Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Sadly, I would totally order Green Lantern Chicken, although I'd probably ask probing questions about which Lantern developed the recipe.
Guy Gardner's chicken would be the chicken that you cook with a whole can of beer stuffed up its butt.
the Teppy corner also serves awesome tots.
Oh, fffffuck. Now I really want tots. With lots of salt and ketchup.
Guy Gardner's chicken would be the chicken that you cook with a whole can of beer stuffed up its butt.
You see? This is why you have to ask these things!
Sadly, I would totally order Green Lantern Chicken, although I'd probably ask probing questions about which Lantern developed the recipe.
and if the lantern symbol was not branded on the breast, I would be pissed.
Yet some days, the need for Ragu and Kraft green can cheese just like Mom used to make
But by qualifying this as a desire for nostalgia as opposed to high quality food, I'd argue that you're proving Hec's (and my) point.
DH likes his mixed drinks sugary and colorful. But he doesn't try to argue than a caramel appletini is a worthwhile use of good vodka, or that drinking them makes him someone you should go to for advice on ordering mixed drinks. (He is not. I love the man more than life itself, but his taste level where beverages are concerned is questionable at best.)
speaking of cooking - in the crock pot: pork that has been brined for two days (brine is bay leaves, onion, celery seed, peppercorns and garlic), cabbage, potatoes, onions. Can't wait to get home.
But Jessica, as Teppy said:
It's not just liking what you like; it's also the contention that liking "crap" food means you have no knowledge of or ability to assess and appreciate the "finer" foods in that same category. As, for instance, cheese. I mean, seriously, because I like the cheese-in-a-can, I can't assess and appreciate artisinal cheese?
I can know and appreciate and enjoy what goes into an artisanal cheese, but I will still put the green can stuff all over my spaghetti. Why does it have to be either/or? That is what is chapping my hide.
The Lantern - [link]
DH likes his mixed drinks sugary and colorful. But he doesn't try to argue than a caramel appletini is a worthwhile use of good vodka, or that drinking them makes him someone you should go to for advice on ordering mixed drinks.
Okay, but here's what I'm wondering. Isn't it possible that someone -- I'm not particularly meaning your DH -- could just like caramel appletinis and still be a mixed-drink maven?
My brother eats Spam out of the can. And he's made the finest non-restaurant dinner (5-course Northern Italian; not a bit of Spam or canned cheese to be found) I've ever had.
I just think it's possible for someone to like crap food and still be able to have authority on "fine" food.
t edit
x-posty with smonster and her Green Lantern chicken.
I think that being informed is the issue here. In other words, you can have an informed palate and also like "crap" food for nostalgia or saltiness or whatver reason. However, if you like crap food and haven't experienced or learned about other foods, then you don't have an informed opinion. You have an opinion which you are fully entitled to, but it's not an informed opinion.
I just think it's possible for someone to like crap food and still be able to have authority on "fine" food.
absolutely. Though I have to admit that if I went to your bro's house and he offered me a Miller, I'd be a mite offended ;)
I mean, seriously, because I like the cheese-in-a-can, I can't assess and appreciate artisinal cheese?
Like != thinks-is-high-quality. If you present green can cheese as an example of good cheese, then yeah, I'm going to assume that cheese is not your forte.
If your favorite cocktail is something that completely masks the flavors of the main ingredient, then I'm going to assume you don't know much about top shelf liquors. I may be wrong in that impression, but I don't think it would be an entirely misguided starting point.