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Dr. Di September 23rd 07 04:08 PM

powered eggs
 
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage life
is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after opening.. Each
2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small) eggs, costs $14.49, and
your entire order, regardless of size, will ship for $4.49 to anywhere in
the U.S.

We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next cruise..

I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms that
sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..

Diana


KLC Lewis September 23rd 07 04:42 PM

powered eggs
 

"Dr. Di" wrote in message
...
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage life
is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after opening.. Each
2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small) eggs, costs $14.49, and
your entire order, regardless of size, will ship for $4.49 to anywhere in
the U.S.

We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next cruise..

I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms that
sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..

Diana


Eeeewwwwwwwwww! Yuck, bleck, patooie and retch. Powdered eggs make powdered
nonfat milk taste like ambrosia by comparison. But if you like them, you can
have my share. :-)



Armond Perretta September 23rd 07 04:44 PM

powered eggs
 
Dr. Di wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage
life is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after
opening.. Each 2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small) eggs,
costs $14.49, and your entire order, regardless of size, will ship
for $4.49 to anywhere in the U.S.

We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next cruise..

I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms
that sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..

Diana


"Powered" how? Battery. solar, etc.?

--
Good luck and good sailing.
s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat
http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare



Dr. Di September 23rd 07 05:03 PM

powered eggs
 
On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 11:44:21 -0400, Armond Perretta wrote:

Dr. Di wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage
life is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after
opening.. Each 2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small) eggs,
costs $14.49, and your entire order, regardless of size, will ship for
$4.49 to anywhere in the U.S.

We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next cruise..

I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms that
sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..

Diana


"Powered" how? Battery. solar, etc.?


Actually it's cold fusion..

Hey, I'm a scientist, a technocrat, are you not aware that we can't spell?

It should read "powdered".. And I stand corrected..

Thanks...

Diana


[email protected] September 23rd 07 05:23 PM

powered eggs
 
Funny, reading the title to the thread, I was imagining a cross
between a jet ski and a paddle boat...


Bob September 23rd 07 06:09 PM

powered eggs
 
On Sep 23, 8:08 am, "Dr. Di" wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage life
is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened,


I merely wish to relay what we've found..
Diana



Well Diana: I hate to break this to you but about 45+ years ago when I
was jus a poor white boy my moma got USDA commodities. This was before
food stamps. Yep, a real treat to sit down to some steamin hot canned
spam, instant potatoes, and yes........... powdered eggs all washed
down with some nice warm powdered milk fresh from the box.

Ah, but lunch was usually deer or salmon followed with blackberry
pie.

Bob




Capt. JG September 23rd 07 06:10 PM

powered eggs
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
Funny, reading the title to the thread, I was imagining a cross
between a jet ski and a paddle boat...



And getting even more egg on your face in the process....

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com




Armond Perretta September 23rd 07 06:43 PM

powered eggs
 
Dr. Di wrote:
On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 11:44:21 -0400, Armond Perretta wrote:

Dr. Di wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage
life is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after
opening.. Each 2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small)
eggs, costs $14.49, and your entire order, regardless of size, will
ship for $4.49 to anywhere in the U.S.

We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next
cruise..

I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms
that sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..

Diana


"Powered" how? Battery. solar, etc.?


Actually it's cold fusion..

Hey, I'm a scientist, a technocrat, are you not aware that we can't
spell?

It should read "powdered".. And I stand corrected..

Thanks...

Diana


Hey, I be one too, and speel me can. Just takes a bit longer.

Dr. A

--
Good luck and good sailing.
s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat
http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare



Dr. Di September 23rd 07 10:53 PM

powered eggs
 
On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 17:09:32 +0000, Bob wrote:

On Sep 23, 8:08 am, "Dr. Di" wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..

http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/

My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage
life is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened,


I merely wish to relay what we've found..
Diana



Well Diana: I hate to break this to you but about 45+ years ago when I
was jus a poor white boy my moma got USDA commodities. This was before
food stamps. Yep, a real treat to sit down to some steamin hot canned
spam, instant potatoes, and yes........... powdered eggs all washed down
with some nice warm powdered milk fresh from the box.

Ah, but lunch was usually deer or salmon followed with blackberry pie.

Bob


I'm sure your memories are vivid in your mind Bob, but I'd venture to
suggest that the majority of us had humble beginnings.. It was more the
nature of the times, rather than an exclusion from a more affluent
society..

I remember saving my school lunch money so I could buy chemicals and
books for my experiments... I think I needed to explore more than I
needed to eat.. Mom didn't know I skipped lunch, but I remember very
clearly.. It was a necessary expediency to attain my goals..

Perhaps what you remember as powdered eggs were really powdered egg
whites (?)... It was pretty common then to find the powdered egg whites..

The eggs I recommend are whole eggs, and they are pretty much equivalent
to homogenized whole eggs in my opinion.. I'm sure they're not for
everyone, but I look forward to using them when local eggs are not
available..

Thanks for the information Bob, it serves to illustrate just how united
in purpose and life we really are..

Diana


terry September 23rd 07 11:17 PM

powered eggs
 
On Sep 23, 2:03 pm, "Dr. Di" wrote:
On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 11:44:21 -0400, Armond Perretta wrote:
Dr. Di wrote:
Anyone interested in powered eggs should find this link useful..


http://store.honeyvillegrain.com/


My husband and I tried these at home and found them tasty.. Storage
life is advertised as 5 to 10 years unopened, and 1 year after
opening.. Each 2-1/4 lb. can contains approximately 170 (small) eggs,
costs $14.49, and your entire order, regardless of size, will ship for
$4.49 to anywhere in the U.S.


We put a can on our boat in lieu of greased eggs for our next cruise..


I have no interest in promoting Honeyville.. There are other firms that
sell powered eggs.. I merely wish to relay what we've found..


Diana


"Powered" how? Battery. solar, etc.?


Actually it's cold fusion..

Hey, I'm a scientist, a technocrat, are you not aware that we can't spell?

It should read "powdered".. And I stand corrected..

Thanks...

Diana- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

With memories of WWII in the UK; nightly bombing and government
recipes by Grandma Buggins (anybody remember her "Ingrediments") on
the wireless; I don't blame anyone for not liking powdered egg!
It used to come, via the convoys, bless their Lend Lease, thank you
again USA, in boxes that had been dipped into wax, turning the yellow
box into a ghastly shade somewhere between camouflage mustard green
and vomit! Always used to make me think of enemy mustard gas, which
never came so we never did use our government issue gas marks.
So eggheads can't eggaxctly spell! Maybe a scientific education isn't
all it's cracked up to be? But after shelling out all that effort to
get, say a university scientific degree it must be a scramble to get
through a day without poaching spellings from a dictionary.
Sorry just trying to make a bit of a yoke, err joke. And reminisce
about the last time ever saw powdered egg, probably in the late
1940s? And it can stay there as far as I am concerned. Thanks for the
memory I guess?


Larry September 24th 07 01:06 AM

powered eggs
 
"KLC Lewis" wrote in
et:

Eeeewwwwwwwwww! Yuck, bleck, patooie and retch. Powdered eggs make
powdered nonfat milk taste like ambrosia by comparison. But if you
like them, you can have my share. :-)



Must be old Navy man. I can't stand to be in the same compartment with
them after eating them on ships all those years....yecch.

I can still eat SOS, though....(c;


Larry
--
Search youtube for "Depleted Uranium"
The ultimate dirty bomb......

Leanne September 24th 07 02:08 AM

powered eggs
 
"Larry" wrote in message
...

I can still eat SOS, though....(c;


Larry


How about the hash and boiled eggs or the beans and cornbread for Sunday
breakfast.

Leanne


KLC Lewis September 24th 07 02:37 AM

powered eggs
 

"Larry" wrote in message
...
"KLC Lewis" wrote in
et:

Eeeewwwwwwwwww! Yuck, bleck, patooie and retch. Powdered eggs make
powdered nonfat milk taste like ambrosia by comparison. But if you
like them, you can have my share. :-)



Must be old Navy man. I can't stand to be in the same compartment with
them after eating them on ships all those years....yecch.

I can still eat SOS, though....(c;


Larry
--
Search youtube for "Depleted Uranium"
The ultimate dirty bomb......


Old Navy girl, but we had fresh eggs in Uncle Sam's Canoe Club -- good chow
all around actually. No, my memories of powdered eggs come from my
childhood, and our pantry-full of green army cans. Powdered milk, powdered
eggs, wouldn't doubt we even had powdered beef in there somewhere. Used to
go to potato farms in the summer and "sort" potatoes, being paid mostly in
culls. Picked lamb's quarter growing wild in the alleys, fished for bluegill
at the old abandoned sand pits, and if we were very lucky we might catch a
bullhead or two. For a short time we lived beside a cauliflower farm --
needless to say, we picked some. We ate, but we didn't have to enjoy it.

Funny thing is that I still like cauliflower.

Karin



Larry September 24th 07 03:08 AM

powered eggs
 
"Leanne" wrote in :

"Larry" wrote in message
...

I can still eat SOS, though....(c;


Larry


How about the hash and boiled eggs or the beans and cornbread for

Sunday
breakfast.

Leanne



No problem. My "Friends and Family Cruise" aboard USS Pennsylvania
(SSBN-735) a few years back was rather disappointing. We came aboard
about 5AM and they had this huge breakfast all ready for us. Didn't seem
like the same Navy I remember. Mark, my sponsor and a radioman at the
time, said the food on the boomers was generally excellent. The cooks
have no place to go to, I suppose...on the bottom like that.

The hash on Everglades was kinda greasy, most of the time.

They fed 4 meals a day (including midrats) on Everglades. I didn't miss
many of them, really making the taxpayers pay for my $68/month wages...
(c;

Larry
--
Search youtube for "Depleted Uranium"
The ultimate dirty bomb......

Larry September 24th 07 03:22 AM

powered eggs
 
"KLC Lewis" wrote in
et:

Old Navy girl,


Oops...Sorry Karin!

There were a few food screwups on our ship. One time they ordered 200
CANS of Yoo-Hoo chocolate drink for the little gedunk. Somebody musta
checked the wrong box and we got 200 CASES, instead. Gedunk was selling
YooHoos for a nickel to try to make some space for the guy who ordered it
to sleep.

Our captain, a 4-striper about to make RADM, had a love for the taste of
Motta Geloti Italian ice cream when we were in Naples on my first Med
cruise. It's really RICH stuff! Did we need so MANY huge cans?!

I ran the ship's TV antenna system, back in the 60's before taped
programs. The channels were whatever the huge Winegard dual-bay blue
monsters on top of the king post, up about as high as the Cooper River
Bridges, could pick up. Two big distribution amps fed all the
shops/spaces with TVs and, of course, FM radio you also couldn't pick up
inside the steel beast below decks. My crowning glory was a restored
Navy R-390A MF/HF receiver I built from junk for our mess decks. Even
halfway across the Atlantic, our mess decks had BBC or VoA or Radio
Netherlands (who had the best rock music on shortwave). Extra speakers
kept my good friends in the various galley shops...pie shop,
etc.....entertained. On my keyring were keys to the pie shop, ice cream
reefer, milk reefer, etc., in case I got hungry. That R-390A was a fine
project with great benefits! We didn't drink mere feedwater off the
evaps in our shop. There was a whole box of milk always cooling in the
massive air conditioner ductwork of the calibration laboratory if you got
thirsty. Much better than feedwater, especially if you poured some
Hershey's Chocolate Syrup out of the big gallon can under the
oscilloscope bench into your glass, first.

Cal techs aboard 'Glades never passed the physical tests. But, when it
was broken, the best technicians seemed to be the fattest, so not much
was said to us...(c;

Larry
--
ET1598
Lowry AFB METCAL School, 1966
God, was it THAT long ago?!


Vic Smith September 24th 07 09:14 PM

powered eggs
 
On Mon, 24 Sep 2007 02:08:56 +0000, Larry wrote:

The hash on Everglades was kinda greasy, most of the time.

On the John King we were always out of eggs and fresh milk less than a
week out.
I hardly ever ate the powdered crap. SOS was edible, but I haven't
had it since. Hash browns were edible. If your belly ached from
hunger.
We had really lousy cooks. Sometimes I think 90% of my mates
never had a decent meal at home. Otherwise they would have joined me
in a mutiny.

They fed 4 meals a day (including midrats) on Everglades. I didn't miss
many of them, really making the taxpayers pay for my $68/month wages...
(c;

No midrats, and I missed every meal at sea I could within the bounds
of health.
The aft fireroom escape hatch door was along the food provisioning
work party route, and any time ice cream was brought aboard - it was
for officers/chiefs only - one of us "volunteers" would duck in there
and climb down into the hole with a 2-gallon container. All BT's
forward and aft would have their fill, and whatever was left would get
smuggled to the aft engineroom for the MM's.
I found a flaw in the galley counter swingdown doors one hungry night
after an 8-12, and began an occasional raid on the galley's reefer.
If the crew knew what the cooks were eating while they fed us slop
there may have been a mutiny, or at least some ass-kicking.
Of course the officers and chiefs had their special reefers too.
Good hard salami, sliced roast beef, cheddar cheese, etc.
My raids were simple. I'd enlist another BT getting off the same
watch. He would sit at a table in the mess deck where he had a view
of the fore and aft passages to the mess deck
I'd go to the aftmost galley swingdown and if he gave the all clear ok
I'd jimmy the door, swing it up, leap the counter with door in hand,
and noiselessly let the door back down. I was athletic, and my
aversion to the food served guaranteed I was slim.
Took me a minute or two to get four slices of bread, a tomato, cut
some slices of salami/cheese/whatever with my Buck, and put it all in
a ditty bag.
Scored strawberries a couple times. This was all before I saw the
Caine Mutiny, so I didn't think much of it, except they were
delicious!
My partner would see me through the door crack when I was ready to
exit, and when he gave me the all clear I was out.
We'd go topside and have a nice meal.
Probably did that 10-12 times over the course of a couple years.
Only after we at sea for a week.
The galley never got wise, because I never got greedy.
But I despised the commissary men. The only fat guys I ever saw in
the Navy.
One time we left Naples for operations, and I went to get some
cigarettes from the ship's store and found they had none.
First and only time in 3 1/2 years aboard there were no smokes.
NONE!
Word got out that the 1st class commissary man (head cook) had sold
them on the black market, dropping them off into a garbage scow.
Since he had kept the store cash balanced he was never charged,
but I don't think he showed his face ashore for a few months.
This was the same guy I had a run-in with once about weevils.
It had been rocking and rolling badly for days, and I got up bleary
eyed, tottered to the mess deck walking on alternate bulkheads,
and got some cereal, my favorite shipboard food, because it
was untouched by the cooks. We still had milk.
So I sat down across from a couple green-faced deck apes, dumped a
box of Raisin Bran in the bowl, and a cup of milk on that.
I was wolfing down the cereal, but watching the deck apes because
I didn't trust them not to barf on me.
I'm about half done with the cereal, and one of them - Shields, still
remember his name - starts gesticulating at me in green-faced horror,
his hand on his mouth, then pointing at my bowl, then he gets up and
runs away, followed by his buddy.
I look down at my bowl and see the raisins are swimming, and there's
WAY too many of them. I spit out what I had in my mouth, but I didn't
get sick, I got mad. Now these Navy "cooks" had f**ked up the only
thing I cared to eat on this GD ship.
I picked up the bowl and stormed into Alberte's little office off the
galley.
He knew what I thought about his "cooking."
I pushed the bowl under his nose and yelled at him "What are you going
to do about these f**king bugs in the cereal??!!"
He calmly put a finger to his lip, and said,
"Ssshhhh. Vic, keep your voice down. They're just weevils. Won't
hurt you. It's probably only a few boxes.
If you want to make a stink about it, I might have to throw all the
cereal overboard. Do you really want that?"
That lazy, crooked, can't-boil-an-egg fat-ass was right, and had
instantly taken the wind from my sails.
Man, I tell you, I never regretted doing my Navy tour, and in fact
joined the reserves 7 years later, but the happiest day of my life was
the last day of my enlistment. I blame it on the cooks.

--Vic

Rosalie B. September 24th 07 10:25 PM

powered eggs
 
Larry wrote:

"KLC Lewis" wrote in
news:S6adnTskTuRKiWrbnZ2dnUVZ_oaonZ2d@centurytel. net:

Old Navy girl,


Oops...Sorry Karin!


U guys sound like Daniel Gallery's books.

There were a few food screwups on our ship. One time they ordered 200
CANS of Yoo-Hoo chocolate drink for the little gedunk. Somebody musta
checked the wrong box and we got 200 CASES, instead. Gedunk was selling
YooHoos for a nickel to try to make some space for the guy who ordered it
to sleep.

Our captain, a 4-striper about to make RADM, had a love for the taste of
Motta Geloti Italian ice cream when we were in Naples on my first Med
cruise. It's really RICH stuff! Did we need so MANY huge cans?!

I ran the ship's TV antenna system, back in the 60's before taped
programs. The channels were whatever the huge Winegard dual-bay blue
monsters on top of the king post, up about as high as the Cooper River
Bridges, could pick up. Two big distribution amps fed all the
shops/spaces with TVs and, of course, FM radio you also couldn't pick up
inside the steel beast below decks. My crowning glory was a restored
Navy R-390A MF/HF receiver I built from junk for our mess decks. Even
halfway across the Atlantic, our mess decks had BBC or VoA or Radio
Netherlands (who had the best rock music on shortwave). Extra speakers
kept my good friends in the various galley shops...pie shop,
etc.....entertained. On my keyring were keys to the pie shop, ice cream
reefer, milk reefer, etc., in case I got hungry. That R-390A was a fine
project with great benefits! We didn't drink mere feedwater off the
evaps in our shop. There was a whole box of milk always cooling in the
massive air conditioner ductwork of the calibration laboratory if you got
thirsty. Much better than feedwater, especially if you poured some
Hershey's Chocolate Syrup out of the big gallon can under the
oscilloscope bench into your glass, first.

Cal techs aboard 'Glades never passed the physical tests. But, when it
was broken, the best technicians seemed to be the fattest, so not much
was said to us...(c;

Larry


Jere Lull September 25th 07 05:51 AM

powered eggs
 
On 2007-09-23 17:53:39 -0400, "Dr. Di" said:

The eggs I recommend are whole eggs, and they are pretty much equivalent
to homogenized whole eggs in my opinion.. I'm sure they're not for
everyone, but I look forward to using them when local eggs are not
available..


I'm wondering if any of the posters have actually tried the product.
Quite a few processes have improved in the last 50-60 years, quite a
few long-life foods considerably tastier.

--
Jere Lull
Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD
Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/
Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/



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