I'd agree, except for the volume I had to consume. NO variety...no options, perhaps. But, ugh.
'Just Rewards (2)'
Natter 42, the Universe, and Everything
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, flaming otters, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Or maybe it was the freakybad indian/midwestern homecooking diner by the hospital.
Seriously, my brain recalls the fries in weird places! but absolutely nothing about where I came across them. Well, at least they can't kill me.
I always have a weird disconnect between "broil" and "grill". Possibly because "broil" is too close to "boil", and then I get confused.
I enjoy the Irish food. Food cooked poorly sucks no matter what cuisine it is. Yell at the individual cooks, don't cast aspirsions on an entire culture.
Good Irish food: bacon, sausage, potato anything, beer, irish soda bread, brown bread, butter. Also, you can just have some damn decent stuff in ireland, salmon and lamb and shepards pie, and I loves me some corned beef. Cooking corned beef till grey is a sign of a bad cook, not a bad culinary culture.
What she said. This is probably one of the foods I was happiest about being allergic to.
You don't even like bacon! Your food credibility hovers around nil.
Yell at the individual cooks, don't cast aspirsions on an entire culture.
No, no. As a culture, they've earned it.
I just recall finding fries in my scrambled eggs, fries in pasta sauce, fries in pasta and cheese, served with chicken... well, it was either the CzechR, Russia, Hungary, Zambia or Zimbabwe.
If it helps you narrow it down any, I don't remember getting randomly fried in the Czech Republic or Hungary, although I was only there for a few days and they might have been holding out on me.
don't cast aspirsions on an entire culture.
I think it's certainly possible to dislike the best cooked foods of any ethnicity. If the things that characterise Thai are horrible to you, they just are.
bacon, sausage, potato anything, beer, irish soda bread, brown bread, butter.
Are the bacon and sausages different from the ones you'd get in the rest of the British Isles? I don't doubt they're great, but I see Irish food as food that's different from day to day fare in the UK.
I was reading somewhere that Lindsey Lohan has a recent article in which she talks about her struggles with bulimia and body issue problems. This article was published in the same week as the Us Weekly magazine that featured Lohan along with a few others in an article on "Celebrity Diet Secrets Revealed!"
This illustrates a problem that I see in many magazines edited for women. Each issue seems to include an article about eating disorders and the importance of developing good body image and self-attitudes, and then they pair it with a diet article conveying the impression that you have to attain an unrealistic physical ideal to be happy, loved, and successful. As an example, there was a brief paragraph discussing my own research on eating disorders in Allure magazine a couple of months ago. Now, the limitations of this particular researcher aside, it’s probably a good idea to let women know about emerging research in this area. But they put the paragraph about my work on the same page as a sensationalistic “study” implying that you have to be very attractive to get a good job, complete with a picture of a very beautiful, very seductive woman in an office. This editorial strategy may sell magazines but it does not seem to be in the best interests of the readers.
It’s kind of like the way that these magazines often have a relationship column that explains why women should avoid men who are jerks, and then later in the issue they have a romance story where the woman meets a guy who is a jerk but transforms him by the power of her love. It’s self-perpetuating. If you take the story seriously, you will soon be in the market for another issue that promises to tell you how to avoid jerks.
No, no. As a culture, they've earned it.
My experience has obviously been different.
I think it's certainly possible to dislike the best cooked foods of any ethnicity.
Sure, of course, I guess I am taking issue with the descriptor of "grey"
I don't doubt they're great, but I see Irish food as food that's different from day to day fair in the UK.
I think Irish bacon is different. But I could well be wrong. Sausages, who knows, there are a zillion permutations, in and out of the British Isles. The cusine through the Isles I think are more or less the same.