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Yumm

Printed From: Tippmann Paintball
Category: News And Views
Forum Name: Thoughts and Opinions
Forum Description: Got something you need to say?
URL: http://www.tippmannsports.com/forum/wwf77a/forum_posts.asp?TID=187349
Printed Date: 23 January 2026 at 1:45am
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Topic: Yumm
Posted By: jerseypaint
Subject: Yumm
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 1:08am

+

+

= Amazing midnight snack.

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Replies:
Posted By: __sneaky__
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 1:11am
I'll take the crackers by themselves.

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Forum Vice President

RIP T&O Forum


Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 7:45am
I still don't like sour cream.

More for you.


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BU Engineering 2012


Posted By: usafpilot07
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 10:03am
You're doing it wrong.




+










+











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Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo


Posted By: FreeEnterprise
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 10:21am
 
 
for the win.


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They tremble at my name...


Posted By: agentwhale007
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 10:38am
Saltines and peanut butter + Diet Coke = A dangerous late night snack. 


Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 10:47am
Originally posted by FreeEnterprise FreeEnterprise wrote:

 

 
for the win.


Those things are addictive, watch out.

I really like Fig Newtons, myself.  If I ever drop by a convenience store (so once or twice a month), I almost always leave with one of the little $2 packs.

That image apparently got me all confused on this itty bitty post window.


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BU Engineering 2012


Posted By: Reb Cpl
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 11:04am
OP:

No offense, but *barf* on the LC.

I can't eat the stuff. Anything at all out of a box tastes......manufactured rather than cooked to me.
 
And Marshmallow fluff and cheese? Are you expecting a baby usaf? That seems like a crime to me.


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Posted By: usafpilot07
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 11:15am
Originally posted by Reb Cpl Reb Cpl wrote:

OP:

No offense, but *barf* on the LC.

I can't eat the stuff. Anything at all out of a box tastes......manufactured rather than cooked to me.
 
And Marshmallow fluff and cheese? Are you expecting a baby usaf? That seems like a crime to me.


Seriously, try it. Dollop of fluff on the cracker, slice of cheese on the fluff, toss a plate of them in the microwave for about 30 seconds(until the cheese is melted).  I promise on my life you will like them.


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Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo


Posted By: FreeEnterprise
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 12:31pm
Speaking of yumm.
 
I never even heard of this until I moved to Cincy... You guys around the country need to try it, if you haven't had it already. They sell skyline at Kroger in a can, you just put it on your spagetti noodles, and top with a bunch of finely shredded cheddar cheese, and oyster crackers... (or cheeze its, if you love cheese).
 


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They tremble at my name...


Posted By: Tical3.0
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 12:43pm
Cup of shredded cheese 6 strips of bacon chopped up and some fries. Throw them tings up in the nuke for about  a minute and a half and a garuntee you will be in heaven

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I ♣ hippies.


Posted By: ArthurBignose
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 1:26pm


+



 = All you ever need


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Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 2:43pm
Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.

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BU Engineering 2012


Posted By: scotchyscotch
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 5:11pm
Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


Posted By: Glassjaw
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 5:25pm
Originally posted by usafpilot07 usafpilot07 wrote:

You're doing it wrong.

crackers

+




+ cheese







Fluff FTW.  This combination had never occured to me though.

And Parriel, you're missing out my man.


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The desire for polyester is just to powerful.


Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 5:34pm
Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


People have confused me for my father on the phone since I was 14.  I'm pretty sure I've got the man thing down.

You find me an athlete with a bad diet, and I'll find you an athlete who's not fulfilling their potential.  Hence why I eat healthy.  Meat and potatoes are very much on the menu, but so are a wide variety of other things.


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BU Engineering 2012


Posted By: usafpilot07
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 5:46pm
Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


People have confused me for my father on the phone since I was 14.  I'm pretty sure I've got the man thing down.

You find me an athlete with a bad diet, and I'll find you an athlete who's not fulfilling their potential.  Hence why I eat healthy.  Meat and potatoes are very much on the menu, but so are a wide variety of other things.


A) You completely missed the point of what he was saying.

B) You're dad looks like a 20 year old?


Also, I consider myself an athlete. An athlete on a very successful rugby team at that. I eat healthy most of the time, but to think that an athlete can't eat what they enjoy as appears as an attempt to make yourself feel superior. I'd point you to Chad OchoCinco as an example of you being wrong.


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Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo


Posted By: scotchyscotch
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 7:04pm
Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


People have confused me for my father on the phone since I was 14.  I'm pretty sure I've got the man thing down.



Yeah... well.. I eat proper man food.






Posted By: ammolord
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 7:07pm
Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


People have confused me for my father on the phone since I was 14.  I'm pretty sure I've got the man thing down.



Yeah... well.. I eat proper man food.




 
LOLClap


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Posted By: ArthurBignose
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 8:01pm
Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Originally posted by scotchyscotch scotchyscotch wrote:

Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:

Sounds like we've got some real balanced diets in here.


Shooosh! The men are talking.


People have confused me for my father on the phone since I was 14.  I'm pretty sure I've got the man thing down.

You find me an athlete with a bad diet, and I'll find you an athlete who's not fulfilling their potential.  Hence why I eat healthy.  Meat and potatoes are very much on the menu, but so are a wide variety of other things.


I was kidding of course...

Over the past 8 months I've dropped 64 lbs and gone from 29% body fat to 12%.  Done by hard exercise and a good diet consisting of 7-8 servings of different fruits or vegetables daily, very limited processed food (if it could be made from scratch reasonable, I did),  and constantly measured ratio of carbs/protein/fat.


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Posted By: tallen702
Date Posted: 14 December 2010 at 9:46pm
I'm on the Travinia diet. It consists of working 12 to 14 hour days on your feet all day with one meal thrown in for good measure in the middle. Dropped 20lbs in a month and a half.

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Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 15 December 2010 at 12:31am
Originally posted by usafpilot07 usafpilot07 wrote:



A) You completely missed the point of what he was saying.


Sure.

Quote B) You're dad looks like a 20 year old?


Yep. Because I have a videophone.

Quote Also, I consider myself an athlete. An athlete on a very successful rugby team at that. I eat healthy most of the time, but to think that an athlete can't eat what they enjoy as appears as an attempt to make yourself feel superior. I'd point you to Chad OchoCinco as an example of you being wrong.


If the only thing you enjoy is red meat and potatoes, you must have some seriously terrible cooks in your life.  You also have somehow confused eating healthy with eating things you don't like.  I don't know where you got that idea, and it's not true.  Yes, I happen to like vegetables, and I sometimes have meals which are not centered on a protein dish.  Oddly enough, the vast majority of the world does so too.

You have mistaken my opposition to scotchy's pretending I'm a child with a superiority complex.  That I might have, but not about diet.

Also, I know people who play college rugby.  There's a huge difference between varsity and club sports, one of those differences being that not eating well does produce the kind of difference which loses games.  OchoCinco eats what he wants, that doesn't mean he has an unbalanced diet.  It also doesn't mean that his enjoyment of McDonald's isn't affecting his body and going to come back and bite him when he's older.

Originally posted by ArthurBignose ArthurBignose wrote:


I was kidding of course...

Over the past 8 months I've dropped 64 lbs and gone from 29% body fat to 12%.  Done by hard exercise and a good diet consisting of 7-8 servings of different fruits or vegetables daily, very limited processed food (if it could be made from scratch reasonable, I did),  and constantly measured ratio of carbs/protein/fat.


Well that would take a whole lot more work than I've ever done to balance my diet.

One of the biggest things for Americans is avoiding fried foods.  About the only thing I enjoy fried are french fries, so that isn't a particularly large issue for me, but I guarantee the kids who grab everything at the grill in our dining halls aren't doing themselves any favors.


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BU Engineering 2012


Posted By: DaveEllis
Date Posted: 15 December 2010 at 12:33am
Eat big lift big bro, I accept no other logic.


Posted By: choopie911
Date Posted: 15 December 2010 at 12:35am
I'm on the eat when I have time, whatever I feel like at the moment diet. The results are mixed.


Posted By: usafpilot07
Date Posted: 15 December 2010 at 9:15am
Originally posted by ParielIsBack ParielIsBack wrote:


Also, I know people who play college rugby.  There's a huge difference between varsity and club sports, one of those differences being that not eating well does produce the kind of difference which loses games.



Having played both, I'd 100% have to disagree with you. My workouts are JUST as hard now for a "club" sport* as they were for the football team, if not harder.





*Club insofar as funding doesn't come from the school. USAR allows collegiate rugby teams to have sponsorships, of which we have a few quite substantial ones.


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Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo


Posted By: ParielIsBack
Date Posted: 15 December 2010 at 11:16am
And again, the difference is that a varsity sport will have dedicated training, nutrition, and coaching staff.  If you don't have a balanced diet, whether you're Chad OchoCinco or  Joe Shmoe, you are not performing to your maximum potential.  It's not about how hard you're working, it's about your physiological improvement, which is going to be less if you're not giving your body what it needs.  Just look at people operating on the extremes: climbing Everest, Ironman.  These guys don't fail because the pain is too much, they fail because they don't have enough of what their body needs to push on, whether it's oxygen, ATP, or water.

Also, our crew teams spends in excess of $250,000 a year, with a total of maybe $20,000 (and four full scholarships we can break up however we want.)  We payed for our $10 million boathouse entirely with donations.  Without training staff, we would be dead in the water.  Keeping athletes uninjured and returning them rapidly from injuries is virtually impossible without dedicated training staff.  It's not something that any college student has the ability to get themself through.


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BU Engineering 2012



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