Terminalcoffee discussion
General Fuckery
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I didn't know that!

I just read this article: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic......"
I did! I did! Richard told us about it back in MiniAm (RIP, MiniAm) a while back. :) Oh. Crap. Wait. I thought we were talking about something else besides cauliflower. NM, I didn't know. But now I do!

http://animal.discovery.com/tv/a-list...

i hope that means you're impressed by our entrepreneurial nature."
And how far you'll go for your soccer team.

I love the Dutch.

i hope that means you're impressed by our entrepreneurial nature."
And how far you'll go for your soccer team."
FOOTBALL



People who don't like white cauliflower should cook it with turmeric. It will turn mustardy yellow.

Indians make cauliflowers into a taste sensation.

i love it too. i'm thinking of making it this week.

http://scienceray.com/biology/10-thin...
That's both men and women, just to be clear.
Lucky. It would take a lot of rooks to make a meal.

The first syllable of the word rookwurst is pronounced like Al Roker's last name (which means "smoker" in Dutch), not like a rook on a chess board.

this wil probably be used against me, but i like anise. i don't think i've ever tasted turnips, but i like rutabaga, which is a cross between turnip and cabbage.

Must . . . . . . resist . . . . . . pull of the dark side.....

I love tidbits of factoid. For awhile I was collecting the original jobs of dogs. The Rhodesian Ridgeback is a lion hunter! Akitas hunt bears. Yikes!

this wil probably be used against me, but i like anise. i don't think i've ever tasted turnips, b..."
I love anise. it is on next weeks shopping list

How else do you make it?
I didn't know that fake smiles use different muscles than real smiles. If a doctor asks a stroke victim to smile, he may smile crookedly. If you tell the same person a joke he finds funny, his real smile may return, since a different part of the brain controls the muscles.
I just read this article: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic...
and learned this:
"Until the 17th century most carrots eaten Europe were white, yellow or purple. The orange pigment was added by Dutch plant breeders looking for a way to celebrate Holland's royal family."
I've seen all of those before, but I didn't know that the orange was Dutch propaganda.