I can’t imagine what you think of food that grows in DIRT!
I think it would have been preferable to separate don’t like shrimp / can’t eat shrimp into two distinct options.
FWIW I can eat it but I don’t like it.
mmm
I haven’t had all the versions of shrimp listed, but I checked all the ones that sounded good.
And the list left off shrimp scampi.
Yes the verdict in A Few Good Men was wrong. What they were found guilty of doesn’t exist. Conduct unbecoming is only for officers. They were guilty of assault.
After an unfortunate food poisoning incident, and too many instances where the shrimp are just not cooked well, I no longer order shrimp. I might eat one deep fried coconut shrimp, but that’s it.
I do like planted shrimp, which are a vegetarian version. The texture doesn’t disturb me and it’s a little less shrimp-like.
Also never seen a few good men, so i voted “something else”.
I like shrimp, unless they’ve been cooked in a sauce i don’t care for. But I’m struggling with what this
even means. I guess i don’t enjoy the texture of raw shrimp (although they taste fabulous raw, at least, the little sweet ones my Chinese coworker sometimes brought to office pot-lucks did) but I’ve never eaten a cooked shrimp and thought “this needed more/less cooking”.
One gallbladder removal, and two separate cataract relensifications, so three outpatient surgeries.
If you count local anesthesia, then four with a cyst removal.
I’m assuming stitches don’t really count as surgeries.
Overcooked shrimp get stringy.
I’m going to assume wisdom tooth extraction counts as outpatient surgery, because I counted it.
And if they’re grilled to long they get dry. But it’s not horrible, and it’s also not a common problem, at least in my experience.
Oral surgery is surgery, so yes.
Only one “major” surgery: repair of a congenital abdominal hernia, done when I was 2 years old, which required general anesthesia and an overnight stay in the hospital.
Only one outpatient surgery, as well: having my impacted wisdom teeth extracted. That, too, was under general anesthesia (because I didn’t care to be awake for it), but I was sent home once I’d woken up.
I have pills I take every day, they’re in one of those day of the week containers, and I take them when I remember to take them. About once a month I forget.
This thread reminded me, I forgot to take my meds today!
I was thinking I was two each on the surgeries, but if we’re counting oral surgeries (and yes, why wouldn’t we?) it’s two and eight. I’ve had a thyroidectomy and an emergency hernia repair inpatient, and a bunionectomy, lumpectomy, wisdom teeth removal, three root canals (two of them on the same tooth), and two surgeries to remove growths in my mouth.
I can remember a time when my list of procedures wasn’t two pages long, but it’s been a while now. And of course I take daily meds - four at night and two in the morning.
I originally counted my two cataract surgeries as just one, and I did not count my wisdom teeth extractions.
I went back and changed my answer to more than two.
mmm
That’s what I was going to ask about. Now that I know, I can go back and answer that one.
One of the fun things about those “How many of these names do you recognize?” polls is going through and seeing which of the names that I recognize is most obscure (i.e. the fewest other people recognize it). This time I was totally shocked to see that it was John Deacon. I would have thought that all four members of Queen were more iconic than that.
I agree, @Thudlow_Boink, but it’s early. I suspect that he will move up in the standings before long.
mmm
I recognised Steve Marriott, but from the Small Faces.