> RH> > I'll have some in chocolate but it's a rather small amount
compared
> RH> to what I'd get in a cuppa tea. Not enough to bother me, for
the
> most part.
>
> RH> I did't know chocolate counted, officially anyway.
>
> Anything with caffiene in it counts. But, since the amount of
chocolate
> consumed at any time plus the relatively small amount of caffiene
in
> chocolate, it doesn't count for a lot.
>
Hence the reason I do coffee.
> RH> > I've got the one we'd sent my parents when we went to Israel
10
> RH> years ago. Also have most of the set my dad's parents had when
he
> was a kid.
>
> RH> Nice. My family never had an older set so we don't have it.
>
> My folks inherited it so I grew up with the set. When they passed
away,
> my brother put it up for "who wants?" so I asked for it. Some of
the
> (very) minor pieces were in pretty sorry shape so they were
discarded
> but the majority of the set survives.
I see an old set around once in a while, but never wanted another
one.
> common road block. The store also had a small chainstitch only
machine,
> only about
>
> RH> Made for export to Britain? They were using hand cranked
chain
> RH> stitch machines right up until WWII. I've seen a few but
never owned
> RH> one.
>
> It looked like a toy, could have been one of those chain stitch
only
> machine that have been sold over the years for those that want a
small
> sewing machine. I wouldn't give 2 cents for them as a useable
machine;
> I've advised parents looking to get a machine for a child to get a
> proper ome. It saves a lot of frustration. The small one I saw
would be
> nice as a collectable but I wouldn't use it for sewing.
I saw one of the toys in an antique store today. Itty bitty sewing
machine. I wouldn't have wanted to try using it for anything other
than a shelf filler.
> RH> > 6-8" long/high, all metal, made the year I was born. Tempted
but
> RH> figured I'd rather have a machine that could do a better
stitch.
>
> RH> One that small was probably a toy.
>
> Basically, yes. I didn't check it out too closely--the asking price
was
> rather high.
>
For ones in good shape, it doesn't surprise me.
> It was our week to cook for our LG at church today; I wanted
something
> easy do since we're between trips. Settled on Mexican lasagne with
> garlic bread, tossed salad and peach cobbler for dessert. It was
well
> liked, even had a request for the recipe. Basically it's tortillas
> instead of noodles, the basic cheese mix and a Mexican flavored
meat
> sauce instead of Italian flavors.
Sounds good to me. I did mostly leftovers tonight. I made turkey meat
loaf and stuffing the other night and tonight fried up the starches
and sweet potato. Served it with grapefruit and cooked broccoli. I
figure I finally got my Thanksgiving dinner.
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