Meclizine! that's the one - it really helped.
Meclizine was what they put me on when I was hospitalized with really bad vertigo (I couldn't open my eyes without puking for two days) a couple of years ago. They never figured out what caused the vertigo. It was probably viral.
I also took it when I was in Mexico a few years ago and had to be a backseat passenger in the car we rented. I wasn't car sick once! AND it didn't make my sleepy. LOVE MECLIZINE!
The best EVER Epicurious comments thread (and I'm guessing Nora remembers this too) was on their recipe for apple pie with cheese baked into the crust. The original thread is gone now, but you can still read some of the responses to the woman who gave it a 1-fork review after making the crust not with cheddar, but with something she thought was probably gorgonzola, but couldn't be sure because it had been in her refrigerator for about 6 months.
the woman who gave it a 1-fork review after making the crust not with cheddar, but with something she thought was probably gorgonzola, but couldn't be sure because it had been in her refrigerator for about 6 months.
::gags::
Some people really ought not to go anywhere near cooking. Ever.
I'm not a cheese in my apple pie sort of person, but I do like fruit and cheese together.
Timelies! Coughing fit at midnight = no voice today. Whee.
Quick question - I'm on my laptop outside and it's hard to see. I thought someone mentioned in here once how to change the brightness levels to make things more visible. Can someone help me out?
I just had to have one of those apple-cheddar bagels after this conversation. Not too bad.
God, I love Epicurious.
Speaking of which, we're doing a pot roast in the slow cooker today, and decided on an ultra-simple recipe from 1963 (the golden age of the pot roast!) that has 112 reviewers and 4 forks. Can't go wrong! (uh, we hope.)
Nora, some of my favorite recipes come from the old General Foods Test Kitchen/Good Housekeeping/et al cookbooks I have from the late fifites/early sixties. (One of my passions-- old cookbooks.)
Timelies. I got about 3 hours of sleep, presented the unfinished system, explained what happens next (uh...I punt?), and then, since that went so well, called the insurance company to find out what the hell was going on.
They require prior authorization of prescriptions. But, the rep was quick to tell me, if the doctor authorizes it, my copay will be $60.00 a month! And then he proceeded to spell out the generic name and a different formulation and tell me that this version would only be $10.00 a month! Yay me. I hung up on him while he was wishing me a happy day.
The medication is Bupropion, which I quit when we started this insurance because there was no coverage for prescriptions in January (it was a weird thing where the company started late, so they cobbled together a faux plan for the first month). He's suggesting I go on the regular release instead of the extended release. It's cheaper--because it doesn't work as well! Oh yay!
I almost told the rep it's a good thing I'm not suicidal...but I figured I didn't need to add to the fun of his day any more than working for an insurance company on a Monday morning must already be, and now I've emailed the doctor who prescribed it with all of the pre-auth information and his 'suggestion', and we'll see what happens.
(((((Deena))))) What a pain in the ass. I hate insurance companies.
We were up way too late last night watching baseball. I have no idea how TCG had the energy to get up and go to work today. When I finally did get to sleep I had a night of the weirdest dreams ever.
Ugh, I'm sorry Deena. I'm on Bupropion extended release that JUST came out in generic a couple of months ago, cutting my copay from $40/month to $8.
I hope this gets worked out soon. I mentioned ugh, right??