I'd always thought of eggnog as a British thing -- it just seemed like what they'd be drinking at Mr. Fezziwig's party -- but I don't know why I thought that.
'Safe'
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.
I just went to 7-11 to get some frozen burritos and a bag of potato chips, and they had a display of vegan cookies from a local bakery right at the front. I'm both impressed and confused. Local bakery selling stuff at 7-11?
I like Silk Nog quite a bit, though.
Mmmm. Silk Nog. I might need to get some today. Or just make eggnog.
I do love the nog.
I don't approve of sheets under 400 thread count.
I've read a few articles that say that manufacturers who claim their sheets' thread count is above 400 are just engaging in deceptive wording: [link] .
it just seemed like what they'd be drinking at Mr. Fezziwig's party
That sounds about right actually. You just don't encounter it much now. First time I got to try it (this was a mistake) was in the US.
The Girl is annoyed that she can't find Baldrick's drum song, from Blackadder, on youtube. So she's looking through an entire season of episodes on DVD for it. Now that's dedication to the cause.
Thanks, Anne. I have been wanting to try this brownie recipe, but I think I am going to stick with bark and cookies for shipping and make the brownies to bring with us on Christmas day.
Random question, based on a few letters to advice columns I've seen recently: If you host a holiday dinner, like invite a bunch of relatives over for Thanksgiving or whatever, do you give each guest some leftovers to take home?
I usually at least offer. But I'm not fancy.
Mmmm I do like the nog.
With brownies, the big problem is that they'll get hard.
Huh, they never last long enough here for that to happen.
Hil, we have always ended up sending food home with people, but I never thought it was expected or traditional. More a function of cleaning up after the meal.
If you host a holiday dinner, like invite a bunch of relatives over for Thanksgiving or whatever, do you give each guest some leftovers to take home?
I think a lot of people DO. So often there is an overwhelming amount of food left, that it is a sane way to deal. And if everyone, or most every one, was asked to bring a dish, why then it would only be fair to package up some of the leftovers and send some home with everyone. But if you plan carefully the amount of food you need for all your guests, and they bring things like wine and flowers, and/or you just feel wiped out at the end, I don't think you have to send stuff home with people. I'm not an expert. As a guest, I happily accept (possibly even going so far as to look forward to), but do not expect, leftovers.
There was one letter I saw recently where someone was very upset that they'd gone to a niece's house for Thanksgiving and she didn't give them any leftovers, and then another one today where a host wants to give leftovers to all the guests, but one person always brings dessert and then takes all the leftovers of that dessert home. I can't remember ever seeing my parents send leftovers home with anyone, except for people taking back what was left of stuff they brought, but most of our usual guests probably wouldn't eat them. The only times I can remember taking leftovers with us when we were the guests is at Passover, when there's not much food we can eat in restaurants and we're going to be staying at a hotel for a few days.