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So, I got the new parts today to hook up a new line and after examining the connection I could not see any kind of locking mechanism on it. So I went home and slapped a set of Channel Locks on it and gave it a good twist and hoped not to break anything. It came right off and the new fitting went on fine and it works like a champ. It was just stuck. I'm happy I didn't break it. Thanks to those that tried to help me out.

So, I got the new parts today to hook up a new line and after examining the connection I could not see any kind of locking mechanism on it. So I went home and slapped a set of Channel Locks on it and gave it a good twist and hoped not to break anything. It came right off and the new fitting went on fine and it works like a champ. It was just stuck. I'm happy I didn't break it. Thanks to those that tried to help me out.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

You just don’t know how to eat them.

The best way is washed, boiled for a couple minutes and immediately dropped in ice.

Served with a wasabi sauce.

[–] 0 pt

Fair, but I still think it is a vegetable nobody other than starving Niggers/Louisianians have any business eating.

Regardless, I am still reading your Atko/Putt/OldVoat post, and I want to disagree with a few thing you said based off my own memory, but I am not sure.

Gibs me a minute.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

For okra, its highest and best uses are hot spicy okra pickles and deep fried okra. Both are southern inventions. The best pickles require 4 inch okra so it's not tough/woody. It gets cleaned, a few holes get pricked into each one, immersed in hot brine, packed in jars and water bath canned. A widely available brand is Talk of Texas. Making deep fried okra puts it's trademark slime on display during preparation only. It gets parboiled and sliced into half inch rounds before battering, breading and deep frying. There are zero hints of slime present when properly prepared, and if it's seasoned properly it is absolutely delicious. Seek them both out if you are willing to further your culinary experiences.

I've eaten more than my fair share of boiled okra as a lad, and will occasionally buy it frozen/sliced for gumbo. Of course no conversation about okra is complete without .

[–] 1 pt

big booylah 'o' boooyled okra, 'dem big ol' houn' daaawwg ain know whaad'm fighnn ovvaaa

That is all I heard from that video clip.