originally posted by SFJoe:
Nice, thanks!
Saw some of those pretty A. muscaria at an undisclosed location up the coast last week.
Didn't eat any, though.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
You're a mushroom man?
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
You're a mushroom man?
By no means the only one around here. VS is probably more active than I am. We debate taxonomy here.
Well, if you like that kind of thing.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Awesome thread
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Nice, thanks!
Saw some of those pretty A. muscaria at an undisclosed location up the coast last week.
Didn't eat any, though.
You're a mushroom man? Music folklore says that John Cage become an expert on the subject because, as a young man, he obsessively read the "Music" entry in every encyclopedia he could find. He also always read the preceding entry, usually "Mushroom."
originally posted by SFJoe:
Nice, thanks!
Saw some of those pretty A. muscaria at an undisclosed location up the coast last week.
Didn't eat any, though.
That's a beautiful park.originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Nice, thanks!
Saw some of those pretty A. muscaria at an undisclosed location up the coast last week.
Didn't eat any, though.
On a hike through the Rhododendron park on the Mendo coast years ago, we ran across a gigantic A. muscaria with a single, large bite taken out of one edge. I spent the rest of the hike looking for a twisted coyote.
Mark Lipton
I'm not a musician, but I can perform a very faithful rendition of 4'33".originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
You're a mushroom man? Music folklore says that John Cage become an expert on the subject because, as a young man, he obsessively read the "Music" entry in every encyclopedia he could find. He also always read the preceding entry, usually "Mushroom."
originally posted by .sasha:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Nice, thanks!
Saw some of those pretty A. muscaria at an undisclosed location up the coast last week.
Didn't eat any, though.
You're a mushroom man? Music folklore says that John Cage become an expert on the subject because, as a young man, he obsessively read the "Music" entry in every encyclopedia he could find. He also always read the preceding entry, usually "Mushroom."
SFJoe still loses a few dinner guests every now and then - he opens a number of wines at once, and you are supposed to know which ones are the antidote.
originally posted by Thor:
Say that three times fast.
(In any case, I find manatee fat a better braising medium for babies. They apparently find the fat soothing, and fuss too much otherwise.)
originally posted by Kevin Roberts:
originally posted by Thor:
Say that three times fast.
(In any case, I find manatee fat a better braising medium for babies. They apparently find the fat soothing, and fuss too much otherwise.)
Speaking of Manatee, did anyone see the bit in the recent Art of Eating about food in Naples that talked about serving baby manatee to the allied commander in celebration of the allied arrival? They called it something really cool, but it escapes my memory right now.
If manatee is "sea cow," does that make baby manatee "sea veal?"
cheers,
Kevin
originally posted by Thor:
Say that three times fast.
(In any case, I find manatee fat a better braising medium for babies. They apparently find the fat soothing, and fuss too much otherwise.)
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
I'm not a musician, but I can perform a very faithful rendition of 4'33".originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
You're a mushroom man? Music folklore says that John Cage become an expert on the subject because, as a young man, he obsessively read the "Music" entry in every encyclopedia he could find. He also always read the preceding entry, usually "Mushroom."