I sort of think of it like Karo. Which is nasty. But you do use it in pecan pie, which is good. Which I'm pretty sure they don't make in Britain.
Kaylee ,'Out Of Gas'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
The pictures of treacle tart I googled do look very much like pecanless pecan pie.
Treacle is syrup made from cane sugar.
Wow, flea is me! I was REALLY confused about "Electric Torch". Instead of a flashlight, I pictured some sort of fake plastic flaming stick of wood.
I was surprised to find out how many people didn't know a punt is a type of boat and thought Filch was drop-kicking students across the Weasley swamp.
I pictured some sort of fake plastic flaming stick of wood.
I still do.
Oh, I know what it really means but if I could buy a flashlight that looked like a flaming stick of wood, I totally would. I prefer to think that Brits can and do.
I remember this kid called me a faggot in 3rd grade and I was SO confused, because my reading had only taught me a faggot was a bundle of wood.
I was all "How is this an insult? Huh?"
Growing up in Jamaica, the shit we had and didn't have meant really random hits with kids books. In some ways, the colonial stories set in India were closest except! Foreign languages! Religion! Tigers and elephants! But the food was closest, and I think that was what I cared about most.
I know I loved the Little House books but that was because of the other worldliness.
I also loved the other worldliness of those books, but I think I really connected with them because both Laura and Mary were so real. LIW did a great job of showing us what their characters were all about, as well as everyone else, that when I finally saw real photos of the people at the time of those books, I wasn't surprised at all.
There was a great photo taken after the Long Winter of the three older girls (Mary, Laura, and Carrie), and it wraps up all three of them at that time in one snapshot. Mary is stoic and calmly seated, with her lips firmly pressed together and hands correctly crossed, the epitome of the proper young 19th century woman, Carrie looks frail and weak, obviously still suffering from the harshness of the recently passed season, and Laura stands with her eyes flashing and her fist clenched, just as I always pictured her.
There was a great photo
That's a lot of gingham.