Does raw or cooked make a difference? Overcooked broccoli can kill at twenty paces, but when I was a kid, cooked at all made me choke.
Though come to think of it, I don't think I liked any vegetables cooked then.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Does raw or cooked make a difference? Overcooked broccoli can kill at twenty paces, but when I was a kid, cooked at all made me choke.
Though come to think of it, I don't think I liked any vegetables cooked then.
Sounds like you're a supertaster, Frank.
Does raw or cooked make a difference?
Cooked is definitely worse, but, like cauliflower I dislike raw intensly as well. I'm definitely down on a lot of cooked veggies that I do like raw, though (carrots, for instance).
I like broccoli.
Sounds like you're a supertaster, Frank.
Do the permutations of that phenom vary from person to person? Because there are a lot of pungent vegatables that I do like - peppers (bell types and hotter varieties), for instance, and all the lillies (garlic, leeks, onions, etc.). I know my first encounter with salsa that had fresh cilantro had a "who put the dish soap in the salsa" component, but I've since come to like the taste (it no longer tastes soapy to me).
I like broccoli.
Is your name secretly "Bob"?
::sitting at the "doesn't like seafood" table::
BHP took the words out of my mouth: gilded age.
Expensive jeans, in theory, don't disgust me as much as an £85 sandwich. If workers were getting paid a good living wage, clothing would cost more. Anyone who sews their own clothing knows how much work is involved. Granted, big factories give one access to time-saving tools one does not have as a home sewer, but it's still a lot of work. Especially doing clean rolled seams with thick denim. Of course, the sad thing is that the workers who sew designer clothing are probably not paid much more than those who make clothes for Old Navy.
I can see paying more money for organic and sustainably grown food, at least until such time as supply and demand even up enough for prices to go down. But a sandwich like that is simply for the novelty of having expensive ingredients. It's conspicuous consumption as much as the $1000 julep is. And that disgusts me to my core.
Oh yeah, I forgot to say about the expensive jeans -- Gawker or someone had a bit when NYC got rid of the sales tax on clothes under $110, but they were like "Who buys jeans cheaper than $110?" Um. Me? Many many many people I know?
I have to call my thesis advisor, and I really don't want to! But I really really have to, because I told him I would. OK. Calling now.
But a sandwich like that is simply for the novelty of having expensive ingredients.
If the expensive ingredients are expensive because they taste better and are harder to obtain, and for some reason it's more expensive to prepare, is it just that you don't think people should bother eating something of that high a price (if it's a reflection of true cost)?
The julep sounds like pure margin, as does the sundae (though it looks like the sundae tastes really great). The sandwich less so.