PDA

View Full Version : How to take your shirt off.



KnottedYet
10-23-2011, 02:29 PM
Safe For Work. (no naughty nuthin')

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QVYiHI4cGlE

I literally laughed out loud.
The music! The "Party" at the end!

I love it that somebody thought it was worth putting this on Youtube. :D

Same series also has "How to peel an egg." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dut1b--AgLM&feature=related

bmccasland
10-23-2011, 03:02 PM
Same series also has "How to peel an egg." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dut1b--AgLM&feature=related

If I actually ate boiled eggs, I would have to try that!

salsabike
10-23-2011, 03:49 PM
There's a really cool one somewhere about how to fold a shirt. I am really lazy and pretty casual, but I must also be easily amused because I loved learning it and watched the video multiple times. I'll be easy to entertain in the rest home...:)

channlluv
10-23-2011, 03:57 PM
You must never have worked in a retail clothing store, Salsa.

I'm pretty fast at folding shirts thanks to Belk's.

Roxy

jessmarimba
10-23-2011, 04:37 PM
You must never have worked in a retail clothing store, Salsa.

I'm pretty fast at folding shirts thanks to Belk's.

Roxy

I'm pretty sure my time spent at Kohls is why I never fold my clean laundry. It sits in a pile on my couch for weeks on end. Usually until it's so full of cat hair that it has to go back in the dirty pile.

salsabike
10-23-2011, 06:49 PM
You must never have worked in a retail clothing store, Salsa.

I'm pretty fast at folding shirts thanks to Belk's.

Roxy

Yeah, I did. They never taught me that!

PS I don't seem to have needed any previous clothing store trauma to not fold my laundry. :-) Just my inborn lazitude.

OakLeaf
10-24-2011, 04:45 AM
I'm pretty sure my time spent at Kohls is why I never fold my clean laundry. It sits in a pile on my couch for weeks on end. Usually until it's so full of cat hair that it has to go back in the dirty pile.

:D :D

DH has confessed that military school is the reason he won't fold shirts the "right" way. He goes out of his way to roll them up so they'll wrinkle as much as possible! I just have to quietly re-fold all my shirts whenever he brings in the laundry...

pll
10-24-2011, 05:01 AM
If I actually ate boiled eggs, I would have to try that!

Tried the egg thing this AM. Did not work for me. :o

BleeckerSt_Girl
10-25-2011, 10:49 AM
So after you whip your shirt off, you "feel alive"...? Like we feel dead with our shirts on? LOL!

I also watched the egg peeling vid, and I gotta agree with th e person who posted this comment:

real question is... who's gonna eat an egg salad when you know whoever made it blew bacteria all over them eggs

Like, EEEEEEEEEEEWWWWWWWWWWWW don't want to prepare eggs for others to eat using this method.

Pax
10-25-2011, 10:59 AM
That "how to take off your shirt" video? That's exactly how I take mine off, I hate wearing clothes so I've gotten very efficient at removing them as soon as I can. :p

GLC1968
10-25-2011, 12:04 PM
Being the pessimist that I am, the first thing I thought was 'try that wearing a dress shirt'. ;)

Then I watched the egg video and immediately thought "wow, that dude doesn't have fresh eggs". That technique would NEVER work on an egg that is less than a month old...breath bacteria or not. :p

OakLeaf
10-25-2011, 03:52 PM
You know, I've heard that "too fresh to peel" thing for a long time, but we don't always eat that many eggs, so the eggs we get from the farmer sometimes stay in our fridge for six weeks or longer. (Yes, they take MUCH longer than that to spoil, and the eggs in the grocery store are probably older than that...)

And in the summertime when the hens are laying heavy, you still can't peel them. It ain't freshness.

My guess is it's nutrition. Battery hens get a precisely controlled ration of calcium that makes for rigid, non-shattering shells. Pastured hens get crickets and grass seeds and whatever they choose to pick out of their supplemental feed pail, and sometimes it's plenty of calcium, and sometimes when they're laying an egg every day it makes for thin shells.

Now that the season has turned and the hens aren't laying quite as much, eggs I'm getting from the same farmer are getting easier to peel - even if I boil them the same day she sorted them.




Whew, that was a drift from taking your shirt off. :p

GLC1968
10-25-2011, 05:28 PM
You know, I've heard that "too fresh to peel" thing for a long time, but we don't always eat that many eggs, so the eggs we get from the farmer sometimes stay in our fridge for six weeks or longer. (Yes, they take MUCH longer than that to spoil, and the eggs in the grocery store are probably older than that...)

And in the summertime when the hens are laying heavy, you still can't peel them. It ain't freshness.

My guess is it's nutrition. Battery hens get a precisely controlled ration of calcium that makes for rigid, non-shattering shells. Pastured hens get crickets and grass seeds and whatever they choose to pick out of their supplemental feed pail, and sometimes it's plenty of calcium, and sometimes when they're laying an egg every day it makes for thin shells.

Now that the season has turned and the hens aren't laying quite as much, eggs I'm getting from the same farmer are getting easier to peel - even if I boil them the same day she sorted them.




Whew, that was a drift from taking your shirt off. :p

Still drifting.... ;)

I think the theory is (and what we've found) is that the eggs need to be older because over time, the white will thicken as some of the moisture evaporates through the shell. This allows some air inside and lets the shell slightly pull away from the white when cooked. We have noticed that even 4 and 5 week old eggs are STILL super hard to peel if they were never washed. The bloom keeps the shells sealed enough that they are still considered 'fresh'. If we wash a freshly laid egg and then wait 3 or 4 weeks, it'll peel.

There is also a definite difference between breeds of chickens. Our white leghorn eggs always have thinner shells that are easier to peel than the other breeds. And since white leghorn is the breed typically used for commercial operations (they lay like clockwork, too!), it makes sense.