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Turning a fish upside down
"Tom Nakashima" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend to taste. I suppose I probably used about 3 tablespoons. I didn't understand the Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend? Your last sentence in the above. Ah. I think, perhaps, you missed this part, http://www.zatarains.com/ from a previous post. Wolfgang |
Turning a fish upside down
"Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Tom Nakashima" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend to taste. I suppose I probably used about 3 tablespoons. I didn't understand the Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend? Your last sentence in the above. Ah. I think, perhaps, you missed this part, http://www.zatarains.com/ from a previous post. Wolfgang Yes, I did miss it, but figured it out after I did a search on Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend. I take it you can't buy it at your local supermarket. -tom |
Turning a fish upside down
"Tom Nakashima" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "Tom Nakashima" wrote in message ... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend to taste. I suppose I probably used about 3 tablespoons. I didn't understand the Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend? Your last sentence in the above. Ah. I think, perhaps, you missed this part, http://www.zatarains.com/ from a previous post. Wolfgang Yes, I did miss it, but figured it out after I did a search on Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend. I take it you can't buy it at your local supermarket. No, I don't have any trouble at all buying it at my local supermarket. As a matter of fact, I purchased it there a few weeks ago because they didn't have the McCormick's http://www.mccormick.com/ that I used to use. Wolfgang |
Turning a fish upside down
"Wolfgang" wrote in news:5s80b1F185308U1
@mid.individual.net: http://www.mccormick.com/ I used to pass by the McCormick bottling facility in the Inner Harbor in Bawlimer. There would always be a lovely smell of whatever they were bottling that day, for quite some distance. I'll always have a warm place in my heart for Old Bay, and I still buy McCormick's when I have a choice. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
Turning a fish upside down
Tom Nakashima wrote:
Yes, I did miss it, but figured it out after I did a search on Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend. I take it you can't buy it at your local supermarket. -tom Try Draeger's or Whole Foods. I'm pretty sure I've seen it at one or the other. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Turning a fish upside down
"rw" wrote in message ... Tom Nakashima wrote: Yes, I did miss it, but figured it out after I did a search on Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend. I take it you can't buy it at your local supermarket. -tom Try Draeger's or Whole Foods. I'm pretty sure I've seen it at one or the other. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. Thanks, two of my favorites, Draeger's and Whole Foods. -tom |
Turning a fish upside down
"Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... "Wolfgang" wrote in : For example, none of it does much to support your contention that "the otolith organs get confused because there is a bouyancy in addition to gravity." Leaving aside the quaint notion that organs get confused (though I think this raises all kinds of fascinating hermeneutic issues that might be fun to explore someday) the sources you link to above suggest that, as has already been stated here, various other systems and cues come into play. Thats a little bit more of a jump, but I do have some evidence to support it. I can't pull this stuff of the tips of my fingers like the last stuff, but it is buried in the literature. There's a whole slew of space data, with a variety of interpretations. The bottom line is that when we remove our 1-g operating point, the system gets very confused. What does "confused" mean? That's a little hard to pin down. Certainly, about half the astronauts and cosmonauts hurl violently for the first few days of micro-g. Typically, space flight papers are just nasty low-n POS's with incredibly large variability in methods and results, but there are some real stars out there (so to speak!!). Perhaps the paper that best attempts to quantify this stuff is Clement et al, Exp Brain Res 138(2001)-- a group I know for about 15 years and trust very much. Abstract: During the 1998 Neurolab mission (STS-90), four astronauts were exposed to interaural and head vertical (dorsoventral) linear accelerations of 0.5 g and 1 g during constant velocity rotation on a centrifuge, both on Earth and during orbital space flight. Subjects were oriented either left-ear-out or right-ear-out (Gy centrifugation), or lay supine along the centrifuge arm with their head off-axis (Gz centrifugation). Pre- flight centrifugation, producing linear accelerations of 0.5 g and 1 g along the Gy (interaural) axis, induced illusions of roll-tilt of 20 degrees and 34 degrees for gravito-inertial acceleration (GIA) vector tilts of 27 degrees and 45 degrees , respectively. Pre-flight 0.5 g and 1 g Gz (head dorsoventral) centrifugation generated perceptions of backward pitch of 5 degrees and 15 degrees , respectively. In the absence of gravity during space flight, the same centrifugation generated a GIA that was equivalent to the centripetal acceleration and aligned with the Gy or Gz axes. Perception of tilt was underestimated relative to this new GIA orientation during early in-flight Gy centrifugation, but was close to the GIA after 16 days in orbit, when subjects reported that they felt as if they were 'lying on side'. During the course of the mission, inflight roll-tilt perception during Gy centrifugation increased from 45 degrees to 83 degrees at 1 g and from 42 degrees to 48 degrees at 0.5 g. Subjects felt 'upside-down' during in-flight Gz centrifugation from the first in- flight test session, which reflected the new GIA orientation along the head dorsoventral axis. The different levels of in-flight tilt perception during 0.5 g and 1 g Gy centrifugation suggests that other non-vestibular inputs, including an internal estimate of the body vertical and somatic sensation, were utilized in generating tilt perception. Interpretation of data by a weighted sum of body vertical and somatic vectors, with an estimate of the GIA from the otoliths, suggests that perception weights the sense of the body vertical more heavily early in-flight, that this weighting falls during adaptation to microgravity, and that the decreased reliance on the body vertical persists early post-flight, generating an exaggerated sense of tilt. Since graviceptors respond to linear acceleration and not to head tilt in orbit, it has been proposed that adaptation to weightlessness entails reinterpretation of otolith activity, causing tilt to be perceived as translation. Since linear acceleration during in-flight centrifugation was always perceived as tilt, not translation, the findings do not support this hypothesis **** I have a bundle of VOR and perception data that seem to suggest that the brain takes liberties, and assumes a 1-g downward acceleration at all times, and that way instead of taking the time doing the geometry on the multi-dimensional otolith responses, the brain need only deal with those bits of acceleration that are orthogonal to gravity, and gets it right most of the time. This is stuff I haven't written on yet, but it certainly goes along with some of the details of the Clement paper. I've spent quite some time chatting with this with one of the authors, and I think we're on the same page. Of course, just because humans and monkeys get confused when you change their gravitational setpoint with micro-g doesn't necessarily mean that adding a bouyant component causes similar outcomes. Frankly, the monkeys keep drowning (just kidding, PETA guys!), but NASA does train their astronauts underwater, and some of the early orientation papers (a la Graybiel) put the body underwater. That's a bit of a jump on my part. Also, none of this means that fish get screwed up when you remove their bouyancy. They certainly flop around a good deal when you take them out of the water and don't put them upside down, which is what pushes me toward the funny paralytic-like state that can cause not being of an octavolateralis origin. I guess it's true what they say......to the man with a fifty megaton thermonuclear obfuscation, everything looks like a nail. Wolfgang |
Turning a fish upside down
"Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... "Wolfgang" wrote in news:5s80b1F185308U1 @mid.individual.net: http://www.mccormick.com/ I used to pass by the McCormick bottling facility in the Inner Harbor in Bawlimer. There would always be a lovely smell of whatever they were bottling that day, for quite some distance. I'll always have a warm place in my heart for Old Bay, and I still buy McCormick's when I have a choice. I spent about three months in that area back in 1971. Hadn't thought about it in a long time, but now that you mention it, I remember the McCormick factory quite clearly. Some of the seasoning blends are o.k. if you're in a hurry, but I really hate to buy from them. You'll pay three or four dollars for a sixteenth of an ounce of a ground spice, most of which will certainly lose its potency LONG before the average home cook will use it up. For two dollars or so, at any of a number of ethnic specialty markets, I can get half a pound of whole fennel, cumin, mustard, etc., etc., which I can grind up in my mortar in whatever quantity I need in a couple of minutes.....and the rest is good for a couple of years if properly stored. Wolfgang |
Turning a fish upside down
Tom Nakashima wrote:
"rw" wrote in message ... Tom Nakashima wrote: Yes, I did miss it, but figured it out after I did a search on Zatarain's Creole seasoning blend. I take it you can't buy it at your local supermarket. -tom Try Draeger's or Whole Foods. I'm pretty sure I've seen it at one or the other. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. Thanks, two of my favorites, Draeger's and Whole Foods. -tom Whole Foods in Palo Alto has, IMO, better carry-out sushi than Draeger's. I'm planning to stop there today. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
Turning a fish upside down
"Wolfgang" wrote in
: "Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... "Wolfgang" wrote in news:5s80b1F185308U1 @mid.individual.net: http://www.mccormick.com/ I used to pass by the McCormick bottling facility in the Inner Harbor in Bawlimer. There would always be a lovely smell of whatever they were bottling that day, for quite some distance. I'll always have a warm place in my heart for Old Bay, and I still buy McCormick's when I have a choice. I spent about three months in that area back in 1971. Hadn't thought about it in a long time, but now that you mention it, I remember the McCormick factory quite clearly. Some of the seasoning blends are o.k. if you're in a hurry, but I really hate to buy from them. You'll pay three or four dollars for a sixteenth of an ounce of a ground spice, most of which will certainly lose its potency LONG before the average home cook will use it up. For two dollars or so, at any of a number of ethnic specialty markets, I can get half a pound of whole fennel, cumin, mustard, etc., etc., which I can grind up in my mortar in whatever quantity I need in a couple of minutes.....and the rest is good for a couple of years if properly stored. Wolfgang Absolutely right. The spice rack seems to have more and more bulk spices in it these days. I love the Iranian Saffron I bought in Spain. Much less expensive than what you buy here. -- Scott Reverse name to reply |
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