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The Darwin Awards - 2011 - Remember - They Walk Among us - Reproduce - and They Vote!
Strange Olde Household Cleaning Tips - Who Knew?
Who Gets Your Social Security When You're Gone - aka - THE REAL PONZI SCHEME!
Downward Wisconsin & So Goes America
Important! 9 Crucial Personal Safety Tips - Especially for Women - MUST READ



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SF - D - MISC FARM STUFF - FITS NO CATEGORY
SF - B - FARM BUILDINGS - BARNS - SILOS - CHICKEN COOPS - STABLES
SF - A - FARMERS - FARM WIVES - HIRED HANDS
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Strange Survey
THE BEST SEASON FOR BEING A FARMER IS:
 ALL OF THEM - THEY ARE ALL GREAT!
 FALL - WHEN THE CROPS COME IN - HARVEST
 SPRING - WHEN EVERYTHING IS NEW
 SUMMER - EVERYTHING IS GROWING
 WINTER - TOO COLD TO PLOW!
 
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The Strange History of Corned Beef

Corned beef got its name because this beef was preserved with pellets of salt that were the size of corn kernels, which was also referred to as "corns" of salt.
The Irish Have A Beef With Being Corny

Almost anyone you ask who knows about this kind of thing, will tell you that Corned Beef is an Irish dish. But ask them how they know. Because nobody ever told the Irish!

The traditional interpretation is that corned beef was a special dish reserved for Easter, or St. Patrick's Day. And while special meals were no doubt cooked at that time, Irish historians say if there was meat to be had, it was far more likely to be a piece of salted bacon. This is particularly true in the 1800s when most Irish families had very little meat in their diets, and when they did, it was more often mutton than beef.

The association of Irish and meals of corned beef and cabbage appears to be an American invention of Irish immigrants, but there are several reasons cited. One, is that poor Irish immigrants living in ethnic neighborhoods, learned to substitute corned beef for a side of salted bacon, a tip given to them by their Jewish friends. But how did the corned beef get to America in the first place?

For that, we go back to Anglo-Saxon times, when meat for the winter was preserved by packing it in barrels with "corns" of salt. The salt, in pellet form, was roughly the size of a corn kernel, hence the name "corned".

A more likely explanation for the Irish love of corned beef, is that it was a staple of the American military diet for both sides, during the Civil War. Irish having fought on both sides, may have taken a taste for the inexpensive dish, and it became a diet staple in the years afterwards.
 






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