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It might be undercooked. The best way to tell would be too taste the middle and see if it tastes like raw flour.
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# ? Nov 4, 2018 15:49 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:10 |
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I can't find my book right now, but since it's meant to be an 18th/early 19th century recipe, it's probably not leavened. An unleavened dough is always going to turn out very dense, which is probably why it looks uncooked. Edit: By the way, there a Historical Cooking thread over in GWS. I'm sure they'd love to see this, and anything else you cook from Lobscouse and Spotted Dog. Jo Joestar fucked around with this message at 00:26 on Nov 5, 2018 |
# ? Nov 4, 2018 23:39 |
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This seems sort of apropos: https://vt.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_peuvt3NfiP1vee0nm.mp4 PerilPastry fucked around with this message at 22:16 on Nov 14, 2018 |
# ? Nov 14, 2018 22:09 |
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PerilPastry posted:This seems sort of apropos: Heh, that's pretty cool.
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# ? Nov 14, 2018 23:13 |
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Came across this unique footage from 1938/39 of one of one the last great grain ships making the voyage from Europe to Australia by way of Africa. Just some absolutely fascinating scenes from daily life aboard a sailing vessel narrated by the photographer himself who doesn't shy away from lugging his camera 200 feet up the mizzenmast! Fair warning: Footage includes them harpooning a porpoise and and butchering a pig. https://youtu.be/96cRjLkIKlE
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# ? Nov 16, 2018 15:52 |
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Anyone know of a model kit of the HMS Surprise that is a reasonable price? Thinking it might make a decent Christmas gift for my dad.
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# ? Nov 18, 2018 00:59 |
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Class Warcraft posted:Anyone know of a model kit of the HMS Surprise that is a reasonable price? Thinking it might make a decent Christmas gift for my dad. Spend a crazy amount of money on the HMS Surprise by DeAgostini models, then get your dad to join us in the Scale Modeling Thread and build model ships! There's a few of us in there, including myself, working on wooden ships of various types. If you wanted to go a bit cheaper, you can get the same model from Artesania Latina for about half the price. The difference is it's just the kit with Artesanias decent, but basic, instructions. The kit from DeAgostini is the exact same kit, but they've expanded the instructions into 14 full-color, step-by-step instructional magazines with thousands of photos to guide you along. Although it's double the price, I would definitely go with the DeAgostini kit, as they lay everything out plainly and make it so someone with almost zero experience can construct a museum quality model. Do it man! The hell with money, this could be a centerpiece your dad would love.
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# ? Nov 18, 2018 06:36 |
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Oof yeah, that's way out of my price range.
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# ? Nov 18, 2018 06:44 |
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Bloody Hedgehog posted:Spend a crazy amount of money on the HMS Surprise by DeAgostini models, then get your dad to join us in the Scale Modeling Thread and build model ships! There's a few of us in there, including myself, working on wooden ships of various types. drat you for posting this. That kit is so cool.
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# ? Nov 20, 2018 01:23 |
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We need a lego version; not my thing, just saying. It would be really cool if you could just get the plans for the real vessel and scale them down yourself. Call up HMS records, then modify to get it to float in your bathtub. Apparently they are in Gardiner - Robert Gardiner's Warships of the Napoleonic Era (Chatham Publishing, 1999).
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# ? Nov 21, 2018 00:19 |
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PhantomOfTheCopier posted:We need a lego version; not my thing, just saying. You certainly can, and people do.
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# ? Nov 21, 2018 00:47 |
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Anarcho-Commissar posted:You certainly can, and people do. That, and most high-end ship models already do employ the original ship plans. Simplified a bit, but otherwise the designers of the kit start with the original plans and make virtually identical facsimiles to include with the kit.
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# ? Nov 21, 2018 01:04 |
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Started reading Clarissa Oakes on Sunday after a few months' break, and because I will forever associate it with beating to quarters and distant sails threatening to slip down under the horizon, I listened to that Boccherini quintet for the first few paragraphs while O'Brian caught me up on horrible Sydney and the horrible platypus and potential cases of importunate pricks.
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# ? Nov 21, 2018 01:25 |
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Phy posted:potential cases of importunate pricks. I can’t believe I just got this.
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# ? Nov 21, 2018 04:38 |
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I made everlasting syllabub from the cookbook for Thanksgiving. It is basically fancy whipped cream. Good stuff.
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# ? Nov 22, 2018 22:44 |
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I've been reading The Surgeon's Mate. I love that Jack's daughters act like ladies in waiting whenever Sophie is in the room but curse like old salts whenever they're outside, thanks to Bonden and Killick's influence.
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# ? Nov 28, 2018 02:18 |
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I'm re-reading The Mauritius Command, and I'm fairly sure I hate the unnamed French captains in this book as much as any named character. They're just such utter scrubs.
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# ? Dec 13, 2018 02:10 |
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Jo Joestar posted:I'm re-reading The Mauritius Command, and I'm fairly sure I hate the unnamed French captains in this book as much as any named character. They're just such utter scrubs. Striking one's colours, and then raising them again and sailing off!? Shameful.
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# ? Dec 13, 2018 22:10 |
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Well you see the French don't have tea time but they do have a flag washing hour.
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# ? Dec 14, 2018 00:51 |
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Have now finished The Wine-Dark Sea, and what a delightful installment. From Stephen cursing about slavers with rare but eloquent vehemence, to a goddamned seamount, Jack's great good fortune in hunting (his maiming aside, of course - those are starting to add up), to the Chilean mission collapsing thanks to that democratical scrub Du Turd, and Stephen's naturalizing is always a joy. And then in the last few pages there's the trip around Cape Horn, and USS Motherfucking Constitution, or one of her sisters, looming out of the mist, and Jack escaping her by piloting Surprise around an iceberg like Will Smith at the end of Independence Day. I had to put the book down a couple times to go into the kitchen and scream silently into my knuckles so I didn't have to explain to my wife why I was making such horrified faces at a book about English boat men. And how wonderful that Jack's nickname for Heneage Dundas is "Old Hen". (I think my favorite Swearing Stephen bit is still "Boiled poo poo.")
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 09:14 |
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Phy posted:(I think my favorite Swearing Stephen bit is still "Boiled poo poo.") Speaking of boiled poo poo, there's a bit that I've always appreciated - I forget in which book, but there's a reference to the fact that among the other bad starts to the morning, rats had gotten into the coffee and eaten it. Stephen and Jack had a breakfast including coffee made from some phrase like "the scrapings of the very bottom of the bags, which would have been called dubious if there was any doubt as to what they were." I have always interpreted that to mean that they were drinking coffee literally made of rat poo poo. Did anybody ever interpret that differently?
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# ? Feb 8, 2019 23:16 |
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Nah, that's definitely it. Jack even says something like "I thought I recognized that tang."
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 04:07 |
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Yeah, the joke is they are so addicted to their coffee they drink rat poo poo from a coffee bag despite knowing exactly what they are doing. Killick still knows how to make a good brew though.
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 07:23 |
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Lockback posted:Yeah, the joke is they are so addicted to their coffee they drink rat poo poo from a coffee bag despite knowing exactly what they are doing. How much coca residue would be left in rat poo poo anyway?
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 08:53 |
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MeatwadIsGod posted:I've been reading The Surgeon's Mate. I love that Jack's daughters act like ladies in waiting whenever Sophie is in the room but curse like old salts whenever they're outside, thanks to Bonden and Killick's influence. Yeah same, it's the best.
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 11:22 |
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yaffle posted:How much coca residue would be left in rat poo poo anyway? They were just ahead of their time. It’s like the civet cat beans.
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 14:40 |
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So.. did Stephen have the Duke of Habachtal killed?
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# ? Feb 9, 2019 19:05 |
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Nuclear War posted:So.. did Stephen have the Duke of Habachtal killed? Since Stephen wasn't even in the country at the time, I think it's implied that either Sir Joseph Blaine or one of the deceased's criminal associates did it.
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# ? Feb 10, 2019 02:41 |
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Nuclear War posted:So.. did Stephen have the Duke of Habachtal killed? How could a simple botanist and ship’s physician do such a thing?
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# ? Feb 10, 2019 03:20 |
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Yeah, he would never do something like have someone killed and then dissect their body for shits and gigs.
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# ? Feb 10, 2019 03:29 |
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Bloody Hedgehog posted:Yeah, he would never do something like have someone killed and then dissect their body for shits and gigs. That dude just happened to have died in far off lands after betraying his country. E: the other was French, so who knows
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# ? Feb 10, 2019 03:41 |
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Every year or so I remember that this thread exists. Two things I can add: One, my amusement at the end of the umpteenth reading Fortune of War at how Aubrey actually mentions Stephen's intense hunger in order to be fed himself as soon as possible (he does this more than once in the series), and not long thereafter, Stephen calls for coffee to be made three or four times as strong as it is currently made ("a thin, thin brew") as a "tonic draught" for the seasick Diana, when in reality he just wants a good cup of coffee for Jack and himself And one thing that has always added to my appreciation of the series is my brief time on a tall ship as a child. When I was graduating from grade seven into high school, my class got to vote on various celebratory trips and we chose this one We spent a week sailing it around the Gulf Islands and learning some of the lubbers' basics of navigation (they had sextants on board) hoisting the occasional rope, hoisting anchors, learning knots, lowering and hoisting boats, and even cooking and steerage (under the bosun's watchful eye). My favourite thing to do was climb the rigging, and since it was 1987, as long as we had a line around our waists and it wasn't one's watch, we could climb whenever we wanted and required no supervision. The circle of sea viewed from a mast revolving in 360 degrees, and whooping to my best friend, is something I'll never forget. Sadly, the ship was sold into private hands, although the program still exists (they sail out of Victoria, B.C.). The experience really adds depth and richness to the seascapes and vision described so often within the series, as well as simply how far one can see from the masts (it's really obvious why Aubrey spends so much time up there - the clarity and vastness is almost undescribable - unless you're O'Brian). While I've never seen a fleet of merchant masts poking out of an inversion at the mouth of the Thames at daybreak, I have seen the sun set from the mast head in a completely clear sky, and it's incredible. If you ever get the chance, spend some time on an actual ship. Heliogabalos fucked around with this message at 20:44 on Feb 12, 2019 |
# ? Feb 12, 2019 20:28 |
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Heliogabalos posted:We spent a week sailing it around the Gulf Islands and learning some of the lubbers' basics of navigation (they had sextants on board) hoisting the occasional rope, hoisting anchors, learning knots, lowering and hoisting boats, and even cooking and steerage (under the bosun's watchful eye). My favourite thing to do was climb the rigging, and since it was 1987, as long as we had a line around our waists and it wasn't one's watch, we could climb whenever we wanted and required no supervision. The circle of sea viewed from a mast revolving in 360 degrees, and whooping to my best friend, is something I'll never forget. This may be somewhat off-topic, but to me Jack Aubrey's capacity for mirth and his raucous delight in wit "even at infinitesimal doses" is one of his most endearing qualities, and I've never seen it so strongly channeled by anyone in real life before! https://twitter.com/peachyelio/status/1100049124982960128
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# ? Feb 25, 2019 16:57 |
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How did Martin die? Edit: And what finally happened to Davidge and West?
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# ? Mar 13, 2019 11:27 |
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Nuclear War posted:How did Martin die? He doesn't die. He thinks he contracted VD from Clarissa Oakes and tried to "cure" himself with mercury nearly killing himself. Aubrey sends him off to live on his lands. He might have given him a parsonage, or maybe he was going to and then changed his mind. Davidge: Killed in action, which was disappointing because I thought his story wasn't quite done, but ah well. West: Dies when the Volcano erupts, which is a pretty metal way to die
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# ? Mar 13, 2019 22:02 |
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Martin's death is only in spirit, as he starts to bore and annoy Stephen, and Stephen starts to hate the living poo poo out of him. Martin fucks himself up so badly over Clarissa that Stephen has the pretext to just boot him out of the ship and his life completely.
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# ? Mar 14, 2019 01:27 |
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Sax Solo posted:Martin's death is only in spirit, as he starts to bore and annoy Stephen, and Stephen starts to hate the living poo poo out of him. Martin fucks himself up so badly over Clarissa that Stephen has the pretext to just boot him out of the ship and his life completely. Oh right, I guess I remember now. I was sure I'd seen a reference to his death and I was confused
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# ? Mar 14, 2019 01:40 |
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Lockback posted:He doesn't die. He thinks he contracted VD from Clarissa Oakes and tried to "cure" himself with mercury nearly killing himself. Aubrey sends him off to live on his lands. He might have given him a parsonage, or maybe he was going to and then changed his mind. Didn't he just have lustful thoughts and flirted a little bit and thought that was enough for god to punish him with a VD?
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# ? Mar 14, 2019 02:47 |
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Sax Solo posted:Martin's death is only in spirit, as he starts to bore and annoy Stephen, and Stephen starts to hate the living poo poo out of him. Martin fucks himself up so badly over Clarissa that Stephen has the pretext to just boot him out of the ship and his life completely. I think this is a rather harsh interpretation! Martin does alienate Stephen while going through that whole bit of turmoil over Clarissa Oakes (and long confinement at sea, in company which is mostly uninteresting to him) but there remains what Stephen refers to as a 'strong latent affection' between them. Stephen arranges for him to be transported home from South America in a more sedate vessel, and its brushed over that he has left the sea afterwards. I got the impression this was a reconciliation between the two of them, even if it was also a separation. Apart from the characters' own motivations, it seems likely that the author had sort of bottomed out that character. Later in the series, Joseph plays a very similar role as Maturin's confidant and fellow lubber.
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# ? Mar 14, 2019 22:39 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:10 |
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Raskolnikov2089 posted:Didn't he just have lustful thoughts and flirted a little bit and thought that was enough for god to punish him with a VD? He did at first and that's why he was uncomfortable but then something happened and its almost certainly that he slept with her since she had no qualms about sex. I guess it's left up somewhat to the reader but I don't think he'd try to kill himself over thoughts.
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# ? Mar 15, 2019 00:27 |