r/limerick

▲ 51 r/limerick+63 crossposts

I stumbled across this book from another post recently that completely changed how I think about food.

We’re so used to fridges, supermarkets, and next day delivery that I honestly never stopped to think about how people actually ate before all that existed. This book is basically a collection of old recipes that were designed to last months or even years without refrigeration. The same kind of food our great grandparents (and great great grandparents) relied on.

What surprised me most wasn’t even the recipes, it was the mindset. Everything was about making food stretch, using what you had, and not relying on systems that could disappear overnight. Reading it made me realize how dependent we are now compared to even a couple generations ago.

I’ve tried a handful of the recipes so far. Some are definitely outside my normal rotation, but a few were genuinely good and oddly satisfying knowing they’d keep without power or fancy storage.

It’s less of a cookbook and more of a little history lesson disguised as one. Made me appreciate how resilient people used to be, especially when it came to food. I wanted to make this post as a bit of a shoutout to the creators for putting it together and the person who shared it here a couple months back (I couldn't find the old post to go back and comment).

Here's the website I bought the cookbook from, it's a pretty niche book so I don't think it's available on any mainstream platforms - survivalsuppers.com

u/-plss- — 7 hours ago
▲ 1 r/limerick+1 crossposts

Dooradoyle estates — original builders, and any history of pyrite, mica, or asbestos issues?

First-time buyer in Ireland, looking at options in Dooradoyle and trying to do proper due diligence before I commit.

I've been viewing or considering a handful of estates across different vintages — The Forts, Glencairin, Cúl Crannagh, Kilteragh, Mount Arbour, and Dooradoyle Park.

Surveyor lined up, solicitor engaged, but there are a few things the internet won't tell me and local knowledge probably will:

  1. Who were the original developers/builders of these estates? None of the property listings name the developer, the Limerick Leader online archives don't go back far enough, and the LCCC ePlan portal only goes back to 2008. I'll pull physical planning files for whichever one I end up offering on, but a name to chase would save days.

  2. Any history of defective concrete blocks — pyrite or mica — in any of these estates? I know the documented Limerick cases have been mostly West Limerick and rural pockets, and Aidan O'Connell flagged the 2003–05 boom builds as the highest-risk vintage. But I'd rather hear from someone who actually lives in one of these estates, or who worked construction in Dooradoyle in the 90s and 2000s, than just assume the city-side is clean.

  3. Any asbestos concerns flagged in these estates? Thinking artex ceilings, soffits, pipe lagging, roof tiles — anything from the pre-2000 builds where it was still standard. Has anyone had a survey come back positive in any of these estates, or is it broadly fine?

Any builders, blocklayers, surveyors, engineers, or long-term Dooradoyle residents — what do you know about who built these places and how they've held up 20–40 years on?

Cheers.

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u/Lone_Gold_Wolf — 4 days ago
▲ 6 r/limerick+1 crossposts

Hotel convenient to UL son and I, midweek.

My young son has an early appointment near UL next Thursday so I am taking him down Wed night. Otherwise we’d be leaving home at 5am. Could anyone recommend a suitable hotel?

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u/albert_pacino — 8 days ago

High Powered Cars on N69?

Did anyone see the convoy of high powered cars on the N69 yesterday evening? I haven’t a clue what make they were, but they were all the exact same, but different colours. Most of them yellow reg as well I think.

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u/farrandeel — 8 days ago