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| | #176 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: Northern CA
Posts: 1,437
| Quote:
Politically correct....'breaks all the rules'.... TEXAS-STYLE TURKEY CHILI Makes 8 servings. From Evelyn McGill of Raeford, winner of the 21st annual N.C. Turkey Cooking Contest. 1 pound turkey tenderloin, cut into 1/2-inch pieces 2 cups chopped onions 5 cloves garlic, minced 2 tablespoons chili powder 1 tablespoon ground cumin 1 teaspoon ground coriander 1 teaspoon ground oregano 2 1/2 cups turkey or chicken broth 1 cup prepared salsa or picante sauce 2 cans (16 ounces each) pinto or red beans (or one of each), rinsed and drained 1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro 1/2 cup sour cream 1 cup chopped ripe tomatoes SPRAY large saucepan with nonstick cooking spray; heat over medium-high heat until hot. Add turkey, onions and garlic; cook and stir until turkey is no longer pink, about 5 minutes. Sprinkle mixture with chili powder, cumin, coriander and oregano; mix well. ADD broth and salsa; bring to a boil. Cover, simmer 35 minutes. Stir in beans, continue to simmer uncovered for about 35 minutes more or until turkey is tender and chili has thickened. Stirring occasionally, stir in cilantro. LADLE chili into bowls and top with sour cream and tomatoes. Garnish with pickled jalapeño peppers and herb sprigs, if desired. | |
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| | #177 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Scotland
Posts: 19
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But they sound GOOD!!! Just one thing Don. Escuse my Brit ignorance but what is chuck roast? | |
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| | #178 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 8,710
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First, the chili recipes. Then, pictures of lilacs ![]() It's an old joke, RovingStar. Kind of a way of reminding us all why we're here in the first place... To help eachother achieve perfect chili. I recommend corn as a magic ingredient. |
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| | #179 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: Northern CA
Posts: 1,437
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The chuck is from the shoulder and neck of the steer. Tough but flavorful, usually braised as pot roast or stew. Chili recipes are a metaphor: achieving a desirable outcome (sobriety) by a variety of means. Some people think there are rules for making chili. Some would only ever use beef. Some people don't think beans should ever be added. Some people think it originated in Texas, others think it has its roots in Northern Mexico. Canadians sometimes add corn. And so on. |
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| | #180 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: New York, NY
Posts: 763
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Hmmm, i really like the chili that is made without meat, but I am not a vegetarian, so I will try yours. How about Green Chili!!!! Now you're talking!!! I am off for Indian food tonight out in Brooklyn-Smith Street. Yum, if I can avoid the Cilantro attack-tastes like soap. Now about that BOOK. ((((((DON))))) YOU HAVE OUTED ME!!! I meant, had you read Frey's book. OK, so I have been to a few thousand AA meetings and now I am an advocate of SMART, AA and Bruce's way (he's a friend of mine who decided he couldn't drink and just quit, 25+years ago). Personally, I love the community of sober people I meat (uh-oh, I have Chile, rather, Chili, on the mind) ...meet at AA meetings (I go once or twice a week now, because we have a great time at coffee afterwards, and I always hear something great at the meeting. I care about the group of people who go to those two meetings, and their struggles and failures and victories mirror and inspire my own. My SR family is just as important as a community, and I feel very fortunate to have found this place and to have hung in here. So backto the book. Currently I am reading the biography of Stalin; will Frey's book provide an alternative choice for my bedtime reading? |
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| | #181 (permalink) |
| Grateful recovering alcoholic Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Blissfield, MI
Posts: 814
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Five, I thought your words sounded familiar. I wasn't too sure if it was Mill or Andy. I didn't think it quite sounded like Andy though. Ok - all of you from England!!! Here's a question - why is it that of all you here I can think of (with exception of JC) are all anti-God? Is it something about your culture or what? I mean, seems like all of the ones I have read; I look at location and it has England there... Just curious - from a naive Michigander! Jen |
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| | #182 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: With Good Spirit
Posts: 378
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I did not have time to read all the responses here tonight. As the mother of an addict, I only care that someone's miracle happened. I only care that another life has been saved. Will James continue on with his sobriety? No-one knows that. People relapse all of the time. People that go to AA and those that do not. All I care about is another human life has been saved. I read the book, LOVED it. I am now reading My Friend Leonard. I wish James continued success. He is someone's loved one. It could be my daughter..and hopefully one day she will have her own success story. AND if she should get clean, and manage to stay that way, I will never argue with her about what she could of done, or should be doing. I will again, celebrate every second of that life that was saved. Prayers to all those still suffering and for those that find recovery.....well...I thank my HP. That is all I know. Thirteen years is a long, long time....and I want another 13 and another and another..... Hopefloats |
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| | #183 (permalink) | ||||
| Paused Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Washington
Posts: 5,094
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| | #186 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2004 Location: uk
Posts: 3,055
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Personally, I'm not anti god or believers, it's hard to be anti something you don't actually think is out there and there are believers I have enormous respect for. I think we are culturally VERY opposed to being told what to think or mass conformity. This is ONLY my perception as one individual - I might live here but it doesn't make me an expert! | |
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| | #187 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: May 2004 Location: England
Posts: 3,410
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I also think we tend towards cynicism as a nation. Or, realism, depending on what you prefer. And many of our citizens seem to prefer to worship at the feet of celebrities instead. I was raised to make up my own mind. I choose not to believe in a Big Guy in the Sky. I do have faith, and I only call this a HP to avoid confusion in Al-anon. I am not anti-God at all and certainly not anti-believer. It's just not my bag.I do know that, were I or many of my friends alcoholic and we went to AA meetings and heard some things that I read on the boards everyday about God, we would run a mile. Or maybe not. Maybe we would be able to take what we like and leave the rest as I have in Al-anon. And perhaps Al-anon meetings would have been more of a challenge in that way were I in the States, I don't know. p.s "Are you anti-god?" You aren't accusing us English of being Satan, are you? Not that I believe in Satan either......
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| | #188 (permalink) | ||
| Member Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 8,710
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| | #189 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: May 2004 Location: England
Posts: 3,410
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Yes, I know, hon. Every day I am glad that I am not an alcoholic and none more so than when we discuss things like this. I am interested in why alternatives to AA haven't taken off so much over here exactly for the reasons that jlo has observed. Or perhaps there are a lot of people who are going it "alone" and we don't often get to hear about them. And you can't pin the Benny Hill thing on me, matey. I'm far too young to have had anything to do with that. |
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| | #190 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2004 Location: uk
Posts: 3,055
| Quote:
Again I think 'Al-Anon' alternatives face similar challenges of numbers. Being a less well known group in the first instance doesn't help (okay we know about al-anon but I believe nearly every person on the street knows what AA is but I doubt the same would be true re al-anon). Couple that with a lower poulation and I think those of us who want alternatives in the UK need to get active in encouraging them. It can seem as though one approach has an unending monoploy but given time most things change. To use an example from psychology at one point psycho ANALYSIS (particularly Freudian) as apposed to other methods of psycho THERAPY held what seemed to be an absolute dominance in perceptions of how to treat emotional distress and understand our psychological processes. Fast forward one century and acedemically Freud is barely taught, usually only one lecture 1st year students - essays arguing for/against his theories are rarely given at uni, but sometimes in schools - it's too easy! Psycho ANALYSIS remains available for those who chose it but has certainly been superceded by CBT, humanistic approaches, and eclectic methods, analysis itself isn't even dominant within most psycho therapy - at least not the therapist analysing the client, now it's the therapist facilitating the clients self analysis! If we could time travel back to when Freud ruled the world of psychology I believe (very strongly) there would exist therapists who could still make that work for patients, who could still achieve success. There would also be many who saw Freud as a hero of science, which is reasonable bearing in mind he replaced some even stranger theories such as the woman's womb running around her body!! (hence the word 'hysteria'). At that time I would think there were many people RIGHTLY grateful for Freud's cathartic methods, with teh choices they had it was a needed service. Without it I doubt we would have learned what we needed to for treatments to evolve. Bottom line? I'm glad Freud played his part - I'm glad we didn't stay stuck in his principles! There were also those who questioned the seemingly overwhelmingly RIGHT answer offered by Freud. They must have at times felt the tide against them was hopeless! However if it wasn't for their efforts psychology would still be thinking the ink blot test worked better than actually asking someone what they believe and feel. It's best not to be daunted by change taking time - some things like this can take a century or so but are no less needed and they need those who'll keep going to change at all. In the mean time we all have to make individual decisions with the PRESENT reality of what's available. And I think being grateful for what's available doesn't hurt. I think where gartitude closes a mind, that can hurt - not the gratitude but allowing it to force the mind shut. Judging by this thread alone James Frey has opened discussion, and certainly the responses to this thread I've found educational. If his book has that impact on a larger scale it'll be all good. | |
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| | #191 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: May 2003 Location: Northern CA
Posts: 1,437
| Quote:
Actually, it isn't that the UK is especially non-religious--it's that the US is unusually religious compared to all those other countries except Ireland, at least in the values that we profess. Here's some data, and lest one think that church attendance correlates with reduced alcohol consumption I've included data about per capita consumption for comparison: ------------------------- 53% of Americans consider religion to be very important in their lives. This compares with 16% in Britain, 14% in France and 13% in Germany. Percent of adults who attend religious services at least once a week: [compared to alcohol consumption rate* = pure alcohol in liters per adult >15 y/o] Country % Attendance Ireland 84% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 14.45 litres] Italy 45% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 9.14 litres] United States 44% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 8.51 litres] Canada 38% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 8.26 litres] Britain 27% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 10.39 litres] France 21% [per capita consumption of pure alcohol: 13.54 litres] * Based on 1990-1991 survey data. These numbers are somewhat suspect. Church attendance data in the U.S. has been checked against actual values using two different techniques. The true figures show that only about 20% of Americans and 10% of Canadians actually go to church one or more times a week. Many Americans and Canadians tell pollsters that they have gone to church even though they have not. Whether this happens in other countries, with different cultures, is difficult to predict. Data is from 1999. For years, pollsters have been asking adult Americans whether they go to church regularly. The results have not changed much over time. Recent estimates of the percentage of adult Americans who claimed to have attended weekly services during the past week are: 38% by the National Opinion Research Center 44% by the Institute for Social Research's World Values survey. This institute is located at the University of Michigan. 4 41% by the Barna Research Group Attendance over the previous week dropped from 49% in 1991 to 41% in 1999 5 40% by National Election Studies. Their poll shows that in 1996, 25% of adult Americans claimed to attend church, synagogue or temple every week; 12% almost every week; 16% once or twice a month, 18% a few times a year, and 30% never. 6 Assuming that "almost every week" means 3 weeks out of 4, then these data indicate 40% attendance. The Gallup Organization measured attendance at 41% during 2001-MAY. 8 The figure of 40% church attendance appears widely in the media. But, two studies have cast a grave doubt on these data: Sociologist Stanley Presser (also of the University of Maryland) completed a study of notes in personal diaries that were written between the mid '60s until the '90s. They found that many Americans were not at church when they claimed to be. Their best estimate is that church attendance was about 26% during that interval. Recent studies have been made of individual counties in both the U.S. and Canada. Researchers counted individuals as they went into church, synagogue, etc. They later interviewed a random sampling of adults in the county. They found that the survey results were inflated by about 100% from the actual attendance figures. Although about 40% of the American adults said that they attended church, the actual value was about 20%. Canadians lied by the same percentage. The only Western Christian country which has a church attendance higher than that of the U.S. is Ireland. More than 90% of adults went to church during the 1960's. A poll by Irish Marketing Surveys released in 1999-DEC, found that only half of the population of the Irish Republic currently attended church weekly. (This is a reduction from about 63% in 1998). 10% went once a month; 5% went on holy days; 13% never went to church at all. A spokesperson for the Archbishop of Dublin blamed the recent reduction on a series of sex scandals by priests in the Roman Catholic church. The next highest church attendance is believed to be Canada where 20% of the adult population say that they go to church weekly. Again, half were lying, as only about 10% actually attend church weekly. http://www.religioustolerance.org/rel_rate.htm [bracketed data inserted from WHO database] | |
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| | #193 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,229
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Including myself, I think relaxing, pondering and processing our lives, and not being ashamed of who we are is essential. It all becomes so narrow at times. A question of right and left, up and down. We become labelled, horribly, no matter what we try and do. Its like we always seem guilty of the same crime: a no win. So its pointless me trying to disprove the twelve steps, because like beliefs as part of human nature, for some they are true, they are reality. And I certainly wouldnt want people messing with my reality....back to square one: no win. Does recovery need rationalists? Atheists? Agnostics? Checking through history books it would seem that it does. |
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| | #194 (permalink) |
| * Join Date: May 2005 Location: Lincolnshire, England
Posts: 464
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The BBC is doing a survey on belief in God; as it stands 23 percent of 10,135 do believe. http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documen.../atheism.shtml
__________________ "All we have to do is to decide what to do with the time that is given to us"....................JRR Tolkien |
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| | #195 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,229
| Quote:
I guess we are all veggie, tree hugging, liberal, whispy, musliea eating freaks. Fine by me. | |
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| | #196 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2004 Location: uk
Posts: 3,055
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| | #197 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,229
| Quote:
Iraq aside, and that is a big aside, we are a lot better. I think. It could be a lot worse. The environment is more of a political concern for me at the mo. I think the political climate in England could be a lot worse. | |
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| | #198 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: London
Posts: 1,229
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Fear of relapse: that is why, I think, these arguments can seem so close to home. Fear that others will relapse if they read it, fear that by not sticking to certain rules that themselves or others will relapse. It becomes morally wrong because someone could read and relapse. That is such a huge moral issue in itself. A really big one. But you have to look at where this fear exists and where it doesn't. Anyway, 5. |
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| | #200 (permalink) |
| Grateful recovering alcoholic Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Blissfield, MI
Posts: 814
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Thank you - your responses were helpful to that question...sorry if "anti-God" was the wrong term... I'm one of those black or white people then after time fall perhaps into the gray. Don - as for religion.... I am NOT religious. I am 31 and have been inside a church, perhaps 5 times for a ceremony (aside from weddings/funerals). I know we have had prior debates regarding religion & AA. I don't understand the whole religion thing - I don't understand why people "go" to church - though I have thought about trying church at different times of my life. I just wasn't brought up that way. I don't understand the whole "you'll go to Hell if you....." thing. Or "it's a sin" thing. I have my own understanding of my HP - whom I do call God today. My HP does NOT probably fit into the "typical" religious mold. The whole idea of religion generally really turns me off. The concept of spirituality is what saved my life - the AA version. I guess over the years I've just slowly adapted my concept to what I believe now. When I first got into AA, I had no idea how to pray or even the words to the Lord's prayer. I just found it really interesting that those of you from England (on this board) seem the most resistant to a reliance upon a HP. Jen |
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