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08-15-2014, 06:02 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-15-2014, 06:02 AM by stevec.)
(08-14-2014, 07:39 PM)chucketn Wrote: I'm disapointed, John. As I'm married to a "Proper English" Lass from East Anglia, I was hoping you woud at least give us Yanks(all the rest, not me, my missus Herself Swimbo knows how, and I'm not allowed in her kitchen....) a good lesson, on par with your other vids, on the making of a "Proper Yorkshire Pud"! But, I do like the tooling used...
Chuck
What does the i in "Swimbo" stand for?
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(08-15-2014, 06:02 AM)stevec Wrote: (08-14-2014, 07:39 PM)chucketn Wrote: I'm disapointed, John. As I'm married to a "Proper English" Lass from East Anglia, I was hoping you woud at least give us Yanks(all the rest, not me, my missus Herself Swimbo knows how, and I'm not allowed in her kitchen....) a good lesson, on par with your other vids, on the making of a "Proper Yorkshire Pud"! But, I do like the tooling used...
Chuck
What does the i in "Swimbo" stand for?
What does the "Swimbo" in "Swimbo" stand for?
Ed
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stevec (08-15-2014)
08-15-2014, 07:40 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-15-2014, 07:43 AM by chucketn.)
Sorry, Ed. Should be SWMBO, "She Who Must Be Obeyed".
I sometimes spell things as they are pronounced, or as I think they are pronounced.
I think it comes from an old Brit TV comedy.
I spent 8 years in Great Britian with the USAF and married an English lass.
Chuck
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the good thing about using that instead of a kitchen mixer is that unlike the kitchen mixer the drill has reverse so if you over mix the brew by mistake you can just select reverse and undo it a bit .
johno
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tackit (08-20-2014)
08-17-2014, 06:13 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-17-2014, 12:11 PM by the artfull-codger.)
(08-14-2014, 04:38 PM)doubleboost Wrote:
Using a drill to mix reminds me of a few yrs ago when I worked for pilkingtons glass,a swimming pool in middlesbrough had a number of portholes so people could watch swimmers underwater,well one cracked so the pool was emptied for only a limited time only & we had to remove & reglaze them before it was filled back up, well using a 2 part mix polysulphide compound & had to be mixed by hand,so I made a ''mixer'' out of a bent hook bolt using the electric drill in a small storeroom,all went well till the tin slipped from between my feet & the whole bloody lot went flying, all the walls, my mate & me were covered in horizontal stripes,we had to get thinners & clean the walls before it hardened,we mixed by hand after that, btw they were 1" thick plate glass & about 3 ft in diameter [& none of them leaked!!] ps we've lived in yorkshire all our lives & mrs artfull's a farmers daughter from north yorks & a cook & I love her ''yorkshire puddings' fnar fnar we allways have them the traditional yorkshire way ie eat them 1st with gravy then the dinner comes next & if there's any left we eat them with sugar or jam
graham from north yorkshire
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(08-17-2014, 06:13 AM)the artfull-codger Wrote: (08-14-2014, 04:38 PM)doubleboost Wrote:
Using a drill to mix reminds me of a few yrs ago when I worked for pilkingtons glass,a swimming pool in middlesbrough had a number of portholes so people could watch swimmers underwater,well one cracked so the pool was emptied for only a limited time only & we had to remove & reglaze them before it was filled back up, well using a 2 part mix polysulphide compound & had to be mixed by hand,so I made a ''mixer'' out of a bent hook bolt using the electric drill in a small storeroom,all went well till the tin slipped from between my feet & the whole bloody lot went flying, all the walls, my mate & me were covered in horizontal stripes,we had to get thinners & clean the walls before it hardened,we mixed by hand after that, btw they were 1" thick plate glass & about 3 ft in diameter [& none of them leaked!!] ps we've lived in yorkshire all our lives & mrs artfull's a farmers daughter from north yorks & a cook & I love her ''yorkshire puddings' fnar fnar we allways have them the traditional yorkshire way ie eat them 1st with gravy then the dinner comes next & if there's any left we eat them with sugar or jam
graham from north yorkshire
Looks like something the boys on The Last of the Summer Wine cooked up. Good going doubleboost, now I can show wifey how the money I spend on tools can benefit her too.
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(08-15-2014, 07:40 AM)chucketn Wrote: I think it comes from an old Brit TV comedy.
Rumpole of the Bailey. An absolute classic!
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Is Rumpole a contraction, leaving out the H between p & o? and isn't it Bailey 's as in Irish cream?
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Not sure I want SWMBO to have ideas like that about my power tools.
Must admit though the De Walt 12v drill works well ( with green scouring pads) for removing "burnt on mixture" from supposably Non-stick pans that definitely aren't! My reputation as a miracle worker was helped by that trick after an incident where the cake mixture got left too long....
You sometimes don't need to add brandy to flame a Christmas pudding if your wife leaves it too long....
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