Oh, what a cutiehead cake eater Owen is!
And Aidan's eyes are blue, blue, blue! He looks very engaged in egg-coloring. And so grown-up in his glasses.
Heartbreaker Buffista boys!
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Oh, what a cutiehead cake eater Owen is!
And Aidan's eyes are blue, blue, blue! He looks very engaged in egg-coloring. And so grown-up in his glasses.
Heartbreaker Buffista boys!
JohnSweden, good to "see" you, Mr. Sporadic. Are you joining us in SF next month?
Hee, Mr. Sporadic is me, fair cop. I'd had been hanging on, hoping I'd be free to come to SF (I had a great time there last August, and a super visit with SFistas), but I'll be in Scotland that week. Sigh.
Raw un-encased un-enpattied sausage
I guess that makes sense. I was just having trouble envisioning it.
I don't know, though. Have they never heard of "wrapped in bacon"? That's pure evil, that is.
On closer reading, the election on Saturday is not in my district. So my uninformedness is A-OK.
I was just having trouble envisioning it.
If you click on Jess's ostrich egg link, it shows you a step by step.
I think the UK's had it and gotten over it. If I'm remembering my History of Food: Renaissance Europe class correctly, Ren. era feasts featured things like roast peacock (with the feathers put back on for table presentation) stuffed with goose, stuffed with grouse, stuffed with pigeon, stuffed with thrush, stuffed with finch, stuffed with a quail egg.
...er, yes. I'm sorry if I seemed not to be aware of the kind of foodstuffs that were all the rage several hundred years ago - I pretty much thought we were talking about modern trends in eating.
Does 'turd' mean anything in US slang?
Yes.
Yet another word for excrement.
Well, huh. I thought you guys used it too. And yet still the word 'turducken' has been embraced to describe a foodstuff? I'd have thought that would be a hard sell...
Although, maybe the UK hasn't entirely gotten over it...slashfood also educated me about a Scotch Egg, which looks like the Everlasting Gobstopper of breakfast foods. It's a hard-boiled egg wrapped in sausage then rolled in breadcrumbs and deep-fried.
Yummy goodness! I suppose that you could think of that in the same light as Turducken, maybe, although it's never occured to me to do so. Didn't realise they were deep fried - it's classic picnic food, served cold with pickles. (And you can get wee picnic eggs, which are half the size or so, and have a chopped-up-boiled-egg centre, instead of an actual boiled egg.) I guess that in my head, they're cheerfully sitting next to sausage rolls and cornish pasties and cheese'n'pineapple-onna-stick, as cheap'n'cheerful foodstuffs, rather than next to an extravagant multilayered beastie. More like a corn dog kind of idea, maybe.
YMMV
ION, I have just watched Lilo and Stitch for the gazillionth time, and have been reduced to tears yet again.
Every bloody time. Damn. It kills me ded.
"Help. I'm lost."
And yet still the word 'turducken' has been embraced to describe a foodstuff?
I think it's in the pronunciation. It's tur(key)-ducken (duck plus chicken smooshed together).
Is it pronounced 'turDUCKen'?
Is it pronounced 'turDUCKen'?
Yep.