It's not as labor intensive
as shelling peas but for salads, I trim away the tougher stalks, using only the tips and tendrils.
Not exact matches
In whatever he did - scrubbing pots,
shelling peas, mopping floors - he worked
as though God were there.
Just peel the chick
peas in a bowl under running water With running water just overflowing the bowl
As you agitate the
peas underwater the water current lifts away the
shells And soon enough all the
shells are in tye bottom of your sink simply strain water and enjoy
Salad: 2 cups fresh corn or frozen corn, steamed 1/2 cup tomato, diced 1/2 cup green
peas or
shelled edamame, steamed 1/2 cup red, orange, yellow, or green pepper or any combination, diced 1 tsp fresh herbs of your choice, such
as cilantro, parsley, basil or shiso (Japanese basil), chopped Salt and pepper to taste
Avoid using flooring substrates that can be accidentally ingested such
as sand, aquarium or
pea gravel, ground corn cobs, walnut
shells, wood shavings or chips, or artificial grasses
Actually the
pea is a priori slipped under the
shell in all arguments, including yours,
as you have admitted to certain answers being unknowable.
Not fair to cheat and just make intelligence an a priori infinitely improbable characteristic of your infinite eternity and explain the visible Universe however improbable you want to judge it in ignorance, with the an even less probable uncaused cause judged in even greater ignorance
as it is out there where it can not even in principle be observed, slipping the
pea neatly under the
shell.
I am very bad at the find - the -
pea - in - the -
shell game, otherwise known
as explaining where the AGW heat is going if the global atmospheric temps are pausing.
Gather • Small needle - nose pliers • 1 blown egg, clean and dry • Epoxy glue • Salt well or other small dish, for the base • Small, single - stem flowers, such
as pansies or violas • Card stock for tag (optional) Create 1 Using the pliers, gently chip away the
shell around the hole in the top of the egg, enlarging it to the size of a
pea.