You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
Challenges: Year Long Main 2021
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Cherie's Low Octane Alphabet





Now there's a book I have to read. Just reading the description makes me hungry...good find Cherie!





Do you use the metric system when cooking in Australia? Do you measure butter in sticks? I have been teaching a Japanese woman to cook traditional American food, and she told me that US cookbooks are very confusing for her because she is accustomed to cooking with the metric system in Japan and the nine years she lived in London. She had never heard of cooking by using sticks of butter either, and that was very confusing for her.

Oddly, it's still common to announce a baby's weight on the imperial scale, but all cookbooks are in metric.
And I would measure butter in grams, I've never had a stick of butter :)

A stick of butter is 1/4th of a pound. A pound is 16 ounces, which is 2 cups, a cup being 8 ounces. So, a stick of butter is 1/2 cup (or 4 ounces). If making a box of Kraft Maccaroni and Cheese, it takes 1/2 of a stick of butter, or 1/4 of a cup, or 2 ounces of butter. I think I am too old to convert to Metric. I can almost bring myself to think in temperatures in C vs F, but it is not easy.
I can only imagine the phone calls after my daughter moves to Canada and has to learn to cook using metric. It is good her husband likes to cook!
On that note, I finished The Book Thief. I loved it! On to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

A stick of butter is 1/4th of a pound. A pound is 16 ounces, which is 2 cups, a cup being 8 ounces. So, a stick of butter is 1/2 cup (or 4 ounces). If making a box of Kraft Mac..."
Kat will be fine cooking in imperial. I've never completely converted to metric. I know how fast I'm driving in metric, and how hot or cold it is in metric. I even know how much one meter of fabric is. But I still measure in feet and inches, and I bake in cups and teaspoons. The stove thankfully shows both Fahreheit and Celcius. Still I turn the oven to the F scale. You'd think I'd be completely confused.
Don't anyone dare contradict me! I am moderator with the power to boot anyone who says I'm confused. I'm not! Okay?

I am reading it for my Z book. It's been on my list forever!

A stick of butter is 1/4th of a pound. A pound is 16 ounces, which is 2 cups, a cup being 8 ounces. So, a stick of butter is 1/2 cup (or 4 ounces). If making a b..."
ROFL!!! I would never think to say you were confusing, er confused. :P
I think eventually, the USA will convert to metric - after all they have been talking about it for years, but there is SO much that has to be changed. I do not think the manufacturers are willing to provide displays with both. It would probably cost too much for the "less wealthy" to purchase. The only consistant thing I see displayed in both F and C is the temperature on sign boards. At work, I was used to dealing with dimensions in mills and decimals instead of feet and inches, but it has changed over to metric now. I always have to convert them back to understand or "see" them.

I think this one will be on my list for a long time.

A stick of butter is 1/4th of a pound. A pound is 16 ounces, which is 2 cups, a cup being 8 ounces. So, a stick of butter is 1/2 cup (or 4 ounces)...."
This is why Google is my very best friend ;-)

; )
google is always a good friend. ; )

I was talking with some other States friends about this today in fact. We colloquially say "I'm 5'2"" or "the baby was 7 pounds" or "about an inch". However everything is in metric ( even now days most friends give baby weights in both, pounds for our parents, kilos for us). I got so confused when I got an American cookbook that was calling for "sticks of butter". Is that a 150g, 250g, 500g or 750g stick? How is a "stick" a measurement!
My US friends were saying they think you guys will eventually switch to metric but not in their lifetime. I facetiously (me? no never!) pointed out you guys were in good company with Liberia and Burma as the only 3 countries in the world with the imperial system still.
I think a gradual transition would help you guys. When I was in the UK a good 9 years ago, prices of fruit were sold buy the kilo but you asked for the amount in pounds. Poor shopkeepers!!

Sums up my position really :P (if its too small you can view it here. I can't find my link on my FB sorry. I have no idea what that blog is http://lesombre.ca/2012/02/15/one-bul... )
I can sympathise with those trying to change. I'm of the generation that was taught at school in metric, but at home in imperial. So I can use both, but am more comfortable in each one in it's correct setting.
Rusalka's right though, goods are priced and sold in metric although people still ask for weights in imperial. the conversion between kgs and pounds is simple enough though - times 2 and add 10%.
The one that does my head in totally is cooking temperature. I grew up using a gas oven, measured in gas marks from 1 to 9. For the last 2.5 years we've had electric in C. I still have to get the conversion table out so that food actually gets cooked and isn't cold or burnt to a crisp!
Rusalka's right though, goods are priced and sold in metric although people still ask for weights in imperial. the conversion between kgs and pounds is simple enough though - times 2 and add 10%.
The one that does my head in totally is cooking temperature. I grew up using a gas oven, measured in gas marks from 1 to 9. For the last 2.5 years we've had electric in C. I still have to get the conversion table out so that food actually gets cooked and isn't cold or burnt to a crisp!

I also finished my D book, Douglas Adams's Starship Titanic, which was not good. If anyone has this book on their list, take it off!
I started my E book, Easter Island this morning.

The pound of butter we buy in the store contains 4 individually wrapped packages we call a "stick". The wrapper on each "stick" is marked with lines dividing the stick into portions (ounces). So, if you HAVE sticks, you cut it in half or into 4ths on the lines with a knife and unwrap the section you cut off to use it. You do not have to put it into/onto something else to measure it.

I finished my E book today. Easter Island. I liked it very much. I have always been intrigued with the moai statues and the remote local. 1500 miles from any other land mass. This book is a historical fiction, done very well, IMO. I will have to look and see if Jennifer Vanderbes has any other books to add to my TBR list.






I finished my E book today. Easter Island. I liked it very much. I have always been intrigued with th..."
Sounds like a perfect day to curl up and read. Glad you had a perfect book at hand...like you would be caught without one! lol
You are on FIRE! Congratulations on your accomplishments, Cherie! ; )







I started my book for the Don't Forget Your Towel Challenge, then it will be back to my K book, The Key to the Indian, which I think I might have read, but am not sure.

If I come across one in my library, I will give him a try. Thanks.


Update. I edited the comment above. I do not think I was being fair.

On to my L book, The Long Earth, which has been patiently waiting for me to get to it. I wanted to read it before the next one is due out next month.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Xibalba Murders (other topics)Zuleika Dobson (other topics)
The Xibalba Murders (other topics)
Young Men and Fire (other topics)
Young Men and Fire (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Bryce Courtenay (other topics)Jennifer Vanderbes (other topics)
I am not posting all of my book titles here, but this is where my book list is:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/...