|
Post by elaine on Dec 21, 2021 0:33:54 GMT
www.southyourmouth.com/2013/12/original-sausage-balls.htmlINGREDIENTS 3 scant cups Bisquick baking mix 1 pound pork sausage at room temperature (I use ‘hot’) 16 ounces sharp cheddar cheese, shredded (4 cups) 1/4 cup chopped fresh chives or parsley (optional) INSTRUCTIONS 1. Combine all ingredients in a stand mixer then mix at low speed using the paddle attachment (or mix by hand) until all ingredients are evenly combined. 2. Roll dough into 1 1/2 inch balls and place on a baking sheet one inch apart. I used my handy-dandy cookie scoop to make quick work out of portioning these. 3. Bake at 350 degrees for 20-25 minutes or until lightly browned on the bottom. NOTES: UPDATE: this recipe has garnered SO MANY comments regarding 2 vs. 3 cups of Bisquick so I want address it here in the recipe... I make it with three scant cups (meaning not scooped/packed cups). I have made it exactly as written dozens of times since I posted this and they have come out perfect and just like I’ve never had these, do you dip them in anything? Are they an appetizer, a main dish, a side dish? We don’t dip these in anything. The fat from the sausage & cheese keeps them very moist. Although, maybe a horseradish dip of some sort would be good. But my boys gobble them down hot out of the oven. They are good as appetizers and/or as a breakfast food.
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 19:23:34 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2021 0:34:15 GMT
I learned about these on this board. They are good and very filling for a crowd. A whole recipe was a little much for just the 4 of us but the leftovers were consumed. We had for a brunch type meal last year...
|
|
|
Post by elaine on Dec 21, 2021 0:35:08 GMT
Any real doctor will tell you “natural immunity” is mostly make believe. Keep listening to the assholes on Fox. So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Are you trolling or trying to have a genuine discussion? Hard to keep it straight with you.
|
|
|
Post by cindyupnorth on Dec 21, 2021 0:38:15 GMT
So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Can you post that study? SO you have had your antibodies recently tested? I do believe in natural immunity, but not that long.
|
|
|
Post by MichyM on Dec 21, 2021 0:52:50 GMT
Besides the length of time it’s been since one has had covid, and the amount of antibodies (which vary from person to person), unless you’re being specifically tested for covid antibodies on a very regular basis (like weekly) you’ll never know when those antibodies wane.
*** clarified in the next paragraph: Also, keep in mind we’ve now had 3 covid variants. Do the antibodies from having one variant keep you safe from the other 2? According to both my physician and my son’s (who we’ve asked this question in the last 3 days) the answer is no.
ETA: I want to reword that last part. We currently have delta and omicron variants being shared. Having one likely does not protect you from the other according to my and my son’s physicians.
|
|
|
Post by Merge on Dec 21, 2021 0:54:44 GMT
The unvaccinated woman at my school who is extremely sick with Covid right now - and passed it on to at least three other teachers - delayed testing in part because she believed she had natural immunity from previous infection and couldn’t possibly have it again.
|
|
|
Post by cindosha on Dec 21, 2021 0:58:13 GMT
So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Can you post that study? SO you have had your antibodies recently tested? I do believe in natural immunity, but not that long. Google the study and yes I was tested recently.
|
|
|
Post by cindosha on Dec 21, 2021 0:59:35 GMT
So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Are you trolling or trying to have a genuine discussion? Hard to keep it straight with you. Google the study.
|
|
|
Post by elaine on Dec 21, 2021 1:00:42 GMT
Are you trolling or trying to have a genuine discussion? Hard to keep it straight with you. Google the study. You can’t Google, apparently. Why recommend it to others? Just try Omicron death and Texas and then get back to me about Google.
|
|
scrappinghappy
Pearl Clutcher
“I’m late, I’m late for a very important date. No time to say “Hello.” Goodbye. I’m late...."
Posts: 4,307
Jun 26, 2014 19:30:06 GMT
|
Post by scrappinghappy on Dec 21, 2021 1:03:01 GMT
I honestly don't understand this. Was there so much kickback to the polio vaccine? To any of the other vaccines. They saved lives, people got them, they ARE LEGALLY required. This will save lives. What's the difference other than 50 years.
|
|
|
Post by littlemama on Dec 21, 2021 1:03:40 GMT
www.southyourmouth.com/2013/12/original-sausage-balls.htmlINGREDIENTS 3 scant cups Bisquick baking mix 1 pound pork sausage at room temperature (I use ‘hot’) 16 ounces sharp cheddar cheese, shredded (4 cups) 1/4 cup chopped fresh chives or parsley (optional) INSTRUCTIONS 1. Combine all ingredients in a stand mixer then mix at low speed using the paddle attachment (or mix by hand) until all ingredients are evenly combined. 2. Roll dough into 1 1/2 inch balls and place on a baking sheet one inch apart. I used my handy-dandy cookie scoop to make quick work out of portioning these. 3. Bake at 350 degrees for 20-25 minutes or until lightly browned on the bottom. NOTES: UPDATE: this recipe has garnered SO MANY comments regarding 2 vs. 3 cups of Bisquick so I want address it here in the recipe... I make it with three scant cups (meaning not scooped/packed cups). I have made it exactly as written dozens of times since I posted this and they have come out perfect and just like I’ve never had these, do you dip them in anything? Are they an appetizer, a main dish, a side dish? We dont dip them in anything. I think they are meant to be an appetizer, but I love appetizers for a meal!
|
|
|
Post by cindosha on Dec 21, 2021 1:10:02 GMT
You can’t Google, apparently. Why recommend it to others? Just try Omicron death and Texas and then get back to me about Google. The Twitter she posted said the death was believed to be from omicron. I was responding to that. 🙄🙄🙄
|
|
|
Post by nightnurse on Dec 21, 2021 1:10:17 GMT
Any real doctor will tell you “natural immunity” is mostly make believe. Keep listening to the assholes on Fox. So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Seriously? That’s like saying already being pregnant protects you more from getting pregnant again than using a condom. Sure, technically true, but kind of misses the point. The point is not to get COVID in the first place. About a third of people who contract COVID end up with long term complications including heart and lung damage and neurological effects. Those who get the vaccine and avoid infection don’t have that risk. And the Israeli study is old news. Newer research suggests the natural immune wanes, and the recommendation remains to be vaccinated and being vaxxed offers the best protection against reinfection www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vital
|
|
|
Post by MichyM on Dec 21, 2021 1:11:16 GMT
I honestly don't understand this. Was there so much kickback to the polio vaccine? To any of the other vaccines. They saved lives, people got them, they ARE LEGALLY required. This will save lives. What's the difference other than 50 years. Right? My son had Chicken Pox when he was 5, several years before the vaccine was distributed and administered. I don’t recall this amount of blowback then.
|
|
|
Post by cindosha on Dec 21, 2021 1:18:19 GMT
So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Seriously? That’s like saying already being pregnant protects you more from getting pregnant again than using a condom. Sure, technically true, but kind of misses the point. The point is not to get COVID in the first place. About a third of people who contract COVID end up with long term complications including heart and lung damage and neurological effects. Those who get the vaccine and avoid infection don’t have that risk. And the Israeli study is old news. Newer research suggests the natural immune wanes, and the recommendation remains to be vaccinated and being vaxxed offers the best protection against reinfection www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vitalI’m curious about how many boosters you think we all are going to need before this is done. However, it’s proven that the vaccination does not protect everyone from contracting covid. That’s why there are so many breakthrough cases. It’s going to just keep mutating and mutating into newer and newer variants.
|
|
|
Post by elaine on Dec 21, 2021 1:19:44 GMT
You can’t Google, apparently. Why recommend it to others? Just try Omicron death and Texas and then get back to me about Google. The Twitter she posted said the death was believed to be from omicron. I was responding to that. 🙄🙄🙄 You suggest that others Google your claims. Why don’t you do the same? Lazy? Challenged? Trolling? What is good for the goose and all, or do you need me to explain that basic reference to you?
|
|
|
Post by cindosha on Dec 21, 2021 1:31:57 GMT
The Twitter she posted said the death was believed to be from omicron. I was responding to that. 🙄🙄🙄 You suggest that others Google your claims. Why don’t you do the same? Lazy? Challenged? Trolling? What is good for the goose and all, or do you need me to explain that basic reference to you? Nope
|
|
|
Post by mollycoddle on Dec 21, 2021 1:33:12 GMT
So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. Seriously? That’s like saying already being pregnant protects you more from getting pregnant again than using a condom. Sure, technically true, but kind of misses the point. The point is not to get COVID in the first place. About a third of people who contract COVID end up with long term complications including heart and lung damage and neurological effects. Those who get the vaccine and avoid infection don’t have that risk. And the Israeli study is old news. Newer research suggests the natural immune wanes, and the recommendation remains to be vaccinated and being vaxxed offers the best protection against reinfection www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vitalOdd how you don’t hear anti-vaxers talking much about long Covid.
|
|
|
Post by Merge on Dec 21, 2021 1:33:31 GMT
|
|
|
Post by lucyg on Dec 21, 2021 1:42:06 GMT
Any real doctor will tell you “natural immunity” is mostly make believe. Keep listening to the assholes on Fox. So are you refuting the Israeli study on natural immunity? Sounds pretty closed minded. I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. I’m not a doctor. I don’t refute studies, I leave that for those who think they know more than scientists and doctors. However, my understanding is that the Israeli study was early and limited in scope, and is not considered the last word on this subject. On the other hand, we all seem to know someone who claimed natural immunity, then caught delta and landed in the ICU. I like to learn from other people’s mistakes. Also, don’t make claims and then refuse to provide links to the studies you’re referencing. It makes you look, hmm, what’s the word? WRONG.
|
|
|
Post by lucyg on Dec 21, 2021 1:49:26 GMT
Seriously? That’s like saying already being pregnant protects you more from getting pregnant again than using a condom. Sure, technically true, but kind of misses the point. The point is not to get COVID in the first place. About a third of people who contract COVID end up with long term complications including heart and lung damage and neurological effects. Those who get the vaccine and avoid infection don’t have that risk. And the Israeli study is old news. Newer research suggests the natural immune wanes, and the recommendation remains to be vaccinated and being vaxxed offers the best protection against reinfection www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vitalI’m curious about how many boosters you think we all are going to need before this is done. However, it’s proven that the vaccination does not protect everyone from contracting covid. That’s why there are so many breakthrough cases. It’s going to just keep mutating and mutating into newer and newer variants. This is not the news flash you apparently think it is. We are all aware of breakthrough cases. The point is that the vaccinated are less likely to catch the COVID, less likely to actually show symptoms if they do, less likely to end up the hospital, less likely to die, and possibly most important … less likely to spread it to others, than the unvaccinated are. So yes, if everyone were vaccinated, the spread would slow considerably and the mutations would have less of a chance to develop, and the pandemic would die off. Why do you think polio, measles, and chicken pox don’t sweep through schools anymore, like they did 50-100 years ago? And I couldn’t care less how many boosters it will take. Life must be kind of difficult for you to navigate, if this is what you worry about.
|
|
sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
|
Post by sassyangel on Dec 21, 2021 1:54:57 GMT
I’m curious about how many boosters you think we all are going to need before this is done. However, it’s proven that the vaccination does not protect everyone from contracting covid. That’s why there are so many breakthrough cases. It’s going to just keep mutating and mutating into newer and newer variants. This is not the news flash you apparently think it is. We are all aware of breakthrough cases. The point is that the vaccinated are less likely to catch the COVID, less likely to actually show symptoms if they do, less likely to end up the hospital, less likely to die, and possibly most important … less likely to spread it to others, than the unvaccinated are. So yes, if everyone were vaccinated, the spread would slow considerably and the mutations would have less of a chance to develop, and the pandemic would die off. Why do you think polio, measles, and chicken pox don’t sweep through schools anymore, like they did 50-100 years ago? And I couldn’t care less how many boosters it will take. Life must be kind of difficult for you to navigate, if this is what you worry about. These people shrieking about boosters can’t have seen the current child vaccination schedule. Staggered boosters build better immunity, historically.
|
|
|
Post by refugeepea on Dec 21, 2021 2:16:47 GMT
.
|
|
|
Post by epeanymous on Dec 21, 2021 2:28:03 GMT
I honestly don't understand this. Was there so much kickback to the polio vaccine? To any of the other vaccines. They saved lives, people got them, they ARE LEGALLY required. This will save lives. What's the difference other than 50 years. That we had a presidential administration that decided to politicize a public health issue for political gain. That's it.
|
|
samantha25
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,184
Jun 27, 2014 19:06:19 GMT
|
Post by samantha25 on Dec 21, 2021 2:38:44 GMT
Can you post that study? SO you have had your antibodies recently tested? I do believe in natural immunity, but not that long. Google the study and yes I was tested recently. What kind of antibodies were you tested for? Total IgG, IgH, IgE, Specific to which Covid Spike protein variant? Did you get a neutralization test with the different Covid variants to show how effective these antibodies were at decreasing infection? Total number of antibodies doesn't mean a whole lot if they aren't effective.
|
|
Gennifer
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,241
Jun 26, 2014 8:22:26 GMT
|
Post by Gennifer on Dec 21, 2021 2:50:42 GMT
I still have antibodies 15 months after having covid. You know who doesn’t have antibodies after having COVID? Me. Because I’ve never had COVID. Which also means I don’t have to worry about any long-hauler symptoms or permanent damage to my body. You know what contributed to that? My vaccination. As far as how many boosters I’ll take? AS MANY AS I FUCKING NEED TO. Happily. Also, the idea that because you had one variation of COVID 15 months ago means you’re somehow “safe” from getting it again? Insane. Along with the idea that just because you, presumably, had a mild case with no long-term effects the first time that you’ll be that lucky again.
|
|
|
Post by lucyg on Dec 21, 2021 2:50:57 GMT
I honestly don't understand this. Was there so much kickback to the polio vaccine? To any of the other vaccines. They saved lives, people got them, they ARE LEGALLY required. This will save lives. What's the difference other than 50 years. That we had a presidential administration that decided to politicize a public health issue for political gain. That's it. AND there was a bad batch of polio vaccine in the early days that killed some children. People still flocked to get their kids vaccinated. Because they knew what a polio epidemic looked like. scrappinghappy
|
|
sassyangel
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,456
Jun 26, 2014 23:58:32 GMT
|
Post by sassyangel on Dec 21, 2021 3:23:10 GMT
lOoK aT aLL tHoSe bOoStErs! 🤦🏼♀️😏 Ergo, they are a proven and safe way to build good immunity.
|
|
|
Post by cindyupnorth on Dec 21, 2021 3:30:58 GMT
Seriously? That’s like saying already being pregnant protects you more from getting pregnant again than using a condom. Sure, technically true, but kind of misses the point. The point is not to get COVID in the first place. About a third of people who contract COVID end up with long term complications including heart and lung damage and neurological effects. Those who get the vaccine and avoid infection don’t have that risk. And the Israeli study is old news. Newer research suggests the natural immune wanes, and the recommendation remains to be vaccinated and being vaxxed offers the best protection against reinfection www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vitalI’m curious about how many boosters you think we all are going to need before this is done. However, it’s proven that the vaccination does not protect everyone from contracting covid. That’s why there are so many breakthrough cases. It’s going to just keep mutating and mutating into newer and newer variants. And you know why that is happening, right? The mutations???…
|
|
|
Post by mollycoddle on Dec 21, 2021 3:45:41 GMT
I’m curious about how many boosters you think we all are going to need before this is done. However, it’s proven that the vaccination does not protect everyone from contracting covid. That’s why there are so many breakthrough cases. It’s going to just keep mutating and mutating into newer and newer variants. This is not the news flash you apparently think it is. We are all aware of breakthrough cases. The point is that the vaccinated are less likely to catch the COVID, less likely to actually show symptoms if they do, less likely to end up the hospital, less likely to die, and possibly most important … less likely to spread it to others, than the unvaccinated are. So yes, if everyone were vaccinated, the spread would slow considerably and the mutations would have less of a chance to develop, and the pandemic would die off. Why do you think polio, measles, and chicken pox don’t sweep through schools anymore, like they did 50-100 years ago? And I couldn’t care less how many boosters it will take. Life must be kind of difficult for you to navigate, if this is what you worry about. I don’t get the hysteria about boosters either. You make an appt online to Walgreens, or wherever you choose to go, and get the booster. Easy peasy. OTOH, I suppose if you think that Joe and Kamala have planted tracking chips in the vaccine, you could, I guess, be leery. 🤔
|
|