Quoting Michael Loo to Nancy Backus on 03-20-19 08:04 <=-
Not good.Yeah, getting. That's right, getting.Ok... there.... Worsening, even.... sigh...
Can't read music well these days - if it's
something I knew from high school or before,
it's pretty good, but much after that, wasteland.
The reading group did Haydn 76/2 and Beethoven 18/4
and 18/6 a week ago - in order of my familiarity as well
as when I learned them, as well as of the program. I
played the first almost flawlessly; the second
enjoyably; and the last sort of okay.
At that point, she was old enough that she probably could have soundedyounger sister misread "They're Double-Toasted" as "They'reIt being something you'd recognize... :) Instead of the purely
Dollabar"... it, of course, became a family saying....
I read Nullarbor.
made up word my sister came out with... :)
When one has a limited vocabulary because of
youth or otherwise, making stuff up makes
more sense (still not the greatest of things).
it out (Mommy having been teaching us to read with such tools as
McGuffey's Readers)... but was just a little lazy that morning, I think.
Or impatient!
I'm sure you would have.... but that wasn't available... and I suspectIf properly handled, and fresh enough, and not in a cardboardYup... which is why I'd go for chocolate milk any time I could...
carton it tastes rather nice... ;) Of course, back in the school
days, the school milk was probably fresh enough, but often not well handled, and was in those little waxed cardboard milk cartons... :)
Yeah, those. I sort of dreaded them, but on
the other hand facing lunch without liquid
was also a cause for apprehension.
I'd have preferred beer.
I'd still not have liked it had I been introduced at an early age...
I wonder if that has to do with the degree of
"supertasterdom," whose scientific as well as
popular definitions most often rest on the
sensitivity to various kinds of bitter.
don't know how their entrees were... but Juanita had sesame chicken
which she enjoyed and took half home, and MG had shrimp in Hunan sauce
which she also pronounced good. I had scallops in garlic sauce which
came with a nice assortment of stirfry veggies as well as a goodly
amount of scallops... tasty enough but a bit overcooked...
So not the dreaded but often-encountered fish jello
scallops.
three usual soups and fried or steamed rice came with... MG had the
eggroll for an additional $1... They did have shrimp toasts on the
appetiser list, with a nice photo... In the interests of experimentation
I got an order (which turned out to be as expensive as my lunch entree was)... four good-sized triangles came, thick toast and even thicker
layer of shrimp stuff... I couldn't tell if there was any sesame seed in
the concoction, but there were plenty of little whole shrimp mixed in...
the fried toast was crunchy and just greasy enough, and the shrimp layer quite tasty... I ate one piece, and brought the rest home, along with a
bit of my rice with the last bits of the sauce and MG's last piece of broccoli.... Richard had one of the shrimp toasts later (cold), and also pronouncd it good... I'd go back there again... and get the shrimp toast again... even if again no one else there wanted to share... might get it instead of an entree, even... ;)
Ah, thanks for that. lately I've been at a few places
of greater or lesser Chineseness, and none, from the
most nativist to the most fashionable American Chinese,
offered the dish, which I know as more or less what you
have described (and what those recipes suggested).
OK, for sure I've not read or seen it....The movie was called, as I recall, FantasticHmmm... I've either heard of the movie, then, or at least seen the
Beasts and Where to Find Them.
cover of the book somewhere (maybe at Lydia's).... didn't know it
had anything to do with dough, though...
From the IMDb plot synopsis:
Inside the bank, Newt meets Jacob Kowalski
(Dan Fogler), a factory worker who is there
to apply for a loan so he can open a bakery.
It's a spinoff of the Harry Potter things.
name comes from the Latin meaning "no trees,"I recognize the Latin... now that you mention it...
whoever settled the country liking to show off
his/her classical knowledge (aboriginal is also
not an aboriginal term).
They're Latiner than illegitimis.
The Website belongs to a guy who wanted toInteresting... :) So the website also has recipes from people in the region...?
bicycle trek the length of it and celebrate
others who have done so (including, apparently,
a 10-year old who did 30 back-to-back centuries
to cycle between Perth and Sydney).
Well, that one at least, but the rest of the
ones I've been posting come from someplace
altogether else.
... Conclusion: Place where you got tired of thinking.
Fair enough, but some people stop thinking only
when the picture is sufficiently complete.
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