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Thread: Restaurant Trick
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21st May 2009, 11:10 PM #1
Restaurant Trick
A couple weeks back, a friend and I had bargain breakfasts at one of our local watering holes. We both ordered the same dish: Scrambled eggs, wheat toast, grits, and coffee. The coffee was served immediately, of course. When the waitress set down the meals, I said, "Whoa! That's not right." And we swapped the identical plates.
The other night, on the Daily Show, Tom Hanks and Jon Stewart did the same maneuver with identical coffee cups.
Weird!
Cheers,
JoeOf course truth is stranger than fiction.
Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain
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22nd May 2009, 10:38 AM #2
maybe they's just messin with ya
Mick
avantguardian
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22nd May 2009, 11:01 AM #3Novice
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haha
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22nd May 2009, 06:04 PM #4
What are grits? Are they the same as the grits (crushed calcium?) that we used to feed to the fowl to improve their egg shells?
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I know you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I'm not sure you realize that what you just read is not what I meant.
Regards, Woodwould.
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22nd May 2009, 06:30 PM #5
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22nd May 2009, 06:33 PM #6
You'd have to ask "Why?"
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I know you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I'm not sure you realize that what you just read is not what I meant.
Regards, Woodwould.
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23rd May 2009, 12:16 AM #7
Provides the "crunch" factor, I guess. Like bamboo shoots in Chinese dishes, but somewhat softer. In SE USA, it's nigh impossible to avoid them, and not bad at all with added cheddar cheese. Farther north, shredded potatoes, lightly fried, serve the same function, sometimes with added onion.
Cheers,
JoeOf course truth is stranger than fiction.
Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain
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23rd May 2009, 12:22 AM #8
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23rd May 2009, 01:48 AM #9GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Oct 2003
- Location
- Sydney,Australia
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Also a staple in parts of Italy where they call it 'Polenta', or in snobby up market eateries which think potato is 'common'.
I have an interesting article from Oxford University on the use of 'grits' in early (and not so early) Colonial America.
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23rd May 2009, 09:33 AM #10
I have polenta regularly and it's a very pleasant compliment to Italian cuisine. But grits! maybe it's just the name and memories of fowl.
.
I know you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I'm not sure you realize that what you just read is not what I meant.
Regards, Woodwould.
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