Hey LRb, chemistry and microbiology is something we all need to brush up on. We're brewers!
Glad you got a chance to quench your thirst after that long talk.
Just watched Days of Thunder for the first time. Robert Duvall and Tom Cruise. Say what you want about TC, he never makes a bad movie. Robert Duvall, hm niether.
Also want to say, Mike sorry you have to let go a good set of chompers but happy you're going to be able to give up the pain killers and start livng life again
LG.. Great fix on the phone. I have a Jeep with 225K on it. I occasionally need to fix things on it and it's good as new. Great feeling. Cheers for you
Beaks, sorry to hear about your mishap. Truly wish you a speedy recovery my friend. Wish I could take Pappy's advice when I get randomly drug tested for work.. "Do I bring my own or do you provide?" (or something like that)

ipe:
I've got over 230k on my truck. She's never let me down.
I am so going to say that next time I get a random'ed.
I don't like dental work either. My dentist says I'm one of only two patients he's ever seen where lidocaine injections simply do not work. I now get put under whenever feasible.
I would put ice cream in the middle.
You really shouldn't be dealing with withdrawals after only two weeks. If it was more than just some sort of placebo effect, consider yourself very fortunate that they were almost certainly on the very mild end of the spectrum.
I've been on very heavy painkillers (large dose Dilaudid) for the past 3.5 years, for a facial nerve issue. I occasionally get a bit of brain fog still, but I manage.
Ice cream sounds perfect.
Novocaine doesn't work for me at all. Lidocaine works, for almost exactly 20 minutes regardless of the dose. As in 2 shots in the jaw. 20 minutes. 7 shots in the jaw. 25 minutes.
As for the withdrawl, I was breaking out into cold sweats a lot. I was really irritable, and I just flat wanted more pain killers. I wasn't in pain, I just wanted more pain killers anyway. I quite smoking at the same time as I started taking the pain killers, so that probably had something to do with it.
Study history it's never been a nice place. My take is start with yourself and go with a "butterfly effect" but there shall always be those that believe they are above others. So be the person you wish the rest of the world should be and keep sanity in check with that
Beeks

to that. I don't try to change the world, I just try to make that little part around me better.
Thanks LRB!
After I peel, slice, and core the apples I let them sit out for a while so they will oxidize a little. Then I bag them up and freeze them overnight. The next day they get thawed and boiled in just enough water to cover them up. Then I lauter the whole mess through my MLT. This leaves me with a gravity of about 1.020 since I use so much water. The apple flavor is very strong, but the sugar content is too low for cider. That's why I make a lot and boil it down. I also add brown sugar to increase the gravity and dry it out during fermentation. It leaves me with an abv of about 5.5-6%. It makes a very tasty cider. You can really taste the freshness of the homegrown apples. Next year I might actually make a large apple press, so I can forgo the two boiling processes.
Then I scoop the pulp out of the MLT and heat it with brown sugar and spices to make the applesauce. Then process the jars in hot water to pasteurize.
I was wondering where your press was, and why peeled the apples.
When I was a kid I remember spending a lot of hours de-stemming, quartering, and coring apples with a pairing knife. I must have started doing that when I was about 4. My Dad liked to make cider every year. Though we were Mormon at the times, so it wasn't alcoholic.
Usually, we did the peeled apples in the press first. Those got turned into apple sauce and/or apple butter. They were the larger apples. We used the crushed pulp leftover from the press. The smaller ones we just washed, de-stemmed, quartered, cored, and pressed.
Sounds delicious and work/time intensive. My grandma would cook the applesauce down til thick then cut 5 inch circles of pie crust dough scoop 1/3 -1/4 cup of apple mixture fold in 1/2 wet the edges and press seal them with a fork. Bake til lightly brown she called them hand pies I believe that it's a tart variation.
I love hand pies. My mom makes them with pretty much drier version of beef stew as a filling. Calls them cornish beef pasties.
Those are indeed small! Some of mine are so large they won't work on the peeler/corer/slicer machine. Those are the ones I've been giving to friends and family.
I have a young peach tree with so many peaches on it that branches are breaking, which really sucks!
Ooh, sounds like you needed to thin the blossoms on that one. Sometimes a late frost will do that for you, but I'm not sure that's likely where you are.