My husband is strange. I've just learned he doesn't like quiche.
A: But you like omlettes.
J: I love omlettes.
A: And you like pie.
J: I love pie.
A: Then you like quiche.
J: I do not, in fact, like quiche.
I don't know what to do with this.
Hey, more quiche for you. I kinda wish my crew didn't like it so much.
Oh yeah. A lot of which I'm going to be making for my Once a Month Cooking spree that I'm going to be embarking upon.
I made quiche last night! Spinach, cheddar, and mooshed edamame. Verrrrrrry tasty. That's been an easy go-to meal all summer. Freezes well, too.
I prefer it with crabmeat, but I live with a vegetarian and I'm too lazy to be arsed to make half with crabmeat, because I'd have to come up with a way to mark which half had it, and -- lazy.
I never thought of quiche as an omelette pie, but I guess that's kinda what it is!
One of the leading places for my parents to move to (and, of course, I'm moving with them) is two hours on buses from my campus.
Which, you know, I can do. And probably will do.
But why the fuck do they expect me to be thrilled about spending almost 4 hours, at least 4 times per week on buses? My dad acts as it's a burden on him that I'm not hopping around, excited over the news. Really. I'd love to move, sounds like it's a good place, but it's me who's gonna do all this bus-time, and can't take any class before or after cetrain hours because of that, OK?
I never thought of quiche as an omelette pie, but I guess that's kinda what it is!
I guess it is - hmm. Pie.
See also: the previous discussion (this thread? Natter? Can't remember, too lazy to look) about Spanish tortilla. Mmm....quiche with lots of potato(e).
Watched Sunset Boulevard, which I had not seen.
Oh man, this is just a clusterfuck of FAIL
A mother is angry about a trip led by the head football coach at Breckinridge County High School. The coach took about 20 players on a school bus late last month to his church, where nearly half of them — including her son — were baptized.
Michelle Ammons said her 16-year-old son was baptized without her knowledge and consent, and she is upset that a public school bus was used to take players to a church service — and that the school district's superintendent was there and did not object.
...
[Superintendent Janet] Meeks said she would have sought the consent of parents for the baptism of students if they had been "7 or 8 or 9" years old. But she didn't think it was necessary for the players who are "16 or 17."
She said that if Robert's parents didn't know that the outing was going to include a revival service it was because "he apparently was not forthcoming with his parents."
[link]
As infuriating as the whole thing is, it's the superintendent that's REALLY mind-boggling. Would have sought permission if the kids had been younger? LADY, there's this little thing called separation of church and state that you seem to be neatly avoiding. Not to mention, nice attempt at shifting blame back onto the parents-- the "Well, if you didn't know, it's because your kid doesn't trust you."
::boggles::