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7:03 AMKeyser Soze
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18 hours? That's really, too too too funny. Idle hands and idle minds.

.........


Harry, depending on what you want. cooking a 200 lb whole hog can take 18-24 hrs.

Why might learn something by putting down the Allen Ginsberg poetry book and get back into reality.

https://amazingribs.com/tested-recip...-you-need-know


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On 5/14/2018 8:43 AM, Tim wrote:

7:03 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text

18 hours? That's really, too too too funny. Idle hands and idle minds.

........


Harry, depending on what you want. cooking a 200 lb whole hog can take 18-24 hrs.

Why might learn something by putting down the Allen Ginsberg poetry book and get back into reality.

https://amazingribs.com/tested-recip...-you-need-know




When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.



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Tim Tim is offline
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Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.
.......

In-jinooity, Richard. Necessity is the mother of invention.

I trust the pig was tasty too!
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On 5/14/2018 9:12 AM, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.
......

In-jinooity, Richard. Necessity is the mother of invention.

I trust the pig was tasty too!



It was. Fed over one hundred people.

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On Monday, May 14, 2018 at 9:12:44 AM UTC-4, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.
......

In-jinooity, Richard. Necessity is the mother of invention.

I trust the pig was tasty too!


No doubt that one and Bill's were very good!

Some folks think you can throw a Boston Butt on a pan with some seasoning and liquid smoke, put it in the oven for three hours at 325, and that's BBQ. I actually feel sorry for them.


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Its Me wrote:
On Monday, May 14, 2018 at 9:12:44 AM UTC-4, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.
......

In-jinooity, Richard. Necessity is the mother of invention.

I trust the pig was tasty too!


No doubt that one and Bill's were very good!

Some folks think you can throw a Boston Butt on a pan with some seasoning
and liquid smoke, put it in the oven for three hours at 325, and that's
BBQ. I actually feel sorry for them.


We fed over a 150 people. The pot luck portion was great, even though was
a bit light on deserts.

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On Monday, May 14, 2018 at 12:15:38 PM UTC-4, Bill wrote:
Its Me wrote:
On Monday, May 14, 2018 at 9:12:44 AM UTC-4, Tim wrote:
Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text -
When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.
......

In-jinooity, Richard. Necessity is the mother of invention.

I trust the pig was tasty too!


No doubt that one and Bill's were very good!

Some folks think you can throw a Boston Butt on a pan with some seasoning
and liquid smoke, put it in the oven for three hours at 325, and that's
BBQ. I actually feel sorry for them.


We fed over a 150 people. The pot luck portion was great, even though was
a bit light on deserts.


Just think... with harry's approach and $1200, you could have fed them a cold BBQ sandwich, cold fries and no desert.
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On Mon, 14 May 2018 09:01:24 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 5/14/2018 8:43 AM, Tim wrote:

7:03 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text

18 hours? That's really, too too too funny. Idle hands and idle minds.

........


Harry, depending on what you want. cooking a 200 lb whole hog can take 18-24 hrs.

Why might learn something by putting down the Allen Ginsberg poetry book and get back into reality.

https://amazingribs.com/tested-recip...-you-need-know




When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.



Harry would have just microwaved in over one of those transmitters
;-)
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On 5/14/18 9:47 AM, wrote:
On Mon, 14 May 2018 09:01:24 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 5/14/2018 8:43 AM, Tim wrote:

7:03 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text

18 hours? That's really, too too too funny. Idle hands and idle minds.

........


Harry, depending on what you want. cooking a 200 lb whole hog can take 18-24 hrs.

Why might learn something by putting down the Allen Ginsberg poetry book and get back into reality.

https://amazingribs.com/tested-recip...-you-need-know




When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast. Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in. Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers. My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters. Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.



Harry would have just microwaved in over one of those transmitters
;-)

Naw, I simply would have gotten a local Puerto Rican restaurant to
prepare the meal.
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On 5/14/2018 10:00 AM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 5/14/18 9:47 AM, wrote:
On Mon, 14 May 2018 09:01:24 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 5/14/2018 8:43 AM, Tim wrote:

7:03 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text

18 hours? That's really, too too too funny. Idle hands and idle minds.

........


Harry, depending on what you want. cooking a 200 lb whole hog can
take 18-24 hrs.

Why might learn something by puttingÂ* down the Allen Ginsberg poetry
book and get back into reality.

https://amazingribs.com/tested-recip...-you-need-know





When we were stationed in Puerto Rico we had a pork roast.Â*Â* Someone got
the pig, slaughtered it and stuck it on a pole draining overnight in the
corner of the transmitter building we worked in.Â* Meanwhile, a pit was
constructed outside for the fire/embers.Â*Â* My contribution was to design
and construct a heavy duty rotisserie to hold the pig over the pit.

I made a heavy duty steel frame and used one of the electric motors and
gear heads that were used to tune the inductor coils in the big, 100,000
watt HF transmitters.Â* Worked great and rotated the pig at just the
right speed.

I forget exactly how many hours it took to cook it but I think it was
around 24 hours.



Harry would have just microwaved in over one of those transmitters
;-)

Naw, I simply would have gotten a local Puerto Rican restaurant to
prepare the meal.



And fed 50 people and their families?

Oh, I see. I got mine. Screw you.




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