I answered that I don’t watch Stranger Things but really I watched the first two seasons. I’m telling myself I’m going to watch the entire thing but I’m not sure if that’s true or not.
Well, to quote my namesake (at least regarding picking candidates for next year’s pool):
“Oh, he’s not dead. Well…not yet.” ![]()
Yeah, I’m honestly a little surprised it’s not in cafe society. But leaving it where it is, and where people who play expect to find out, seems like a solid plan.
Ditto. I looked at the title, thought‘definitely not my sort of thing’, and have never clicked on the thread. Maybe I should reconsider.
Good timing of the Meatloaf question.
Last night I had Embutido at a Philipino Restaurant, not sure if it is the first time I have had hard boiled egg in a meatloaf but if not it is the first time for at least 25 years.
My “Something else” on the meatloaf question = “Huh? Is that an actual thing? How does that work?”
Here you go:
They routinely do sometime like that with meat pies on the great British bakeoff. A meatloaf isn’t very different from a meat pie without the crust, baked in a loaf pan.
I’ve never seen it done irl, but I’m also not a meatloaf fan, so i haven’t eaten many meatloaves.
I duuno why, but “meatloaves” cracked me up.
mmm
I’ve never owned a waterbed, but I’ve slept in one, at a friend’s house. I liked it. I liked it more than the foam than has become standard mattress material.
I’m always suspicious when people don’t vote in their own polls !
I would try the hardboiled eggs in the meatloaf for sure!
I just don’t like egg yolk on its own, so no fried eggs on things or boiled eggs in things, please. Scrambled or otherwise mixed in, great.
I had a waterbed from about age 4 to college, then futons until my husband made me get a bed. All fine, but I prefer futons.
Never owned or wanted a waterbed, but I have slept in one.
According to 1970s lore, a waterbed could somehow enhance certain ‘activities’. It didn’t. We got out of bed and did it on the floor. ![]()
Yes I agree!
Me and my ex husband had a waterbed for years but I finally set up sleeping in another room because it was too difficult to fall into slumber with all of the rolling and sloshing, gentle as it was.
Waterbeds for me were not good for anything from getting a good’s night’s rest to procreation.
He took it with him when we split in the mid 1990s.
All of my friends’ parents had waterbeds when I was a kid, and I was envious. I eventually slept on an unheated one on a ski trip when I was 13. I slept on the floor after that first night.
They’re called Gala pies
I owned an old-fashioned, “just a bag of water in a frame” waterbed in the late '80s and early '90s. My parents had bought a waterbed in the early '80s, primarily because the warmth was helpful for my mom’s arthritis. They bought me the bed as a gift when I was in grad school.
I liked it a lot (especially in the winter), but it was a hassle to move (I moved twice while I owned it), and the heating element stopped working once, which led to me waking up in the middle of the night with incipient hypothermia.
When I was getting married, and about to move in with my fiancee, we mutually decided to junk the waterbed, in part because she wasn’t a fan.
Hubby got a waterbed before we got married, with my approval. It had baffles, so it was practically waveless. After 4 years, hubby started having back issues, and found his back issues went away when he slept on a normal bed. So we got rid of the water bed mattress and got a California King mattress. Haven’t had any desire to get another waterbed.
That was my case, too*, and that was why I said I wanted one at one point. I never particularly wanted one as an adult, but I really wanted one as a kid.
*Well, maybe not “all”, but some of my parents’ friends had them.