Cooking aboard or outdoors

Discussion in 'All Things Boats & Boating' started by daiquiri, Nov 30, 2011.

  1. Yobarnacle
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    Yobarnacle Senior Member holding true course

    only if your kosher, I'm not. :)
     
  2. jamesgyore
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    jamesgyore Senior Member

    Herb crusted lamb rack with eggplant mash and parsley and lemon flesh salad... easy.

    Mash prepared in advance at home with salad made fresh aboard with lamb cooked on the BBQ with the hood down.
     

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  3. hoytedow
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    hoytedow Fly on the Wall - Miss ddt yet?

    Neither am I. It is interesting to me that the old english word for rabbit (KJV Bible) is closer to the spanish than now.

    I just read that coney refers to adult rabbits while rabbit meant a young one. Nowadays the term rabbit is less discriminating.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_rabbit
     
  4. rxcomposite
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    rxcomposite Senior Member

    Conejo in Spanish, as I often hear it, is a rabbit (a male rabbit), but is often used to denigrate a person. I am not sure what it implies when somebody is called a "conejo".:D

    I like the rabbit meat though, just don't like to be called one as I know there is something sinister about it.
     
  5. Yobarnacle
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    Yobarnacle Senior Member holding true course

    English has some very "nasty" curses. :)
    Some languages use less graphic epithets.
    Calling someone "conejo' is "you silly rabbit".
    calling someone "pendejo" translated to an obsolete english curse, is "you young scullion" Scullion is a house servant of limited intelligence and ability, usually young, that works in the scullery. Scraping plates, and washing pots and pans. Spanish cultures still have house servants for the rich.

    "Tonto" means "silly". Hiyo Silver! The Lone Ranger and Tonto! Was racist! :)

    Russians say "blini" or "blin". Translates "pancakes". When making pancakes, the first few usually are disasters, till you get the heat and time to flip correct. Learned this from a friend, Blyn Kustoss. Guess his parents thought he was a mistake! Blyn-blin? :)
     
  6. rxcomposite
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    rxcomposite Senior Member

    Thanks for the language course Yob. I grew up hearing it but when I asked for an explanation, they said it is a rabbit. Sometimes the word is combined like "Tonto Conejo"

    "Pendejo" also means "to be made a fool of by wife/husband".

    Now back to the main course. What's for dinner?:p
     
  7. hoytedow
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    hoytedow Fly on the Wall - Miss ddt yet?

    Wabbit.
     
  8. rxcomposite
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    rxcomposite Senior Member

    LOL.:D:D:D
     
  9. Frosty

    Frosty Previous Member

    Rabbit in English means to talk a lot.

    Shall be going to UK to see my Mum and dad in summer. Then I will have some proper English food, nothing like a Kebab after a skin full,--- or a chinese curry and chips.

    Last time I had fish and chips I was chewing Polo mints all afternoon trying to get the oil out of my mouth or should I call it lard.
     
  10. hoytedow
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    hoytedow Fly on the Wall - Miss ddt yet?

    Uh, kebab is Persian, not English.
     
  11. Frosty

    Frosty Previous Member


    " Really" If most English eat it then its English food.

    Apple pie is German,--No you did not invent it. They invented it before the English too.

    American as apple pie is nonsense but typical American.
     
  12. Yobarnacle
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    Yobarnacle Senior Member holding true course

    I've eaten struddle and apple pie. Both are good. But not the same thing.

    French bread, italian bread, cuban bread, are all made similar, same basic ingredients, and each tastes unique and has a different texture.
     
  13. Yobarnacle
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    Yobarnacle Senior Member holding true course

    Well, I'll be more carefull what I say to my wife! :)

    Some times we have a "discussion" and she announces "Soy independente!"

    and I respond, "Eres inde-pendeja!" :D
     
  14. Frosty

    Frosty Previous Member

    Same thing as what? The point is the world was eating apple pie before America was found by the English settlers from Plymouth.

    Strudel was puff pastry. Apple pie is not, upper crust cost more hence upper crust meaning wealthy.

    Apple pie in London was not with upper crust. Crikey I can remember that.

    Apple pie is European German.

    Your American --what you gonna know about apple pie>?
     

  15. hoytedow
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    hoytedow Fly on the Wall - Miss ddt yet?

    You forget many of us are descended from Germans. My grandmother worked in a German bakery.

    Famous advertisement: "Tonto conejo Trix son para los niƱos."

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=endscreen&v=nxl_dGrw2Ao
     
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