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SaltyJon
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: February 08 2008
Location: Location
Status: Offline
Points: 28772
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 00:53 |
Had one of the 3oz. bags of Andy Capp's Hot Fries and a Mountain Dew.
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Fox On The Rocks
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 10 2011
Location: Toronto, Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 5012
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 13:46 |
Honey Bunches Of Oats cereal. mmm...
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tamijo
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 06 2009
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 4287
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Posted: June 20 2012 at 14:06 |
Water
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Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Man With Hat
Collaborator
Jazz-Rock/Fusion/Canterbury Team
Joined: March 12 2005
Location: Neurotica
Status: Offline
Points: 166178
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Posted: June 21 2012 at 03:17 |
Iced Tea
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Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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Barbu
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 09 2005
Location: infinity
Status: Offline
Points: 30850
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:29 |
Coffee. Strong.
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:32 |
Just had Corn Flakes
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:41 |
Corn Flakes for elevenses - I approve
I'm baking a Parmesan and sun-dried tomato bread for my lunch, which I'll eat with some nice cured meats, extra virgin olive oil and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar.
I'm currently drinking a cup of tea with a M&S choc-chip cookie.
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What?
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:46 |
The food you eat always sounds superb Dean. I might make some Tomato Soup later.
It was more a late breakfast.
Edited by Snow Dog - June 22 2012 at 05:46
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:46 |
I live to eat.
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What?
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 05:47 |
Dean wrote:
I live to eat. |
I love how adventurous your diet is. I really must extend my range.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:22 |
Snow Dog wrote:
Dean wrote:
I live to eat. |
I love how adventurous your diet is. I really must extend my range. |
Thanks. My late Mum, (bless her), was a good cook (and a great baker) but not very adventurous - if it's Tuesday then it must be chops - "foreign" food was unknown in our house, my late Dad (bless him too) thought lamb with rosemary was exotic. She taught me to cook and bake and grounded me in the fundamentals, but we never experimented beyond putting a few raisins in ginger bread - it was simple food simply cooked and damn fine it was. It wasn't until I went to Uni in '79 that I discovered there was other food out there - Leicester market was a revelation to me - strange looking vegetables, cheese that wasn't cheddar, all kinds of fresh and cured meat, all manner of bread that wasn't Wonderloaf - stuff I'd honestly never seen when I was growing up in darkest rural north Bedfordshire... I'd never even drunk real coffee because we only had instant at home and that gave me migraines. I ate my first Indian meal there (didn't like it much) and my first chili (loved it) - even my first real hamburger (not Wimpy) was bought in Leicester; Even then, I'd never eaten Italian (except frozen pizza and "school" spag-bog) or Chinese food until I moved to Edinburgh a couple of years later. But as a student I couldn't afford to eat out all the time so learnt to adapt what my Mum had taught me to mimic those "foreign" meals - a few herbs and spices here and there in the "English" meals I knew how to make and is sort of grew from there. (with lots of encouragement from Debs, who had grown up with a more varied diet, though chitlins and tripe and onions are still a no-no for me - I remember the first meal I cooked for her - roast beef with all the trimmings and rice-pudding - later she cooked me home made pizza with fresh tomato sauce, proper mozarella, bell peppers and hot pepperoni - which I proceeded to liberally coat with HP sauce ). But even now and then I get stuck in a repeat loop of cooking the same meals just like my Mum did - my daugher once remarked - ug, not coq au vin again...
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What?
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Ancient Tree
Forum Groupie
Joined: June 19 2012
Location: EU
Status: Offline
Points: 109
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:24 |
Veggie Burger and drinking water
99.9% Healthy
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:32 |
Ancient Tree wrote:
Veggie Burger and drinking water
99.9% Healthy |
Mmm - I love veggie burgers, even the sad looking McDonalds ones. A tin of mixed beans mashed up, made into patties and fried in sunflower oil, then coated with sweet chili sauce and served in a fresh toasted bun with a quality salad harvested from the garden (with maybe some tangerine segments scattered over it) - yum! I could do that for tonight's dinner - sounds ideal.
/edit: all food is 99.9% healthy
Edited by Dean - June 22 2012 at 06:44
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What?
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:32 |
Dean wrote:
Snow Dog wrote:
Dean wrote:
I live to eat. |
I love how adventurous your diet is. I really must extend my range. |
Thanks. My late Mum, (bless her), was a good cook (and a great baker) but not very adventurous - if it's Tuesday then it must be chops - "foreign" food was unknown in our house, my late Dad (bless him too) thought lamb with rosemary was exotic. She taught me to cook and bake and grounded me in the fundamentals, but we never experimented beyond putting a few raisins in ginger bread - it was simple food simply cooked and damn fine it was. It wasn't until I went to Uni in '79 that I discovered there was other food out there - Leicester market was a revelation to me - strange looking vegetables, cheese that wasn't cheddar, all kinds of fresh and cured meat, all manner of bread that wasn't Wonderloaf - stuff I'd honestly never seen when I was growing up in darkest rural north Bedfordshire... I'd never even drunk real coffee because we only had instant at home and that gave me migraines. I ate my first Indian meal there (didn't like it much) and my first chili (loved it) - even my first real hamburger (not Wimpy) was bought in Leicester; Even then, I'd never eaten Italian (except frozen pizza and "school" spag-bog) or Chinese food until I moved to Edinburgh a couple of years later. But as a student I couldn't afford to eat out all the time so learnt to adapt what my Mum had taught me to mimic those "foreign" meals - a few herbs and spices here and there in the "English" meals I knew how to make and is sort of grew from there. (with lots of encouragement from Debs, who had grown up with a more varied diet, though chitlins and tripe and onions are still a no-no for me - I remember the first meal I cooked for her - roast beef with all the trimmings and rice-pudding - later she cooked me home made pizza with fresh tomato sauce, proper mozarella, bell peppers and hot pepperoni - which I proceeded to liberally coat with HP sauce ). But even now and then I get stuck in a repeat loop of cooking the same meals just like my Mum did - my daugher once remarked - ug, not coq au vin again... |
My mother actually wasn't a great cook so I started doing it myself from about 18 I suppose. I do the majority of the cooking now but I think I'm starting o get a bit safe and need to push myself out of the comfort zone. Sometimes I use"instinct" (actually it's accumulated cooking knowledge) and make stuff up. Sometimes with very good results.
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Snow Dog
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
Status: Offline
Points: 32995
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:34 |
Dean wrote:
Ancient Tree wrote:
Veggie Burger and drinking water
99.9% Healthy |
Mmm - I love veggie burgers, even the sad looking McDonalds ones. A tin of mixed beans mashed up, made into patties and fried in sunflower oil, then coated with sweet chili sauce and served in a fresh toasted bun with a quality salad harvested from the garden (with maybe some tangerine segments scattered over it) - yum! I could do that for tonight's dinner - sounds ideal. |
That sounds easy. I may give it a go sometime.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:41 |
Snow Dog wrote:
That sounds easy. I may give it a go sometime. |
It is - and it can be as tasty as you want it to be - throw in some chopped chili pepers (I prefer to saute then in a little oil first to knock the raw burn out of them... same with garlic), a few herbs, even some grated cheese, mushrooms if you like - and then build it up as you would a hamburger with pickles, mayo, beefsteak tomato, whatever... but the sweet chili dipping sauce is my condiment of choice .
/edit: oooh - and a Kraft cheese slice - I would never eat one of those normally, but a burger without one is just wrong.
Edited by Dean - June 22 2012 at 06:50
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin & Razor Guru
Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:48 |
Thanks guys - just finished a horribly foreshortened cheese salad sandwich from the van which visits our office... I really should start making my own again
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 06:54 |
Had the best beef Burgundy I've ever made last night.
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Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 07:03 |
Snow Dog wrote:
My mother actually wasn't a great cook so I started doing it myself from about 18 I suppose. I do the majority of the cooking now but I think I'm starting o get a bit safe and need to push myself out of the comfort zone. Sometimes I use"instinct" (actually it's accumulated cooking knowledge) and make stuff up. Sometimes with very good results. |
Same here - back at Uni a small tin of fruit cocktail (you know - diced pears, peaches, grapes and cherries in heavy syrup) tipped into a small saucepan with a glug of Heinz ketchup and a splash of malt vinegar slowly heated up so it didn't stick then poured over a grilled chop became my take on sweet and sour pork. Cooking on instinct - it wasn't authentic, but they contained all the right ingredients so seemed like it would work, and it did.
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What?
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin & Razor Guru
Joined: February 02 2004
Location: South England
Status: Offline
Points: 14693
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Posted: June 22 2012 at 07:05 |
Dean wrote:
a small tin of fruit cocktail (you know - diced pears, peaches, grapes and cherries in heavy syrup) tipped into a small saucepan with a glug of Heinz ketchup and a splash of malt vinegar slowly heated up so it didn't stick then poured over a grilled chop became my take on sweet and sour pork. |
Sounds absolutely disgusting, yet tempting
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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