa Rica.

    Etch a Sketch

    Last production date: 2000

    Etch A Sketch, an iconic American toy since the 1960s, used to be produced in Bryan, Ohio, a small town of 8,000. Then in Dec. 2000, toymaker Ohio Art decided to move production to Shenzhen, China.

    Converse shoes

    Last production date: 2001

    Marquis M. Converse opened Converse Rubber Show Company in Massachusetts in 1908. Chuck Taylors– named after All American high school basketball player Chuck Taylor– began selling in 1918 as the show eventually produced an industry record of over 550 million pairs by 1997. But in 2001 sales were on the decline and the U.S. factory closed. Now Chuck Taylors are made in Indonesia.

    Stainless steel rebar

    Last production date: circa 2001

    Many forms of this basic steel product are not available domestically. Multiple waivers to the Buy America Act have allowed purchase of rebar internationally.

    Note: The Buy America Act requires government mass transportation spending to use American products.

    Dress shirts*

    Last production date: Oct. 2002

    The last major shirt factory in America closed in October 2002, according to NYT. C.F. Hathaway's Maine factory had been producing shirts since 1837.

    *We know there are other shirt manufacturers in America. They do not produce in large quantities or supply major brands.

    Mattel toys

    Last production date: 2002

    The largest toy company in the world closed their last American factory in 2002. Mattel, headquartered in California, produces 65 percent of their products in China as of August 2007.

    Minivans

    Last production date: circa 2003

    A waiver to the Buy America Act permitted an American producer of wheel-chair accessible minivans to purchase Canadian chassis for use in government contracts, because no chassis were available from the United States. The waiver specified: "General Motors and Chrysler minivan chassis, including those used on the Chevrolet Uplander, Pontiac Montana, Buick Terraza, Saturn Relay, Chrysler Town & Country, and Dodge Grand Caravan, are no longer manufactured in the United States."

    Note: The Buy America Act requires government mass transportation spending to use American products.

    Vending machines

    Last production date: circa 2003

    You know that thing you put bills into on a vending machine? It isn’t made in America, according to a waiver to the Buy America Act.

    Neither is the coin dispenser, according to this federal waiver.

    Note: The Buy America Act requires government mass transportation spending to use American products.

    Levi jeans

    Last production date: Dec. 2003

    Levi Strauss & Co. shut down all its American operations and outsourced  production to Latin America and Asia in Dec. 2003. The company's denim products have been an iconic American product for 150 years.

    Radio Flyer's Red Wagon

    Last production date: March 2004

    The little red wagon has been an iconic image of America for years. But once Radio Flyer decided its Chicago plant was too expensive, it began producing most products, including the red wagon, in China.

    Televisions

    Last production date: Oct. 2004

    Five Rivers Electronic Innovations was the last American owned TV color maker in the US. The Tennessee company used LCoS (liquid crystal on silicon) technology to produce televisions for Philips Electronics. But after Philips decided to stop selling TVs with LCoS, Five Rivers eventually filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Oct. 2004. As part of its reorganization plan, the company stopped manufacturing TVs.

    Now there are ZERO televisions made in America, according to Business Week.

    Cell phones

    Last production date: circa 2007

    Of the 1.2 billion cell phones sold worldwide in 2008, NOT ONE was made in America, according to Manufacturing & Technology publisher Richard McCormick.

    After studying the websites of cell phone companies, we could not identify a single phone that was not manufactured primarily overseas.

    Railroads (parts including manganese turnout castings, U69 guard bars, LV braces and weld kits)

    Last production date: circa 2008

    Here's another standout from dozens of waivers to the Buy America Act: railroad turnouts and weld kits.

    Manganese turnout castings are used to widen railroad tracks, and they were used to build our once-great railroad system. U69 guard bars, LV braces and Weld Kits, along with 22 mm Industrial steel chain are basic items that were certifiably not available in the US.

    Note: The Buy America Act requires government mass transportation spending to use American products.

    Dell computers

    Last production date: Jan. 2010

    In January 2010, Dell closed its North Carolina PC factory, its last large U.S. plant. Analysts said Dell would be outsourcing work to Asian manufacturers in an attempt to catch up with the rest of the industry, said analyst Ashok Kumar.

    Canned sardines

    Last production date: April 2010

    Stinson Seafood plant, the last sardine cannery in Maine and the U.S., shut down in April. The first U.S. sardine cannery opened in Maine in 1875, but since the demand for the small, oily fish declined, more canneries closed shop.

    Pontiac cars

    Last production date: May 2010

    The last Pontiac was produced last May. The brand was formally killed on Halloween, as GM contracts Pontiac dealerships expired.

    The 84-year-old GM brand was famous for muscle cars.

    Forks, spoons, and knives

    Last production date: June 2010

    The last flatware factory in the US closed last summer. Sherrill Manufacturing bought Oneida Ltd. in 2005, but shut down its fork & knife operations due to the tough economy. CEO Greg Owens says his company may resume production "when the general economic climate improves and as Sherrill Manufacturing is able to put itself back on its feet and recapitalize and regroup."

    Incandescent light bulb

    Last production date: Sept. 2010

    The incandescent light bulb (invented by Thomas Edison) has been phased out.

    Our last major factory that made incandescent light bulbs closed in September 2010. In 2007, Congress passed a measure that will ban incandescents by 2014, prompting GE to close its domestic factory.

    **********

    What are some American made products that you buy on a regular basis?

     

  • IT CAME!!!!!!

     

     

    m217179930

    Just received my signed copy of Cadmium (with a neato free bookmark) in the mail. Thanks, Sandra! May be the best ten bucks I've ever spent!

    https://www.createspace.com/3486232

     

     

    Now I need to order a copy of Jacksoncroon's book P.U.D.Z.S.

    z217600702

    Available for pre-order here

    http://www.blackcoffeepress.net/

    Show some support for your fellow Xangans.

    Follow the links and get your copies today!