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Plaid Friday in Oskaloosa

The day after Thanksgiving has come to be known as Black Friday, when stores and malls are filled with shoppers looking for bargains.  In Oskaloosa, though, Friday (11/29) will be called Plaid Friday.  April Gorski, the manager of Book Vault in Oskaloosa, explains.

“Plaid Friday is an outgrowth of the concept that communities are stronger when consumers, shoppers and the retailers, the shops are woven together to make a fabric of your community, so we each help each other.”

Gorski says if you wear plaid when you shop at Book Vault on Friday, you’ll get a 15 percent discount.  She says other downtown Oskaloosa businesses will also have specials for those who wear plaid.  Saturday (11/30) is still known as Small Business Saturday and you’re encouraged to shop downtown Oskaloosa businesses for Christmas and holiday gifts on Saturday.

Grinnell man sentenced for receiving child pornography

A Grinnell man is going to prison for over 20 years for receiving child pornography.  43-year-old John Allen Urfer was sentenced Tuesday (11/26) to 260 months in prison plus another 20 years of supervised release once he’s out of jail.  He also has to pay $21,000 restitution to victims shown in the images and videos. Urfer pleaded guilty to the charges in July and admitted receiving child pornography from September 2017 to April 2018.

2 arrested in Ottumwa for dealing meth

A K-9 officer’s sense of smell has led to two Ottumwa men being arrested for dealing meth.  In October, Wapello County Sheriff’s Deputy Seth Hobbs and his K-9 Luna were on patrol in a rural part of the county when Luna noticed something on a vehicle.  That led to about 28 grams of meth being seized. Then last week, 57-year-old David Lemley and 33-year-old Hector Iglesias-Tobar, both of Ottumwa, were arrested.  Both are charged with possession with the intent to deliver more than five grams of meth and failure to affix a drug tax stamp.  Iglesias-Tobar is also charged with carrying weapons.  The Southeast Iowa Inter-Agency Drug Task Force says the investigation resulted in seizing about three and a half pounds of meth, over $35,000 cash, a handgun, a rifle, two vehicles and other items used in dealing meth.

A Big Turkey Is A Must For Dierks Bentley’s Thanksgiving

Dierks Bentley is looking forward to Thanksgiving this week, and there must be at least one thing on his table to make it a real Thanksgiving. “You gotta have a big turkey,” he tells Sounds Like Nashville. “Thanksgiving is not possible without a turkey.”

He shares, “A couple of Thanksgivings ago, we were here in Nashville, we did the whole fry the turkey up, and it was great. You really can’t, to me, cook a turkey wrong.”

And Dierks isn’t kidding, especially since he’s eaten turkey in a variety of ways. “I’ve seen gigantic turkey legs, you know, I’ve had the flat meat,” Dierks offers. “I’ve done turkey every way you could do it. I’m pretty good any way you want to cook it up, but you’ve got to have a turkey for Thanksgiving.”

Source: Sounds Like Nashville

 

Which turkey will Trump pardon? Will it be Bread or Butter?

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE

WASHINGTON (AP) — Which Thanksgiving turkey will earn a presidential pardon? Will it be Bread or Butter?

The White House is sponsoring an online contest to help President Donald Trump as he contemplates his role in the 30-year-old tradition of sparing the National Thanksgiving Turkey.

According to the White House, Bread is a 45-pound (20-kilogram) turkey who likes a cherry flavored soft drink called Cheerwine, bluegrass music and college basketball. Butter weighs 47 pounds (21 kilograms) and enjoys eating sweet potato fries, listening to bagpipes and watching NASCAR.

Trump will name the bird he’ll pardon Tuesday afternoon at the White House. Afterward, he’ll fly to Florida for a campaign rally and to spend Thanksgiving with his family.

President George H.W. Bush established the annual turkey pardon tradition in 1989 by sparing a 50-pound (23-kilogram) bird.

Montezuma girls ranked #1 in preseason poll

Montezuma opens its girls basketball season Tuesday night (11/26) at Pella Christian.  The Bravettes are ranked number one in the Class 1A preseason rankings from the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union.  Was Montezuma senior Shateah Wetering surprised by being ranked number one?

“A little bit, but I was actually hoping we were up there because we have a very good team this year.  We’re very together and we’re figuring things out with each player and their strengths and their weaknesses.”

Earlier this month, Wetering signed a national letter of intent to play basketball at the University of Iowa next year.

One dead, one injured in Eddyville road accident

One man is dead and another is hospitalized after a one vehicle crash Monday (11/25) in Eddyville.  The Iowa State Patrol says a pickup driven by 29-year-old Jacob Ross of Eddyville was eastbound on 160th Street just before 3am when it lost control on a curve, left the road, rolled over and came to rest in the north ditch.  A passenger, 28-year-old Jessie Parker of Wilton, died at the scene.  Ross was taken to Ottumwa Regional Health Center with injuries.

Stop! Washing your Thanksgiving turkey could spread germs

By CANDICE CHOI

NEW YORK (AP) — Go ahead and rinse your cranberries, potatoes and green beans. But food experts say don’t — repeat don’t — wash the turkey before popping it in the oven on Thanksgiving Day.

They say that could spread the germs lurking on your turkey in the kitchen sink or nearby food. But it’s been a challenge trying to convince cooks to stop rinsing off raw poultry.

“If your mother did it and your grandmother did it, and suddenly the (government) says not to wash your turkey, you may take some time to adjust,” said Drusilla Banks, who teaches food sanitation for the University of Illinois Extension.

Germs that can make people sick are common in the guts of healthy poultry and are legally allowed to be on raw turkey and chicken. The assumption is that nobody eats their poultry rare, and that thorough cooking will kill the bacteria.

So it’s possible that two common causes of food poisoning — salmonella and campylobacter — are on the turkey, said Mindy Brashears, a food safety official at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The do-not-wash raw poultry advice from the USDA is relatively new and perhaps hasn’t caught on because it goes against the ingrained belief that washing makes things clean, said Banks.

Participants in a food safety study offered their own rationale: “If it’s still slimy — I’m not sure what that is. It just feels good to wash it,” said one. Another said: “My grandmother taught me that. She just said to wash all your food because there’s no telling where it’s been before it got in the pack.”

Benjamin Chapman, a study author and food safety expert at North Carolina State University, said the instinct to wash raw poultry goes back at least decades when people relied more on visual cues to spot problems with poultry. TV chef Julia Child was among those who said washing chicken was “just the safer thing to do” before experts began advising against it.

But food prep is a juggling act, and germs from poultry can be spread even if it’s not washed, especially when birds are removed from packaging. It’s why washing and sanitizing hands, utensils and surfaces are even more important.

The USDA-funded study underscores that point.

Researchers sprayed raw chicken with a harmless strain of E. coli and watched volunteer cooks at test kitchens. Among those who washed their raw chicken, about a quarter ended up spreading the bacteria to their lettuce. But even some of those who did not rinse the chicken got germs on the lettuce.

There are other opportunities for germs to survive and thrive on turkeys: thawing and cooking.

For thawing, experts say frozen birds shouldn’t be left out on counters since germs can start multiplying on the outer parts that defrost first. They instead recommend thawing in fridges, cold water or in microwaves. You can also cook a frozen turkey, but it will take a lot longer.

And to ensure a bird is thoroughly cooked, they say to use a thermometer to check that the deepest and thickest parts of it have reached 165 degrees.

Even after the meal is cooked, you aren’t out of the danger zone. To keep turkey and other leftovers safe, experts say they should be refrigerated after two hours.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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