View Single Post
  #123 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
Jeßus[_3_] Jeßus[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,676
Default American foods that foreigners don't like.

On Sat, 3 May 2014 11:10:34 +0100, Janet > wrote:

>In article >,
>says...
>>
>> On Thu, 1 May 2014 18:37:24 +0100, Janet > wrote:
>>
>> >In article >,
says...
>> >
>> >> > However, Registered Dieticians are properly trained but people calling
>> >> > themselves "nutritionists" are usually, if not always quacks and are not
>> >> > to be trusted!
>> >> > Graham
>> >>
>> >> That's true too. I cringe when people say that they saw a nutritionist.
>> >> However, I do know of a good nutritionist. She doesn't so much tell you
>> >> specifically what to eat but more looks at the diet you are eating, tells
>> >> you what you are lacking in terms of vitamins, minerals, protein, etc., ways
>> >> you can change that and perhaps tells you of things you should look at
>> >> giving up.
>> >
>> > Well that's a step up from your pet psychic and that fake fraudster
>> >"hair analyst" in the UK whose "scientific" diagnoses you used to cite.

>>
>> LOL. Pet psychic??

>
> Don't tell me you missed the pet psychic saga? It's a Bove classic. I
>think it was last year if you want to look it up in the google-groups
>archive.
>
> Julie's cats were abducted by a raccoon which broke the window screen,
>reached in and kidnapped them. (Julie heard it all from the next room so
>it must be true). She employed a pet psychic to channel psychic
>messages from the cats in the (vain) hope they would tell the Bove
>rescue squad where they were.


Yes, I DO remember it now, for some reason I forgot the pet psychic
part of it, but I certainly remember about that sinister racoon.

Maybe the racoon was planning on abducting and selling these poor
moggies into servitude?