Well, no room in the freezer (apartment size, about 2/3rds the size I used to have) and the women's shelter already has a hook up on bread and milk
Also, that thing in udaman's post scares the hell out of me.
- LOL, Merc, do you know what goes into those 'dogs'? That would make you throw up. In the pic (do a search on Insalata Caprese, classic southern Italian dish), you only have olive oil (what you think it's cat pee?) drizzled over slices of mozerella cheese, on top of slices of heirloom tomatoes. A little salt and pepper, with slivers of sweet basil on top. Damn what a bunch of whussies you guys are, it tastes great!
That reminds me (we'll let's not start a gross out thread on food, cause then we'd have to go into
Apocolips (not misspelled ) Chow-probably not safe for work either, even though it's not really 'sex'???) about bird's nest soup.
Eddie Lin is married (huh, some poor woman actually married this guy???), kind of whack to put it mildly (a quote from link above "No penis envy here. And I’m totally not trying to be a dick. It’s only my opinion." Hmm, that Megan McCormick over there in the side bar, as part of the team for PBS series Globe Trekker's, more my style of whacky
wneddnce: Be sure to check out the
"Archives Notorious"
Link to the side
.
My mother grew up in Hawaii, long ago, in the Chinese neighborhood of Diamond Head. A delicacy known as 'bird's nest soup' (I don't know how you'd write it in English pronunciation of the Chinese words). Back then it was a favorite Cantonese luxury item up there with shark fin's soup & abalone soup. And it was a laborious preparation of one days worth of pork & chicken stock, mixed in with that stock was flour to thicken it a little, some dried egg whites that float in a pretty patter in the soup, some small shreds of quality crab meat, and a small amount of thin slivers of 'bird's nest'. That was the old preparation, it was a comfort food hot soup. Now days, here in the USA and China (Hong Kong) the generations have changed the fashion such that when you ask for bird's nest soup, it is usually for rich people, and they use a good amount of the bird's nest mixed into a cold coconut desert soup concoction!!!
I asked this fluent in English (she went to HS in England & was going to university here in LA area) Chinese college student working part-time in a restaurant if the restaurant she was working in did a good bird's nest soup. She looked at me with confusion, did not understand what I was referring to. Only after I told her it was expensive, did she utter the Chinese name for it, and she told me that growing up her mother would make it for her back in HK. But she did not really like the taste of it, as it was the desert prepartion. She told me it's supposed to be good for the complexion/skin, but that she looked at me with disgust when she asked if I knew what the bird's nest is made of? When she learned that it was made from the bird saliva exuded by a certain species of swallow, she was grossed out by that.
Same thing happened when I was at a Chinese area, HK seafood restaurant on the eastside of town, and I asked the young female assistant manager if that restaurant did the 'old-fashioned' style Cantonese bird's nest soup. She had now idea what I was talking about, being in her early 20's; she too thought it was a cold desert soup. And likewise, she made the 'eeeew' look on her face saying she was also disgusted by what it is made of. Honestly it is like shark fin, very mild, and just adds a little something extra to the complexity of the soup. Yet she too was grossed out by what it was made from...what's the matter with modern day Chinese women they're sending over here, damn it!?!? There all a bunch of friggin whussy pansy arse sissies, no backbone, no character.