johnchoiniere
johnchoiniere
johnchoiniere

100% agree

With only brief searching, I found a case report of an unstable INR after recreation marijuana use *and* a lab study showing THC-related inhibition of P450 2C9. I don't know for sure they do interact, but since damn near everything interacts with warfarin I just hope the guy is cautious with it.

Warfarin (Coumadin) and THC likely interact as well, watch out, letter writer.

Interesting! I've never been around one; I was guessing based on my too-many-to-count visits to breweries. But what you say makes a lot of sense, and I wish I would've thought of it myself.

Indeed - as you said, if it's a concern for some people, better to test and label, just to be safe!

I felt this way too, but after thinking about it a little, I bet most distilleries don't exactly work in clean-room-type environments. Even though distillation *obviously* doesn't allow for the retention of any gluten whatsoever, it's not so easy to rule out post-distillation contamination.

Certainly I don't want to discount your experience, which is the more important part, given the fact that gluten can make you sick. However, it is *literally* impossible for gluten to make it through the distillation process, given the temperatures involved. It's not that it's burned up, it's that only chemicals

No vodka has any gluten in it, even wheat-based ones. Gluten is a protein, and will be left behind during the distillation process vodka goes through.

Well, it's California - everything's "known to cause cancer" there.

I used to listen to this, but after they did a few episodes on subjects I have expert knowledge in, I realized they often make factual mistakes in their discussion. Not as reliable a source of information as I once thought.

"as winter approached"

"I was trying to get the words out but I was being squeezed so hard that all I could manage was a pitiful whisper."

I have a few times! It's interesting that only after a while did you start becoming aware of "evil beings", that's usually a main feature of it.

I've said this before way down here in the greys, but Nordicware's plastic rice cooker, provided you own a microwave, is the best possible rice cooker you could own. $8-$10, and 10 minutes in the microwave. Perfect every single time, and no crusty mess at the bottom.

Makes sense!

Well, for one, this screenshot isn't the closest Drew got while in possession of the ball, but more importantly, I wasn't trying to argue that this is okay - I thought you just didn't understand what happened.

"96.3% of respondents said they wouldn't take their wife's name if she asked them to"

Well, she certainly has the right - she can change her name to whatever a court allows. It's technically completely her decision. However, out of her respect for his feelings on the issue, she won't.

Neighborhood play: the player attempting a double play doesn't need to actually touch second base to get the force out, but rather merely be in the "neighborhood" of the base. It's not an actual rule, but rather just how it's generally called, especially in college/MiLB/MLB. It's for the sake of fielder safety,

It's not a blown call - this is generally accepted as an out.