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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Mon, 25 Feb 2019 11:21:57 -0500, Gary > wrote:
>Ophelia wrote: >> >> "cshenk" wrote in message: >> I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! >> >> == >> >> lol that works too ![]() > >Their US version is way too sweet now. Frenchs is better...or >even the generic brands. L&P does make a very tasty steak sauce >though or was it a bbq sauce? You tell us what Lea & Perrins Traditional Steak Sauce really is: "Distilled Vinegar, Tomato Puree (Water, Tomato Paste), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Raisin Paste, Molasses, Salt, Orange Marmalade Base (Orange, Grapefruit and Lemon Juices), Onion (Fresh and Dried), Dried Apple, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Tamarind, Anchovies, Garlic (Fresh and Dried), Spices, Xanthan Gum, Hydrolyzed Soy and Corn Protein, Potassium Sorbate and Sodium Benzoate Added for Freshness, Natural Flavors, Shallots." I'd call it "Kitchen Sink & Leftovers From A Science Project" sauce. |
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On Tue, 26 Feb 2019 06:05:50 +1100, Bruce >
wrote: >On Mon, 25 Feb 2019 08:29:15 -0600, wrote: > >>On Mon, 25 Feb 2019 13:01:09 +1100, Bruce > >>wrote: >> >>>On Sun, 24 Feb 2019 19:55:19 -0600, wrote: >>> >>>>oh bull crap it is correctly pronounced in the south, the turret >>>>south, but actually she south west has the correct pronunciation >>>>except if only you discount the north east they have it better unless >>>>you consider the south south west with north eastern influences... >>> >>>One skill you haven't mastered yet: writing. Reread that sentence and >>>cry. >> >> >>guess you have not really heard of spell check either.. And I am sorry >>if I have a freaking Band-Aid on my pointy finger at the tip that >>causes many typos and many crazy spell checker errors. Wow you people >>are NUTS!!!! > >I wasn't talking about typos. > >>let me redo the sentence for those that are crying because they can >>not understand that I am a human and I am not perfect > >Hey, you're making progress! sarcasm my friend.... I am by far the most perfect fun loving gorgeous person.... in my house :P -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
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![]() "dsi1" wrote in message ... On Sunday, February 24, 2019 at 10:41:32 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > > --- > > Ok you got me with that one. Explain please? Nobody in the US can figure out how to handle Welsh words. OTOH, I would be funny as heck if it was called "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysili ogogogoch sauce." == lol |
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On Monday, February 25, 2019 at 11:47:11 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
> "dsi1" wrote in message > ... > > On Sunday, February 24, 2019 at 10:41:32 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > > > > --- > > > > Ok you got me with that one. Explain please? > > Nobody in the US can figure out how to handle Welsh words. OTOH, I would be > funny as heck if it was called > "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysili ogogogoch sauce." > > == > > lol Wales, it seems, has discombobulated the English too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnl3N1RQedE |
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Julie Bove wrote:
> > > wrote in message > ... >On Sun, 24 Feb > 2019 09:03:05 -0500, Ed Pawlowski > wrote: > > > > > On 2/24/2019 7:37 AM, wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > Oh, that recipe. Gary is fond of ketchup and mayo mixed > > > > > together. Perhaps he will enjoy the additional ingredients. > > > > > > > > The ketchup and mayo mix is often refereed to as a Russian > > > > dressing, for instance thousand island is a ketchup and mayo > > > > mix and is a Russian dressing. I do have a wonderful thousand > > > > island recipe available upon request. > > > > > > I'd not eat the dressing of those godless people. > > > > > > as opposed to those with gods whom are violent to each other solely > > because they think their god told them to which it never did because > > fairies dont exist. > > Take it somewhere else. I don't care about your name. I'm not a > Christian. I didn't come here to talk religion. +1 |
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Leonard Blaisdell wrote:
> In article >, cshenk > > wrote: > > > I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! > > Sure. But is the first word pronounced lee or lay? > > leo Umm, humm. Not sure how the English say it! |
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Gary wrote:
> Ophelia wrote: > > > > "cshenk" wrote in message: > > I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! > > > > == > > > > lol that works too ![]() > > Their US version is way too sweet now. Frenchs is better...or > even the generic brands. L&P does make a very tasty steak sauce > though or was it a bbq sauce? They make both types. I seem to note some 10 versions at least under the brand name. |
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![]() "cshenk" wrote in message ... Leonard Blaisdell wrote: > In article >, cshenk > > wrote: > > > I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! > > Sure. But is the first word pronounced lee or lay? > > leo Umm, humm. Not sure how the English say it! == Lee! ![]() |
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![]() "dsi1" wrote in message ... On Monday, February 25, 2019 at 11:47:11 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > "dsi1" wrote in message > ... > > On Sunday, February 24, 2019 at 10:41:32 PM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > > > > --- > > > > Ok you got me with that one. Explain please? > > Nobody in the US can figure out how to handle Welsh words. OTOH, I would > be > funny as heck if it was called > "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysili ogogogoch sauce." > > == > > lol Wales, it seems, has discombobulated the English too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnl3N1RQedE == LOL |
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Ophelia wrote:
> > > "cshenk" wrote in message > ... > > Leonard Blaisdell wrote: > > > In article >, cshenk > > wrote: > > > >> I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! > > > > Sure. But is the first word pronounced lee or lay? > > > > leo > > Umm, humm. Not sure how the English say it! > > == > > Lee! ![]() Oh good! I get a pass then as that's how I do it! |
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On Tue, 26 Feb 2019 16:59:07 -0600, "cshenk" > wrote:
>Ophelia wrote: > >> >> >> "cshenk" wrote in message >> ... >> >> Leonard Blaisdell wrote: >> >> > In article >, cshenk >> > wrote: >> > >> >> I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! >> > >> > Sure. But is the first word pronounced lee or lay? >> > >> > leo >> >> Umm, humm. Not sure how the English say it! >> >> == >> >> Lee! ![]() > >Oh good! I get a pass then as that's how I do it! Round 2: how does one pronounce "sea"? Round 3: "pea". Round 4: "tea". |
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![]() "cshenk" wrote in message ... Ophelia wrote: > > > "cshenk" wrote in message > ... > > Leonard Blaisdell wrote: > > > In article >, cshenk > > wrote: > > > >> I'm gonna try to get by with Lea and Perrins! > > > > Sure. But is the first word pronounced lee or lay? > > > > leo > > Umm, humm. Not sure how the English say it! > > == > > Lee! ![]() Oh good! I get a pass then as that's how I do it! == LOL I am not saying the whole of the UK but it is certainly the way I and those I know, say it ![]() |
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2019 10:09:25 +1100, Bruce >
wrote: > >> Lee! ![]() > >Oh good! I get a pass then as that's how I do it! > Round 2: how does one pronounce "sea"? Round 3: "pea". Round 4: "tea". In the run-up the the War of 1812 (or the "American War of 1812" as the Brits call it because they were rather busier with Napoleon at the time) the British navy was in the habit of stopping vessels flying the US flag to search for British sailors who had deserted to the US navy. One of the "tests" used to distinguish between Left- and Right-pondians was to show a quantity of dried (I suppose, fresh being hard to find in the middle of the Atlantic most times of the year) peas. (And there's your food reference.) One group would call them "pees" and the other "pays". I forget which was the "British" pronunciation at the time but those who used it were arrested and taken ("impressed" they called it in those days) into the British navy. (I have in mind a Drunk History sketch in which a cheeky tar says "I 'aint impressed, guv" and the officer in charge says "Oh yes you are.") -- Bob St Francis would have done better to preach to the cats |
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