Originally posted by Alain Maréchal
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What is a vegetarian?
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Have not tried it. Hertekamp, Bols or Verpoorten (the latter slightly suspect since it is German)* for me. If you can safely upturn the open bottle then it is too thin.
* on reflection I am being illogical since Eierlikoer is excellent.
mmm, I am now impatient for tomorrow morning's cafepause. Advokaat is why God invented cold mornings. (that, and jenever)
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(I presume the Guardian would describe Carbonnade Flamande, which I am currently cooking for tonight's Sinterklaas supper, as a weird hotpot.)
ps <<eggnog is made with eggs and brandy>> is it? It is not. It is made with eggs and brandy and whisky and gin and vodka. What a lot of weaklings work at the Guardian.
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Originally posted by jean View PostVegetarians do admit animal products such as cheese or eggs, but these don't involve the killing of the milk- or egg-producing animal itself.
However I often have to remind them than the consumption of milk by humans does involve the death of the baby animals who would otherwise have drunk it.
I thought that true vegetarians would not eat any animal that loved its mother, thus making fish available for consumption.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostIf the Guardian thinks <<Advocaat is a Dutch version of eggnog>> then it partly explains why the British and Europe are a poor fit. <<Later research reveals the grotesque fact that the Dutch also have a thick version of advocaat which they eat with a spoon. >> The inference is that the Netherlanders (do you still call them Dutch?) have a strange version of a British drink. I'm now thinking, for the first time, that you define "insular", should Brexit and go away.What a lot of weaklings work at the Guardian.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostIf the Guardian thinks <<Advocaat is a Dutch version of eggnog>> then it partly explains why the British and Europe are a poor fit. <<Later research reveals the grotesque fact that the Dutch also have a thick version of advocaat which they eat with a spoon. >> The inference is that the Netherlanders (do you still call them Dutch?) have a strange version of a British drink. I'm now thinking, for the first time, that you define "insular", should Brexit and go away.
(I presume the Guardian would describe Carbonnade Flamande, which I am currently cooking for tonight's Sinterklaas supper, as a weird hotpot.)
ps <<eggnog is made with eggs and brandy>> is it? It is not. It is made with eggs and brandy and whisky and gin and vodka. What a lot of weaklings work at the Guardian.
Love it, the ire that is, not Advocaat (nor eggnog for that matter)...
... you have made my day.
OG
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostIf you can safely upturn the open bottle then it is too thin.
If you can safely invert the open bottle, surely that means that the contents do NOT run out and are quite thick, rather than too thin?
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View Postps <<eggnog is made with eggs and brandy>> is it? It is not. It is made with eggs and brandy and whisky and gin and vodka. What a lot of weaklings work at the Guardian.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostSomething lost in translation here, perhaps, Alain?
If you can safely invert the open bottle, surely that means that the contents do NOT run out and are quite thick, rather than too thin?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostSomething lost in translation here, perhaps, Alain?
If you can safely invert the open bottle, surely that means that the contents do NOT run out and are quite thick, rather than too thin?
Should read: if you CANNOT safely invert the open bottle, then it is too thin. In other words, it must need a spoon to "get at it".
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Originally posted by french frank View PostMy feeling is that although the alcohol might improve the drink to which it's added, the drink seldom does anything for the alcohol. Unless you use cheap alcohol, I suppose. BUt what kind of brandy would you add to a lait de poule, par exemple!
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostMy standard rule is: if I wouldn't drink it, I wouldn't cook with it.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
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My standard rule is: cooking with it ruins it. I don't have grand tastes, but I wouldn't waste my Baron de Sigognac on an eggnog. Cognac might not matter …It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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