Spaghetti Tacos

guitarrockeron

New member
Yep! We're having them for dinner tonight. All the kids want them because
the older brother on ICarly (the TV show) made them. There are even recipes
on the Internet for them.

They are basically leftover spaghetti with meat sauce put into crisp taco
shells. I kept mostly meat sauce for the leftovers. Just a little bit of
Tinkyada rice spaghetti mixed in.

They are actually pretty good. Not something I'd go out of my way for, but
not bad. And super quick to make. I'm having mine with some leftover
steamed green beans.
 
"Julie Bove" wrote:



I accidentally watched the iCarly program between commercial break
channel surfing.

I don't watch laugh track dubbed TV shows! It guides the blind to think
it's funny, when in fact it's not!!!

Andy
 
"Andy" wrote in message news:[email protected]...

It's not my favorite show, but it is set in Seattle and I used to live
there. So that part is interesting because they are pretty much spot on
when they talk of things Seattle. I don't know if they have a laugh track
or not. I never really paid attention. I don't actually watch the thing
but the TV is near the computer so when daughter has it on, I at least hear
it.
 
"Storrmmee" wrote:



Lee,

I meant no offense to the blind. In one college, for recreation and beer
I played foosball with the deaf students (NTID, a National Technical
Institute for the Deaf) down below the dorms. They challenged me to
become an otherwise aware expert at the game.

They held many distinct advantages beyond that.

One, they could speak faster in ASL (American Sign Language) that
speakers could talk. And next, they could communicate in ASL at greater
distances than we could shout. They had quite an advantage.

I was an armature when it came to ASL. They laughed at me for finger-
spelling and could only put up with my struggling to communicate. The
BUMS!!!

I have a great appreciation for the deaf. I learned a lot from them!

Imagine the zero noise distraction!!! The sharpened other senses!

What an extreme benefit, imho.

Visual acuity is excellent. The first of real time TV campus-wide
communications made me jealous!

When it came to music, they'd expertly dance to the beat, standing in
front of the music amps, feeling the music vibrations.

Deafness is NOT a handicap!

Best,

Andy
 
Julie wrote on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 17:38:09 -0800:


They sound on a level with British spaghetti (sometimes canned) on toast
or the spaghetti sandwich a visitor from New Zealand brought for lunch
(once).

--

James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland

Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not
 
no offense taken, but having a deaf neice it sure can be a disadvantage, as
to the senses, they aren't better... you just use them more, think of it as
taking the time to pay better attention...

Lee.

ps i didn't much like tv much when i could see it, now it has to be a
stunningly excellent show for me to like it, i just watched the first abby
masterpeice and that wasn't bad,
"Andy" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
 
"Storrmmee" wrote:



Lee,

Blindness is the worst loss of all the senses.

After all I've seen, I couldn't manage life in the dark. I'd be SO
afraid I'd rather kill myself!

Andy
 
On Tue, 1 Feb 2011 13:06:39 -0500, "Felice"
wrote:

Andy's right. Deaf people do not consider it a handicap. They have
their own language and culture. They even have their own university
(Gallaudet).

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
sf wrote on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 10:26:04 -0800:


The federal subsidy to Gallaudet is such that the whole student body
could be fitted with cochlear implants, each year.
High cost : $100,000
Federal subsidy (2010) : $118,000,000
Students 1191
Subsidy/student: $99,076
--

James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland

Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not
 
sf wrote:



The deaf also had some very important tech that hearing didn't.

The deaf students had vibrating mattress "wake up" signaling in association
with visual doorbell, phone and fire blinking dorm room lights in various
sequences. Great "must have" stuff. The visual telephones were a must for
ASL, far ahead of it's time, even today!!!

Andy
 
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