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MickParticipantThe sad thing is that Mrs. Mick detests seafood, she doesn’t even want to see me eat it at a restaurant. So I don’t really have any seafood dishes from Mrs. Mick.
That said, however…my son lost a bet in which he had to eat a pescetarian diet for three weeks. He divided his meals into three: salmon/non-salmon/sushi.
I won’t opine on sushi, it’s too personal of a taste. But here was his favorite salmon dish, which was rosemary salmon with orange. Super easy:
Ingredients
- 1 garlic cloves
- 1 or 2 small rosemary sprigs chopped or 1 tablespoon dried rosemary
- 1 or 2 6oz salmon filets
- Dash of sea salt and black pepper
- 1 tbsp Orange peel or grated Orange zest
- Balsamic glaze
- Olive Oil for cooking
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°. Next chop garlic and rosemary and mix together with orange zest.
- Place salmon in foil or oiled baking dish. Drizzle each filet with olive oil and sprinkle with the rest of your herbs/seasoning. Including the salt and pepper. You can also drizzle a little balsamic glaze over each filet if you’d like.
- Place baking dish in oven for about 10-12 minutes or until the salmon flesh is flaky.
- You can also grill this in foil for about 10 minutes Both work!
As for non-salmon, my current flavorite is perch. Best recipe, also easy:
Ingredients
- ½ cup butter, melted
- ⅔ cup crushed saltine crackers
- ¼ cup grated Parmesan cheese
- ½ teaspoon dried basil
- ½ teaspoon dried oregano
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 pound yellow perch fillets
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Pour butter into a shallow dish. Combine cracker crumbs, Parmesan cheese, basil, oregano, salt, and garlic powder in a separate shallow bowl.
- Dip perch fillets into melted butter and press into the seasoned cracker crumbs to coat. Arrange coated fillets on a baking sheet.
- Bake in the preheated oven until the coating is browned and fish flakes easily with a fork, 25 to 30 minutes.
Best of success!
MickParticipantBelated Happy Thanksgiving as well. Pretty good way to celebrate Thanksgiving Mick. How many people were involved over 3 days?
Seventeen regulars, seven of whom were cooking. The rest were kids, grandparents or dishwashers (my category).
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This reply was modified 3 years, 5 months ago by
Mick.
MickParticipantTwo thoughts. First, with respect to the wrongful death aspect of suicide, it needs to be examined whether Stanford owed Katie Meyer a “special duty of care,” which covers a fairly broad ground. If Katie was on prescription meds, or under the care of a psychiatrist, therapist or doctor and Stanford was aware of same, then Stanford would be wise to construct a thorough legal defense. And in fact, Katie did seek care at Stanford’s Sports Psychology Clinic, she talked about considering suicide and was prescribed medication. Similar goes if Katie felt bullied, either by the school or the football player. Bullying isn’t just person-to-person, institutional bullying can be argued as well, particularly since they didn’t hold the football player to the same level of (semi)legal scrutiny. If any administrator at Stanford ignored a direct or indirect plea for help, well…
Separately…I worry about the “always believe women” position. When I grew up, my mother hated men (with good reason), and she would predictably take my sister’s side over that of my brother and me, every single time. That led to some monstrous behavior on the part of my sister. Professionally speaking, I’m aware of numerous situations in which women were believed completely, and incorrectly. In that environment, when a woman can speak no wrong, is it a far jump to imply that she can do no wrong; e.g., throwing a cup of coffee on someone who offends you is perfectly acceptable. Gives rise to “Karens” everywhere, is my concern.
One final point…as Harvey Weinstein is about to go down for the third time, it’s easy to point out what a reprehensible lizard he was. Imagine, demanding sexual favors in trade for career advancement. Horrific, I agree. And yet…while it is awful for the gander, it’s acceptable for the goose? How is that different from what Kamala Harris did? She carried on a public affair (so public that it was discussed in Herb Caen’s column) with a highly placed public official, Willie Brown, who gave her the first two political positions she had. And a BMW, as Willie proudly noted. Like a budding actress, she slept with a powerful man and received favors. Why no public outcry? Why was it off-limits during the campaign?
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This reply was modified 3 years, 5 months ago by
Mick.
MickParticipantBelated Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Glad we do have this site, even if it’s just for a few enthusiasts. New t-day recipe. Roasted turnips and carrots. My 16 year old vegetarian absolutely loved them. We’re in the sticks back East, and a neighbor noted that fresh turnips are in. Never ate one, let alone cooked one in my life. . .. Gotta admit, they were indeed very tasty! Rutabagas next year. . . .
One of the things I’m most thankful for in my life is that I married a gourmet chef, and she’s in a family of great cooks…and they’re competitive.
Our Thanksgiving starts on Wednesday with a regional dinner (Mexican this year), just the adults, at a local club. Thanksgiving day, every one of these great cooks takes two dishes and puts their own spin on it. Friday morning, a brunch, and each cook creates a brunch dish. There are no leftovers…
MickParticipantYou’re older than me, Gramps. I’m 60…the springiest of spring chickens…now get off my lawn…
MickParticipantDoesn’t surprise me, tbh, and not just because Journalism is a dying/nearly dead business. My early connections with journalists weren’t positive, I didn’t have much respect for the profession. My sister, who is one of the most objectionable people I know, worked as a journalist at the local paper, writing a muckraking article. The editor loved it, and essentially wanted her to write all sleaze all the time. Disgusted by the emphasis, she quit in a huff. If my sister thinks you ooze slease, well then…
Seeing Marketing Management/Research on the list surprises me, a little. My undergrad major was Finance. I always knew that I’d end up in Marketing, but as the oldest of six, my father limited my options to Accounting, Finance or Engineering. I had zero affinity for engineering, and I was an Accounting major until Intermediate Accounting (it’s the Great Separator, basically the HumBio of the Accounting world…either you have it or you don’t, and I definitely didn’t have it). Ergo, Finance. My favorite undergrad course was the single Marketing class I took from a mensch of a prof named Moshe Handelsman.
I wish I’d been able to major in MM/R, it would have been very helpful in my career. Oh well. And I really liked the final comment on being a lawyer. My brother was a Poli/Sci major who now practices as a public defender in San Diego. According to the ABA and as of 2020, there are 1.3 million lawyers in the United States. Or as the legal profession likes to comment, just four lawyers for every 1,000 Americans.
MickParticipantI don’t think Trump has a chance to win the primary — unless many Republicans get in and split the primary vote. He has a lot of support, no question. But I have to think that cooler heads will prevail. In a very strange way, he’ll generate a huge turnout among the anti-Trump Republicans — for that reason, I actually support the idea of him running. Republicans will register to vote in record numbers. Based upon how Trump’s candidates got trounced last week, I have to think his support is receding. Not just that, it is likely that Biden and other progressive Democrats will continue to stink up the joint. Incidentally, I don’t dislike Democrats — I’m a registered Independent, and I prefer to think carefully and soberly about any politician for whom I vote. I voted for Obama over McCain and for Romney over Obama.
Once Trump loses the primary, he and the anti-democracy/vote conspiracy people will be finished. I do, however, hope that his common-sense policies remain. Every time I hear a politician support a common sense, middle-of-the-road policy, I want to weep, because it’s so rare. That’s what attracted people to Trump in the first place. And let’s not forget that if there wasn’t a COVID pandemic, Trump would have won the 2020 Presidential election. Or if it had been any other candidate instead of you-can-always-count-on-Joe-Biden-to-f-things-up (my favorite Obama quote), then Trump would have won, because the Dems were only running polemicists like Bernie or Pocahontas.
MickParticipantPs: I read that Republican house candidates received 6 million more votes nationally than their democrat counterparts. Yet relatively few seats flipped. The power of gerrymandering front and center. Do citizens have a “vote” anymore?
At 10 p.m. Pacific time on November 10, the vote count is:
Republicans, 50,935,540 (52.2%)
Democrats, 45,226,768 (47.8%)
So the Repubs have about 5.7 million votes more than the Dems.
MickParticipant
MickParticipantWe’re going to be paying for this for decades. We flooded the system with money, didn’t allow many people to work, ruined kids with the sorry-assed approach to “education” (thanks education unions!), and beat the hell out of many of our core industries.
Just makes me sick.
MickParticipantWhat makes me mad about inflation is that it erodes savings. It takes most people a lot of sacrifice to build up a nest egg. To have it devalued by 13% (being generous here) means a lot more time, sacrifice, and effort just to build it back up again. Not to mention main store of savings (stocks) are down 25% lately. https://nypost.com/2022/10/16/average-american-is-losing-34k-and-everything-else-on-bidens-watch/ Not to mention that real wages have declined every month for 19 straight months. An astonishing “accomplishment.”
I’ve had 2/3rds of my investment in cash for nearly a year now. Just bad feelings about economic mismanagement by the current administration.
MickParticipantEvery variable rate loan (mortgages, credit cards, auto financing) just got a lot more expensive. Real estate will likely hit a hard ceiling, and I suspect will drop substantially in certain areas that experienced big runups. Going to be a tough next six months…to a year. Or two…
US Home Prices Now Posting Biggest Monthly Drops Since 2009 (yahoo.com)
San Jose and San Francisco housing markets are leading the decline with 13% and 11% drops in residential real estate values.
MickParticipantMakes one wonder what those 87,000 new IRS employees will focus on?
I don’t wonder. I think we all know what 87,000 IRS agents will be focused. Collectively turning the taxpayers upside down and shaking as much money out of them as they possibly can. The IRS estimates that there is a $600 bils. delta between their collections and what they estimate they should collect.
As to the new budget and new headcount, here’s what it’s really going for:
– $45 billion of the $80 billion appropriated is going to update systems.
– In the next five years, 50,000 IRS employees will retire and will need to be replaced.
– They only answered 11% of their calls in 2021, so that needs to be addressed.
– In fact, they still have 8 million unprocessed 2021 tax returns.
– There’s been an overall 17% reduction in IRS workforce since 2010 That needs to be addressed, and in that time, the percentage of returns that were audited went from 0.9% to 0.25%. That needs to be addressed.
– Yes, the number of audits will go up, but likely only for people making $400k or more annually; basically high net worth individuals, complex partnerships and large corporations.
– Supposedly, only 57.3% of the estimated new 86,852 agents will be assigned to enforcement.
MickParticipantpublic confessions of doubt by Jay Powell don’t help the nation’s confidence:
Fed unsure of economy’s direction as Wall Street meltdown worsens (msn.com)
MickParticipantSo not only did the Fed increase rates 75 basis points, they signalled that there will likely be another 75 basis point increase and a 50 basis point increase in the next two sessions.
Every variable rate loan (mortgages, credit cards, auto financing) just got a lot more expensive. Real estate will likely hit a hard ceiling, and I suspect will drop substantially in certain areas that experienced big runups.
Going to be a tough next six months…to a year. Or two…
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