361 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
361 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2119
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Title: HPR2119: Making Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2119/hpr2119.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:34:44
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,119 entitled Making Chocolate Chip Cookies and is part of the series
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cooking.
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It is hosted by John Culp and is about 41 minutes long.
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The summary is, listen live and I make a batch of really tasty chocolate chip cookies.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
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Make a web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hey everybody, this is John Culp and Lafayette, Louisiana, and today what we're going
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to be doing is making chocolate chip cookies.
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I think that's something everybody can get on board with, don't you?
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So I meant to do this episode once before, and I don't know, I got halfway through and
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realized that I probably should have started.
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And then today I almost made the same mistake, where's my case?
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Trying to find the case for the recorder, so it doesn't accidentally get turned off.
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Where did I put it?
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It's got to be fascinating listening right now.
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Looking around for the case, from my zoom recorder, oh here it is.
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Okay, so I'm going to put the case around the zoom and then put the zoom in my pocket and
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get the lapel mic clipped to my shirt.
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Now I'm good to go.
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Okay, so anyway, I've been making chocolate chip cookies most Sunday afternoons because
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the kids like to have a cookie in their lunch.
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And I like making these cookies.
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The variant of cookie that I'm making today is one, I'll tell you about a little bit, maybe
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as we go on.
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I've already done a little bit of the recipe because I kind of, I got started before I remembered
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that I wanted to do an episode about this.
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So I've done the very first part already, which is to cream the butter in both sugars,
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which is like the first thing you do on just about any cookie project here.
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And these are called the $250 cookies and I got this recipe a long time ago.
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I was doing kind of an editing project for some publisher, somewhere, I don't remember
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where they were.
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Stack Vaughn as the publisher, but the editor that I was dealing with one day sent me an
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email.
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It was a forwarded email with this story that might be apocryphal, I don't really know.
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But the story was about a woman who went to Neman Marcus and had some delicious cookies
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and asked the waiters if she could have the recipe for the cookies.
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And the waiters came back a while later with the recipe and also with the bill.
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And the bill apparently was $250 for the recipe.
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Well, this so outraged the woman that she decided to share the recipe with the entire world.
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And that's how I got it on this chain email.
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It just so happens that I don't know if that's true or not, doesn't really matter to me.
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These are delicious cookies.
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So I'm just going to eat them because I like them.
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Now a couple of things about the tools I'm using here.
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I used to make these cookies years ago in graduate school before I had very good equipment.
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I think I might have had a hand mixer and that was good enough to cream the butter and
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sugars.
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I started adding the dry ingredients, it didn't really stand up to, it just wasn't powerful
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enough.
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Probably three or four years ago, I bought my wife the KitchenAid Artisan Mixing Bowl.
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Like it's a big powerful mixer on a stand, runs into several hundred dollars.
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I got a bargain at just over three hundred dollars, like a significant discount.
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So it's a pricey thing and at first she was like, you know, I don't know if you should
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spend that kind of money on this thing.
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Maybe we shouldn't do that, but I did it anyway and we've never been sorry.
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This thing is so amazing.
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I took a picture a while ago and I'll post that along with the episode.
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But this mixer makes it so that it's super easy to make these cookies.
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It is so powerful and mixes everything so perfectly that I can whip up a batch of these
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pretty darn quick.
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Okay, I think I'm going to preheat the oven.
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I use a to bake these.
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I don't use our big oven because it's kind of, it's got some squirrely things regarding
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temperature.
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And so I think I'm going to use the toaster oven, which is actually a pretty nice toaster
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oven too.
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It's a cuisine art total touch and it does very accurate, very accurate temperatures.
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I need to choose pizza bake and then temperature and then hit the up arrow until it gets to
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375 degrees Fahrenheit and then start.
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Okay, so it's going to start preheating.
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So I've added one stick of butter and then half a cup of vegetable shortening.
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Crisco is the branding and one of the cool things about using the crisco is you get to
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use the water displacement method to measure it.
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I mean, when you scoop it out with a spoon, it's just a big gobb and so the only way to
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measure it accurately is to put a known quantity of water into a measuring cup.
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Get a bunch of this stuff on a spoon and then dunk it in the water until it displaces
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enough to bring it up.
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So I put two and a half cups of water in that liquid measuring cup and then scoop out
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a bunch of crisco and dunk it in there and when it's enough where the water reads three
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cups, then I know I've got the right amount and I put it in there and mix it up.
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So I have mixed the butter and the white sugar and the brown sugar.
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Next thing to do is put in two eggs and one teaspoon of vanilla.
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Get out some measuring utensils here.
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Okay, there's the one teaspoon there it is.
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I think this is probably imitation vanilla extract.
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I don't know if we use the real thing or not, is it?
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Oh, it's actually, it's actually pure vanilla extract.
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Oh, fancy.
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And measuring out one American teaspoon, dump it in.
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I'll get a bowl to put the jockey spoon in.
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And then I need two eggs.
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I'm going to fridge and get out a couple of eggs.
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We have, yeah, it looks like we got some, my wife had some kind of incident earlier today
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where she was making a frittata and had already cracked like seven eggs and the eighth one
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that she put in there was bad and didn't realize it until it had already gone in with
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all the other she had, so she had to dump all of them, it was very upsetting.
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These look like they're probably going to be fine and I crack the eggs into a little
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bowl so that if I get little bits of shell in there, they don't go all the way into the
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mix.
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It makes it harder to fish them out.
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One egg.
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I'm not very good at the egg part, I'll just crush the shell.
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But I don't think any little bits went in there sweet, okay.
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Yeah, I think I'm good, so I'm just going to dump them in to the bowl.
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The KitchenAid Artisan mixer has a large stainless steel bowl and the mixing mechanism
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is really, really cool, so not only does it, it's got one kind of, one place to stick
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a mixer thing and if you use one of the electric hand mixers, normally you've got two whisk
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kind of things that spin around and go in between each other, well this only has one
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and it spins around on its axis but it also does this kind of elliptical movement where
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the entire unit is going around in a circle while it's spinning in place.
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Oops, I've already got it preheated and so it mixes things very, very thoroughly.
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So I'm going to turn it on now to mix in the eggs and the vanilla.
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See what's a nice thing about this kind of mixer too is you can walk away from it while
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it's mixing, you don't have to stand there holding it, you can either mix the dry ingredients,
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that looks good.
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Now mix the dry ingredients in a large bowl.
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Just occurred to me, this white bowl that I always use to mix the dry ingredients is the
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bowl that came with my mom's first mixer that she got when my mom and dad were first married,
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they made an investment similarly and got one of these big mix, I don't know if it was
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the same brand but it was quite a lot of money for a young married couple at the time
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but my mom used it so much that they, and I think she used it for 35 years or something
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and then gave it off to me and it finally gave up the ghost but I still have the bowls that
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went with it.
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So I'm going to do the white flour first, recipes, two cups of flour, I'm using American
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measurements here, I don't know the number of grams or whatever, I'm going to post the
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recipe in the show notes and so if you want to try it out and you live in Europe then
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I guess you'll have to figure out the conversions, I'm not going to do that, but I think it's not
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too hard to do.
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One cup and two cups.
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And what's next, a teaspoon of baking soda, and a teaspoon of baking powder, and that's
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what these things do, I just know that every cookie recipe needs them, I've got to rinse
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off the teaspoon measuring spoon and then dry it, let's do the baking soda first.
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Okay, and now a teaspoon of baking powder, and very importantly do not forget the salt,
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the cookie will taste bad if you don't put the salt in it.
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So if I put this salt container, this one's just about empty, I wonder if there's enough
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in there.
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I've got another one, but it looks like I'm going to have to open it, yeah that's pretty
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much empty.
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I do have another one right, oh there it is, it's way up on the shelf.
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Okay, I can see over there that my wife is planning tomorrow to make me a big pot of
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red beans and sausage, like Cajun sausage and red beans, I can't wait stoked about that.
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This is open here, it's hard to get open.
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Okay, there it's open, I'm going to pour some salt in this little bowl and I can use
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that same bowl of salt when I make my steel cut oats, I think I might make a batch of
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steel cut oats for breakfast tomorrow.
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How much salt does this, one half teaspoon of salt, okay there goes a half teaspoon of
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salt, what else, teaspoon of soda, teaspoon of baking powder, two cups of flour, half
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teaspoon of salt, okay so the next thing to put in there is the secret ingredient that
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makes it taste a little bit different from a lot of other chocolate chip cookies and
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that is two and a half cups of blended oatmeal.
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What I'm going to do is pour in that you measure it, but that means two and a half cups before
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it's been blended. I use a cuisine art food processor to do the blending bit here.
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I measure out two and a half cups of rolled oats into this thing,
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one cup, two and of course since this is oatmeal in there that means the cookie is very
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healthy doesn't it? Let's say yes, that way we can eat lots of them and not ever gain any
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weight or be unhealthy, okay so there's two and a half cups of oatmeal in the hopper,
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if that's what that thing's called, I'll put the lid on the food processor and I'm going to turn it
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on. Let it go for a minute, walk over here to the side room because that's kind of noisy.
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There's a mosquito in the kitchen, I think it just bit me on my ankle.
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Let's check the consistency. Ooh, looks lovely. It's a nice oat flour now.
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Get the blade out of there. I'll put the blade over here to wash it later and just put it in the dish
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washer. I think I'm going to mix up these other dry ingredients thoroughly before I put the
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oatmeal in there. The main thing is to use a whisk for this and the main thing we want to do is make
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sure that all of the small quantity ingredients like the salt and the baking soda and baking powder
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get mixed in thoroughly. So I'm mixing that with a whisk now. Spread it all around nice and evenly.
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Okay that's good and now let's dump the the blended oatmeal in there with the white ingredients
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whisk that around. It's this part of the cookie making process that used to be extremely
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difficult before I had this like awesome mixer. I remember a few times doing the entire process
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of folding in the dry ingredients in with the wet one using like a big spoon and that worked.
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I mean I made the cookies but man that was hard. Once you get past a certain point it feels like
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there's no way I could possibly mix in any more of this dry ingredients here and get it thoroughly
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combined but you have to. There's still a lot more left and I managed to do it but man it was
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really hard. This mixer makes it so easy so I like that. I'm putting away some ingredients now
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just get them out of the way. All right so I'm going to tip this thing back a little bit and
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start pouring dry ingredients into the bowl. All right there's probably a third of the dry
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ingredients in there now. Start on a very low speed because if I turn the thing on really high
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immediately then it blows this powdery stuff all over the kitchen. So I'm going to start on a low
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speed and let it do its thing. Now I'll turn it up a little higher. Beauty. Okay add some more dry
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ingredients and start on low again.
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Okay now let's put the last bit in. I used to have to do this in about seven or eight stages when
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I was using a spoon but now I can do it in three. I could probably even just put all of it in
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there and do it all at once but I do it in stages anyway. Love the kitchen aid artisan mixer.
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If you do any amount of baking of this kind and don't have one of these things I'd really
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highly recommend it. If it's at all feasible in your budget I realize it's an expensive piece of
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kit but man it's so great. I just put it up to level four and it's got six more levels to go
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if I want to get it really fast but there's no need. Okay so the dry ingredients are all mixed
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in. The last thing to put in there is chocolate chips. I put in one cup of chocolate chips.
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These are nicely told how semi-sweet morsels.
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Oh one of those chocolate chips fell on the counter. I'm going to have to eat down.
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I'm not terrible in that happen. Okay I'm going to put the chocolate chips in this.
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This is probably going to jump a little bit now with the chips in there.
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I probably had to just fold the chips in there with a big spoon or something but I always use
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the mixer anyway. Get them mixed in there really good. Okay the batter it's cookie dough is all mixed
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up ready to go. Now of critical importance is tasting it. So I'm going to try to get all the dough
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to come off the mixing blade. That's stuck because it's pretty stiff now.
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Anybody who makes cookies knows that one of the great pleasures of doing it is getting to eat
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just a little bit of raw cookie dough. People say that this might not be the healthiest thing to do
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with the raw eggs in there but I've done it my entire life and I've never gotten sick from it
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unless I just ate too much. So here it goes.
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Oh that's good.
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That's a ticket right there.
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I'm going to detach the blade thing.
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I might have to lick a little bit of that off there too. That would be terrible.
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You can see the sacrifices I make for my kids.
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Not every dad would be willing to go through these trials and tribulation
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so that their kids will have cookies in their lunch.
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Okay that's enough.
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Now if you touch the bowl from the base and move the mixer back toward the back so I got a
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little room to put the cookie sheet. I've lined the cookie sheet for the toaster oven with some
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paper parchment stuff to keep it from sticking. I'm going to use a what size is this one inch?
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Does it even say what size is it? I'm using a little baller thing so it's got a circular ball.
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You scoop stuff out and it makes a nice ball and it's got this piece of metal in the middle
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that swirls all the way around it to eject the ball out of the thing once you've done it.
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This is what I use to make the dropped cookies. This pan holds nine. There's one, two,
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nice because it makes a uniform size every time. Three, four, five,
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six, seven, eight, and nine. All right let's put the cookies in the oven and set the timer
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for 11 minutes. And normally while that first batch is cooking excuse me I do a little bit of clean up.
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Might be fun. Fun to let me clean things up on HPR. How could that possibly be born?
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You put that in that bowl in the dishwasher. This one in the dishwasher.
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Maybe I could do an episode on how to load the dishwasher or maybe that's like a bonus episode
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that I'm doing right now as we speak. The cookies part and also how to load the dishwasher.
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Actually I'm not going to tell you how I'm just going to do it.
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Find that people all have their own ways of loading a dishwasher. You're visiting
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somebody and you want to help them clean up the kitchen. Sometimes you end up causing
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consternation because you don't do the dishwasher exactly how they like and then they have to redo
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everything. I'm not that I would ever do that when somebody was trying to help me but
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I've known it to happen.
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Rinse off a little bit.
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Now what to talk about while the cookies are baking. I plan to carry this all the way through
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to when I get the cookie out and take a bite out of it. I don't know what I could do. I could get
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a cup of coffee to go with. Go with the cookies. Rinse that blade off a little bit.
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I wonder what kind of cookies you guys like to make out there. Maybe you could do an episode
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of how to make your favorite kind of cookie. I love chocolate chip cookies. I mean I don't
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see how anybody could ever get tired of these things. It's tempting while that first batch is
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cooking. It's tempting to have another scoop of the cookie dough but I think I'm not going to do that.
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I think I might regret it if I did that. What I'm going to do instead is get me a cup of coffee
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ready because as everybody knows a cookie by itself is great but if you've got a bit of coffee with
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it that's even better. This is coffee from this morning that I keep in the thermos. I'll probably
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have to warm it up a little. It stays kind of warm in the thermos but not as hot as it needs to
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be. Nuke it in the microwave.
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Seven and a half minutes left.
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Cleaning the dry measuring cups now. These dry measuring cups are excellent. They're made by
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William Sonoma and these were gifted. I don't know if they were wedding gift or what but they're so
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great. A lot of times dry measuring cups are either plastic or really thin. These have an amazing
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build quality that very heavy stainless steel cups. Like one of these cups weighs almost as much
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as the whole set of those cups often does. They're awesome.
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Not sure what else I could talk about at this point.
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The coffee is heated up. I'm going to add just a little bit of milk.
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Daish.
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So I usually do this activity on Sunday afternoons because at this part of the afternoon is when
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my wife and daughter go out to volunteer at the local no-kill animal shelter, and daughter
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is really into cats, and so she goes out there and volunteers to clean out the kitty litter,
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sweep things, mop the floors, give cats medicine, do all kinds of things she loves doing, and
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it's nice to do that kind of volunteer work, but it's just me and my son in the house,
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and he's usually reading his book at this hour, and so it's a nice time for me, normally,
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so I would be doing right now, instead of talking to you, is listening to podcasts, catching
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up on the bug gast, or HPR, or whatever, that I've gotten my cue, but today I'm talking
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to you while the cookies bake. I can see them in there, maybe I'll take a picture, that
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I'll get me something to do. They're clearly baking, but they're not as flat as they're
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going to get eventually. Still got five minutes left, I'll take a picture of the cookie
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dev also, end of the scooper, position it just so. Okay, man, it's going to be a thrilling
|
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slide show to look at with these cookies. I can get the cooling rack ready. Whenever I take
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the cookies out, I like to put them on a cooling rack right away, that way they can cool off,
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but I can use the, I've only got one tray that goes in this cuisine art toaster oven. As
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toaster ovens go, this is a pretty large one. It's exactly square in the interior, so it
|
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holds a pretty good size pan, and it's, when I was looking for a new toaster oven, I went
|
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with the highest customer review ratings, and so I ended up spending a good bit more money
|
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than I thought I would at first, but we've been really, really happy with this, because I,
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I mean, you can bake real things in there, like you could bake a full-size pie in there,
|
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probably. I don't know if we've ever done that or not, but when the large oven is acting
|
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up in terms of temperature, then I know I can rely on this one. So, we've got the cooling
|
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rack out now. I think I'll take a picture once I have the cookies on the rack, that'll make
|
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a nicer picture than just the rack I'll buy itself. Three minutes left. Well, after a little
|
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|
apparent crisis in terms of HPR shows, it seems like the crisis has been averted, at least,
|
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for the moment, and there are enough shows in the cuper a couple of weeks. I remember
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last week thinking that I might, I should have recorded the episode about the cookies and
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posted it immediately, because there was a slot coming right up that was empty, and it
|
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seems to have gotten filled. So, that's good. Two and a half minutes. By the way, the red beans
|
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|
|
that my wife's going to cook for me, what she does here, she soaks, I guess, a pound
|
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|
|
of these red beans all night long in water. Oh, no, that, you know what that means, though.
|
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|
She's using the crock pot for this, so that means I can't do my steel cut oats. I guess
|
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|
|
I won't do that after all, because I need the crock pot for the steel cut oats. Oh, well,
|
||
|
|
I'll do that the next day. It makes a huge mess of beans down here in South Louisiana. People
|
||
|
|
really like beans and caged and sausage, served over white rice, delicious. Great thing
|
||
|
|
about that also is you can make a big pot of it and then eat it for the next five days,
|
||
|
|
just as leftover. It's pity that the kids don't like it, though. Somehow they've got
|
||
|
|
an aversion to beans of any sort. Pity. All right, how you'll do it in there? About a minute
|
||
|
|
and 15 seconds left. Don't worry, I'm not going to keep recording while I do all six
|
||
|
|
trays of these that I have to do. We'll just do one tray and then call it done. So now I've
|
||
|
|
retrieved the oven mitts from the other side of the kitchen, ready to pull the hot tray
|
||
|
|
of cookies out. I'm going to put the eggs away also. Don't leave the eggs out or else they're
|
||
|
|
all going to be bad, just like that one earlier. Thirty seconds. I might even need to let them
|
||
|
|
bake a little bit longer. I had one tray last Sunday that was a little bit too burnt on
|
||
|
|
the bottom. I still ate them and everything, but I like them to be just a little bit chewy
|
||
|
|
and a little bit not chewy. A little crispy on the outside and a little bit chewy on the inside.
|
||
|
|
Ten seconds. Five, four, three, two, one. Okay, pull the cookies out. When I set them down in
|
||
|
|
the counter, they kind of collapse a little bit. They look like they might need a little bit longer.
|
||
|
|
I think I'm going to put them in for another minute or so. The first batch seems like the first
|
||
|
|
batch always needs a little bit longer than the succeeding ones. I'm going to let it go another 30 seconds or so.
|
||
|
|
I thought about having some background music going on while I was doing this, but then I remembered
|
||
|
|
well, if it's background music that is under copyright, then Ken might not like that very much. So I
|
||
|
|
decided not to have any background music going on. I guess I could have had a gemendo or something playing
|
||
|
|
CC licensed music in the background, but I just didn't have the energy to go set it all up. Okay,
|
||
|
|
I'm going to pull them out for a while now. Okay, first I'm going to take a picture of them. Oh, don't they look
|
||
|
|
lovely, knowing delicious cookies. Okay, now time to put them on the cooling rack. Gotta be a little bit careful
|
||
|
|
with them at this stage because they're tiny bit delicate and they could fall right in half if you're not
|
||
|
|
careful.
|
||
|
|
right
|
||
|
|
Cookies are on the rack and then I'm going to take another picture.
|
||
|
|
And now I think I'm going to put one on a plate and eat it.
|
||
|
|
It's going to be really hot, but a little cool enough.
|
||
|
|
I'm going to eat it live on the recording.
|
||
|
|
They'll sip it off.
|
||
|
|
You know what I'm going to do?
|
||
|
|
We're going to let that cool for just a minute.
|
||
|
|
Get the next tray in the oven and then eat the cookie.
|
||
|
|
So one, we're scooping again.
|
||
|
|
Two, three, one, four, five,
|
||
|
|
I think what I'm probably going to do apart from this makes enough cookies to get through the week easily.
|
||
|
|
Even if I have one or two after lunch every day and the kids have one in their lunches every day.
|
||
|
|
And I can be a hero to my two administrative assistants at work if I bring them cookies as well.
|
||
|
|
That seems like a good idea, doesn't it?
|
||
|
|
I got to keep them happy because they work very, very hard for me.
|
||
|
|
Okay, so the next batch is in the oven. The timer is set.
|
||
|
|
I'm going to eat this cookie.
|
||
|
|
It's still warm in my hand.
|
||
|
|
Come on.
|
||
|
|
There's nothing like a fresh chocolate chip cookie right out of the oven.
|
||
|
|
I promise I'm not trying to make you all jealous or anything.
|
||
|
|
I'm going to make this one inspired you to go make a batch of cookies yourself.
|
||
|
|
I'll put the recipe in the show notes and if you want to try these very cookies yourself, you might do so.
|
||
|
|
I'm going to take one to my son also.
|
||
|
|
He likes to have one for a shallot.
|
||
|
|
You're perfect.
|
||
|
|
Do you want a cookie?
|
||
|
|
Fresh audio? No?
|
||
|
|
Go for it.
|
||
|
|
There you go.
|
||
|
|
He paused only for a second and then grabbed it.
|
||
|
|
All right.
|
||
|
|
I hope you guys have enjoyed hearing me make cookies and then stuff my face with him.
|
||
|
|
This has been John Culp and Lafayette Louisiana for Hacker Public Radio.
|
||
|
|
Talk to you guys later.
|
||
|
|
Bye.
|
||
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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||
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Imphonomicon Computer Club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the creative commons, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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