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Post Dental Surgery Food? - CLICK HERE for the Cooking Forum Index
blubberpuss@gmail.com
Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
part of her gums. Ouch.
So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
neither of which are very inspiring....
TIA!

Scott

Doug Kanter
Split pea soup, very hot, then allowed to cool. Sink croutons in it till
they're soft. Campbell's is good enough. Progresso is too salty.

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott
>



jmcquown
Doug Kanter wrote:
> Split pea soup, very hot, then allowed to cool. Sink croutons in it
> till they're soft. Campbell's is good enough. Progresso is too salty.
>
> <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
>> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
>> part of her gums. Ouch.
>> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
>> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
>> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or
>> prepare for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed
>> potatoes, neither of which are very inspiring....
>> TIA!
>>
>> Scott


Yup yup, soup. Use the oatmeal as filler in meatloaf. When I make meatloaf
I also add to the mix 1/2 a bottle of cocktail sauce and shred some cheddar
cheese in it; it comes out nice and moist - won't be hard on the mouth.
Other things that come to mind are macaroni & cheese, potatoes au gratin,
scrambled eggs. Jell-O :) I'm sure you'll think of other stuff, and very
nice of you to consider her needs at this time!

Jill


Doug Kanter
Cream of wheat with fresh berries whisked in while cooking, so they blend
well. And, vanilla or plain yogurt with frozen raspberries sprinkled on top,
placed in refrigerator for 4 hours or so. The berries get mushy as they
defrost, and their juice flows into the yogurt, making for a sensual sharing
experience which may be more than you bargained for. :-)

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott
>



limey

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott


Oof, sounds painful. You might want to take a look at the baby foods - not
for real infants, but the "junior" variety, since there is a better
selection. My husband recently had dental surgery so I can sympathize.

Dora


Shaun aRe

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott


Hey Scott - fancy seeing you here ',;~}~



How about a cold soup of sorts? 'Bout all I can think of right now - need
sleep!

Hope she's alright as soon as afterwards. Later,

Shaun aRe
--
May all your wishes be both wise and fulfilled.


Doug Kanter
Got any lovage growing in the garden? Process some leaves with sour cream or
plain yogurt. Comes out a little lighter green than guacamole, very pretty,
but tastes like cucumber. Use as dip with some sort of soft bread. The
recipe usually wants some salt, but you might want to avoid that, since it
might sting.


M. Smith
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!


I personally like carrot& pumpkin soup, but unless you live in an area that
provides pumpkin pieces all year 'round (like mine) it may be hard to make
right now. You can do it with canned pumpkin (that has no pumpkin spicing in
it) but I've never seen that in my life.

Other options are things like risoto, custards, popcicles (for 'on the spot'
pain relief, if they're allowed), bananas (which can be had on their own, or
mixed with something else).

On a medical note, something like Ensure or another 'meal in a can' is
probably a good idea once a day, and do make sure to rinse the mouth often
and well with the rinse I'm almost certain she's gonna get. It'll be
annoying and painful at first, but it's the best way to get her back on real
food.


Dimitri

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott


Chilled consume (beef Jelly)
Cream of wheat (with Butter & sugar)
Mashed ripe bananas
I like cold barley soup (just suck it down no chewing required)
Rice pudding
Egg Custard
Cottage cheese
Cottage cheese & sour cream mixed with sugar on top (from my childhood)
very lose scrambled eggs make them with cream and some finely minced chives.
Soft boiled eggs AKA 3 minute eggs.
Milk Toast,
Obviously any of the baby food pureed fruits ( many are great over ice cream)
Canned Tuna prepared anyway then made into a paste in a food processor.

Dimitri


blubberpuss@gmail.com


Shaun aRe wrote:
> <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> > Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> > square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> > part of her gums. Ouch.
> > So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> > smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> > Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> > for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> > neither of which are very inspiring....
> > TIA!
> >
> > Scott

>
> Hey Scott - fancy seeing you here ',;~}~
>
>
>
> How about a cold soup of sorts? 'Bout all I can think of right now - need
> sleep!
>
> Hope she's alright as soon as afterwards. Later,
>
> Shaun aRe
> --
> May all your wishes be both wise and fulfilled.


Shaun... er... I feel like I've been busted playing hookey by a truant
officer... a heavily medicated truant officer.

Cheers! Gazpacho, perhaps a cool potato leek soup....

/s

Mary

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>



Soft boiled eggs, with very lightly toasted buttered white bread.

Macaroni and cheese, not done al dente?

Pureed lentil soup--always good with a bit of shredded cheddar on top.
You could omit the lemon juice and go easy on the tomato, you just
need enough for a bit of tang.


jmcquown
M. Smith wrote:
>> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
>> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
>> part of her gums. Ouch.
>> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
>> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
>> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or
>> prepare for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed
>> potatoes, neither of which are very inspiring....
>> TIA!

>
> I personally like carrot& pumpkin soup, but unless you live in an
> area that provides pumpkin pieces all year 'round (like mine) it may
> be hard to make right now. You can do it with canned pumpkin (that
> has no pumpkin spicing in it) but I've never seen that in my life.
>

You have never seen pumpkin soup? Or you've never seen canned pumpkin that
doesn't have pie spices added? Pumpkin soup using canned plain pumpkin is
pretty simple. Add chicken broth or stock. Add whatever spices you like
(tarragon is nice in this; pepper of course, a minimal amount of salt and a
dash or two of hot pepper sauce).

Jill


M. Smith

> You have never seen pumpkin soup? Or you've never seen canned pumpkin that
> doesn't have pie spices added?


Never seen non-spiced pumpkin. Every can I've seen in a shop is designated
as pie fodder, though honestly I haven't looked reciently.


Doug Kanter
Pureed lobster with lemon/tarragon remoulade. Treat your friend right.


jmcquown
M. Smith wrote:
>> You have never seen pumpkin soup? Or you've never seen canned
>> pumpkin that doesn't have pie spices added?

>
> Never seen non-spiced pumpkin. Every can I've seen in a shop is
> designated as pie fodder, though honestly I haven't looked reciently.


Libby's (brand) makes plain packed pumpkin - no spices. I can buy most
hard-shelled squashes around here year round but they tend to only bring out
pumpkins in the fall, so when I want pumpkin soup, I buy the canned (not pie
filling) stuff.

Jill


kalanamak
blubberpuss@gmail.com wrote:
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon.


>

Good vanilla ice cream whirred up with fresh press apple juice. I lived
on it for 3 days after four wisdom's came out.
Penny Lane

"jmcquown" <jmcquown@bellsouth.net> wrote in message
news:Z5cDe.7119$TU.2751@bignews1.bellsouth.net...
> M. Smith wrote:
>>> You have never seen pumpkin soup? Or you've never seen canned
>>> pumpkin that doesn't have pie spices added?

>>
>> Never seen non-spiced pumpkin. Every can I've seen in a shop is
>> designated as pie fodder, though honestly I haven't looked reciently.

>
> Libby's (brand) makes plain packed pumpkin - no spices. I can buy most
> hard-shelled squashes around here year round but they tend to only bring
> out
> pumpkins in the fall, so when I want pumpkin soup, I buy the canned (not
> pie
> filling) stuff.
>
> Jill


Yep, I buy Libby's all the time for my dogs, just plain pumpkin; never
thought of making soup for me so I appreciate the recipe you posted!

To the original post, so sorry for your girlfriend's surgery...how
uncomfortable, she's lucky to have you caring for her!
Penny


jmcquown
Penny Lane wrote:
> "jmcquown" <jmcquown@bellsouth.net> wrote in message
> news:Z5cDe.7119$TU.2751@bignews1.bellsouth.net...
>> M. Smith wrote:
>>>> You have never seen pumpkin soup? Or you've never seen canned
>>>> pumpkin that doesn't have pie spices added?
>>>
>>> Never seen non-spiced pumpkin. Every can I've seen in a shop is
>>> designated as pie fodder, though honestly I haven't looked
>>> reciently.

>>
>> Libby's (brand) makes plain packed pumpkin - no spices. I can buy
>> most hard-shelled squashes around here year round but they tend to
>> only bring out
>> pumpkins in the fall, so when I want pumpkin soup, I buy the canned
>> (not pie
>> filling) stuff.
>>
>> Jill

>
> Yep, I buy Libby's all the time for my dogs, just plain pumpkin; never
> thought of making soup for me so I appreciate the recipe you posted!
>
> Penny


LOL if soup can be made with it, I'll find a way to do it! Enjoy!

Jill

P.S.
The vet recommended pumpkin for my elderly dog but he wouldn't eat it. It's
supposed to be very good for them.


David Hare-Scott

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!
>
> Scott
>


Dicken doodle doup.

David


Frogleg
On 19 Jul 2005 07:43:23 -0700, blubberpuss@gmail.com wrote:

>Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon.


>Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
>for her?


Have you/she considered just forgetting about 'good eating' for a few
days? I imagine nothing is going to be a great eating experience for a
while, and I'm sure the dentist has a list of no-hurt basic foods to
keep up caloric intake. Save your labor for when she declares she
wants something she can chew! :-)
Nancy Young

"Frogleg" <frogleg@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:50fsd19k2slopkrbe0druoul7h398kgsir@4ax.com...
> On 19 Jul 2005 07:43:23 -0700, blubberpuss@gmail.com wrote:
>
>>Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon.

>
>>Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
>>for her?

>
> Have you/she considered just forgetting about 'good eating' for a few
> days? I imagine nothing is going to be a great eating experience for a
> while, and I'm sure the dentist has a list of no-hurt basic foods to
> keep up caloric intake. Save your labor for when she declares she
> wants something she can chew! :-)


At the very least, get some meal supplement drinks, like Boost or
something better from a health store.

nancy


Monsur Fromage du Pollet
Nancy Young wrote on 20 Jul 2005 in rec.food.cooking

>
> "Frogleg" <frogleg@nowhere.com> wrote in message
> news:50fsd19k2slopkrbe0druoul7h398kgsir@4ax.com...
> > On 19 Jul 2005 07:43:23 -0700, blubberpuss@gmail.com wrote:
> >
> >>Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon.

> >
> >>Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or
> >>prepare for her?

> >
> > Have you/she considered just forgetting about 'good eating' for
> > a few days? I imagine nothing is going to be a great eating
> > experience for a while, and I'm sure the dentist has a list of
> > no-hurt basic foods to keep up caloric intake. Save your labor
> > for when she declares she wants something she can chew! :-)

>
> At the very least, get some meal supplement drinks, like Boost or
> something better from a health store.
>
> nancy
>
>
>


Creamed Soups, mashed potatoes...scrambled eggs...Forget anything
involving a straw...causes a minor vaccum in your mouth and re-starts
bleeding and is painful.

--
It's not a question of where he grips it!
It's a simple question of weight ratios!

A five ounce bird could not carry a one pound coconut.

Are you suggesting coconuts migrate?
Nancy Young

"Monsur Fromage du Pollet" <invalid@invalid.null> wrote

> Creamed Soups, mashed potatoes...scrambled eggs...Forget anything
> involving a straw...causes a minor vaccum in your mouth and re-starts
> bleeding and is painful.


Wow, Monsur, sounds like the voice of experience. Ouch!

nancy


Shaun aRe

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121789813.086195.88120@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
>
> Shaun aRe wrote:
> > <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> > > Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> > > square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> > > part of her gums. Ouch.
> > > So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> > > smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> > > Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or

prepare
> > > for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> > > neither of which are very inspiring....
> > > TIA!
> > >
> > > Scott

> >
> > Hey Scott - fancy seeing you here ',;~}~
> >
> >
> >
> > How about a cold soup of sorts? 'Bout all I can think of right now -

need
> > sleep!
> >
> > Hope she's alright as soon as afterwards. Later,
> >
> > Shaun aRe
> > --
> > May all your wishes be both wise and fulfilled.

>
> Shaun... er... I feel like I've been busted playing hookey by a truant
> officer... a heavily medicated truant officer.


Heheheh, well mate, despite many folk having tried over the years, and one
well know weirdo doing it for the GBOR, ya can't really eat a bike, huh?

BTW - WTF makes you think I'm at all medicatonateded, let alone 'heavily'?!?
And no, ciffee, cogarettes, ibupourfun, and 5-HTP don't count.

> Cheers! Gazpacho, perhaps a cool potato leek soup....
>
> /s


These are the kinds of things I was thinking, aye! Either that, or a nice
indica and/or sativa foliage cold broth - pain medication there too huh?


Shaun aRe


Monsur Fromage du Pollet
Nancy Young wrote on 20 Jul 2005 in rec.food.cooking

>
> "Monsur Fromage du Pollet" <invalid@invalid.null> wrote
>
> > Creamed Soups, mashed potatoes...scrambled eggs...Forget
> > anything involving a straw...causes a minor vaccum in your mouth
> > and re-starts bleeding and is painful.

>
> Wow, Monsur, sounds like the voice of experience. Ouch!
>
> nancy
>
>
>


You thought I was just an old Fart...Ha! fooled you...I'm a toothless
old fart...So there!

--
It's not a question of where he grips it!
It's a simple question of weight ratios!

A five ounce bird could not carry a one pound coconut.

Are you suggesting coconuts migrate?
S'mee [AKA Jani]
One time on Usenet, blubberpuss@gmail.com said:

> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> part of her gums. Ouch.
> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or prepare
> for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> neither of which are very inspiring....
> TIA!


When DH had his wisdom teeth out, he couldn't get enough scrambled
eggs on the first day. The nice thing about eggs is that you can jazz
them up in accordance with the patient's wishes/tolerances...

--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, VidGamer, novice cook, dieter ~
jmcquown
S'mee [AKA Jani] wrote:
> One time on Usenet, blubberpuss@gmail.com said:
>
>> Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
>> square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
>> part of her gums. Ouch.
>> So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
>> smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
>> Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or
>> prepare for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed
>> potatoes, neither of which are very inspiring....
>> TIA!

>
> When DH had his wisdom teeth out, he couldn't get enough scrambled
> eggs on the first day. The nice thing about eggs is that you can jazz
> them up in accordance with the patient's wishes/tolerances...


Yup! Cheese please! Or an omelet (stir in some sauteed green onion,
spinach, etc.) Eggs are about the perfect food if your mouth hurts. Soft
boiled are also nice, with a little bit of butter and a dash of salt &
pepper.

I'm very lucky; I don't have wisdom teeth. My dentist was quite surprised.
Nope, no wisdom teeth.

Jill


blubberpuss@gmail.com


Shaun aRe wrote:
> <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1121789813.086195.88120@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> >
> >
> > Shaun aRe wrote:
> > > <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > > news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> > > > Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> > > > square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a receding
> > > > part of her gums. Ouch.
> > > > So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> > > > smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> > > > Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or

> prepare
> > > > for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed potatoes,
> > > > neither of which are very inspiring....
> > > > TIA!
> > > >
> > > > Scott
> > >
> > > Hey Scott - fancy seeing you here ',;~}~
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > How about a cold soup of sorts? 'Bout all I can think of right now -

> need
> > > sleep!
> > >
> > > Hope she's alright as soon as afterwards. Later,
> > >
> > > Shaun aRe
> > > --
> > > May all your wishes be both wise and fulfilled.

> >
> > Shaun... er... I feel like I've been busted playing hookey by a truant
> > officer... a heavily medicated truant officer.

>
> Heheheh, well mate, despite many folk having tried over the years, and one
> well know weirdo doing it for the GBOR, ya can't really eat a bike, huh?
>
> BTW - WTF makes you think I'm at all medicatonateded, let alone 'heavily'?!?
> And no, ciffee, cogarettes, ibupourfun, and 5-HTP don't count.
>
> > Cheers! Gazpacho, perhaps a cool potato leek soup....
> >
> > /s

>
> These are the kinds of things I was thinking, aye! Either that, or a nice
> indica and/or sativa foliage cold broth - pain medication there too huh?
>
>
> Shaun aRe


Hah ~ she's, uh... she's actually never ever done anything of the sort.
She likes to think of me as a 'bad boy', even though I'm probably
cleaner these days than your average grandma. Actually... err...
perhaps a bad example. Cleaner than top atheletes... uh... I mean...
government leader... oh....
As much as I'd like to see how she'd react to some thc, I kind of dig
that she's no druggo. Opposites attract? (Though, yah, she's on codeine
scripts for her gums, but this is headed for another newsgroup
methinks.)
Happily she's eager to oblige other vices ;)

/s
rust eats bikes....

Shaun aRe

<blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1121974306.244927.31610@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
>
> Shaun aRe wrote:
> > <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > news:1121789813.086195.88120@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> > >
> > >
> > > Shaun aRe wrote:
> > > > <blubberpuss@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > > > news:1121784203.431562.120030@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> > > > > Hello, my girlfriend's having surgery performed this afternoon. A
> > > > > square at the roof of her mouth is being removed to patch a

receding
> > > > > part of her gums. Ouch.
> > > > > So last night we stocked up on Jello, pudding, and the like. Soft,
> > > > > smooth, non-acidic, not-too-cold-or-hot stuff.
> > > > > Anyone have recommendations for 'real food' I could purchase or

> > prepare
> > > > > for her? The best I've come up with are oatmeal and mashed

potatoes,
> > > > > neither of which are very inspiring....
> > > > > TIA!
> > > > >
> > > > > Scott
> > > >
> > > > Hey Scott - fancy seeing you here ',;~}~
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > How about a cold soup of sorts? 'Bout all I can think of right now -

> > need
> > > > sleep!
> > > >
> > > > Hope she's alright as soon as afterwards. Later,
> > > >
> > > > Shaun aRe
> > > > --
> > > > May all your wishes be both wise and fulfilled.
> > >
> > > Shaun... er... I feel like I've been busted playing hookey by a truant
> > > officer... a heavily medicated truant officer.

> >
> > Heheheh, well mate, despite many folk having tried over the years, and

one
> > well know weirdo doing it for the GBOR, ya can't really eat a bike, huh?
> >
> > BTW - WTF makes you think I'm at all medicatonateded, let alone

'heavily'?!?
> > And no, ciffee, cogarettes, ibupourfun, and 5-HTP don't count.
> >
> > > Cheers! Gazpacho, perhaps a cool potato leek soup....
> > >
> > > /s

> >
> > These are the kinds of things I was thinking, aye! Either that, or a

nice
> > indica and/or sativa foliage cold broth - pain medication there too huh?
> >
> >
> > Shaun aRe

>
> Hah ~ she's, uh... she's actually never ever done anything of the sort.
> She likes to think of me as a 'bad boy', even though I'm probably
> cleaner these days than your average grandma. Actually... err...
> perhaps a bad example.


Heheheheheh...

Yeah, why is it that so many women like to at least entertain notions of
their men being at least a little 'bad'?

> Cleaner than top atheletes... uh... I mean...
> government leader... oh....


<Chuckle!> Gividup Scott! Heheheh...

> As much as I'd like to see how she'd react to some thc, I kind of dig
> that she's no druggo. Opposites attract?


In some cases, aye.

When I met my wife, I was actually smoking *tiny* amounts, and infrequently.
She hit up at least a couple a night. We sorta, met half way to share the
load after a while though ',;~}~

> (Though, yah, she's on codeine
> scripts for her gums, but this is headed for another newsgroup
> methinks.)
> Happily she's eager to oblige other vices ;)


That ain't a vice unless clamps of some sort are involved mate ',;~}~

> /s
> rust eats bikes....


True, But is rust 'people'?

Have a great w/e!


Shaun aRe
--
Living Life Large Like Loud Lemon Lipped Laughter.


S'mee [AKA Jani]
One time on Usenet, "jmcquown" <jmcquown@bellsouth.net> said:

<snip>

> I'm very lucky; I don't have wisdom teeth. My dentist was quite surprised.
> Nope, no wisdom teeth.


Very lucky! Took me three sessions with the dentist and oral surgeon
to get rid of mine. Unfortunately, general anesthesia makes me sick,
so I couldn't keep anything down, including eggs... :-(

--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, VidGamer, novice cook, dieter ~


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