Cold fried chicken and hot batteries
Sep. 16th, 2008 06:16 pmGood cold fried chicken needs to be still crispy and not dried out. The Skillet Street Food's fried chicken after chilled, it very crispy. It is a little dry but not terribly so. And the kick of cayenne? really kicks when it gets cold. I had saved the little thing of cool dipping sauce and I used it tonight as the dressing for some cold pasta salad. Perfecto.
Mr. Skillet Street Food uses chicken fillets for his frying which gives you a whole lotta meat. My $7 lunch/dinner has enough chicken left over for a nice sandwich for lunch tomorrow.
So,
ljtourist, you might not need two orders. But if you get two, you'll likely have more than two yummy meals for yourself!
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Tomorrow my cellphone (EVDO) modem arrives. FedEx willing, of course. I'm jazzed. And anxious to test it out. I hope the testing goes better than my Fun with Batteries.
First of care and feeding of batteries could be more confusing but I'm not sure how. My little laptop uses a Lithium ion battery. I searched the internet to see what I should expect and how I could best treat it. I found:
-Drain it all the way until it has no more electricity and then recharge - do this three times with every new battery to make sure it will provide the best service.
-Be sure you never drain the battery all the way down.
-If you are going to leave your computer plugged in remove the battery.
-Try to never operate the computer without the battery attached
-Small, short, drains and charges should be done often and are best.
-Be sure and charge for 16 hours minimum.
And a giant WTF to all of it.
I recently got a new cellphone and the instructions that came with it said 'you can charge this battery anytime you for as long as you like.' That's some clear info.
Mr. Skillet Street Food uses chicken fillets for his frying which gives you a whole lotta meat. My $7 lunch/dinner has enough chicken left over for a nice sandwich for lunch tomorrow.
So,
--
Tomorrow my cellphone (EVDO) modem arrives. FedEx willing, of course. I'm jazzed. And anxious to test it out. I hope the testing goes better than my Fun with Batteries.
First of care and feeding of batteries could be more confusing but I'm not sure how. My little laptop uses a Lithium ion battery. I searched the internet to see what I should expect and how I could best treat it. I found:
-Drain it all the way until it has no more electricity and then recharge - do this three times with every new battery to make sure it will provide the best service.
-Be sure you never drain the battery all the way down.
-If you are going to leave your computer plugged in remove the battery.
-Try to never operate the computer without the battery attached
-Small, short, drains and charges should be done often and are best.
-Be sure and charge for 16 hours minimum.
And a giant WTF to all of it.
I recently got a new cellphone and the instructions that came with it said 'you can charge this battery anytime you for as long as you like.' That's some clear info.