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#1
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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 |
#2
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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. :-) |
#3
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#4
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#5
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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powered eggs
Funny, reading the title to the thread, I was imagining a cross
between a jet ski and a paddle boat... |
#6
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#7
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#8
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#9
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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 |
#10
posted to rec.boats.cruising
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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? |
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