What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Moderator: Zulus Thousand of em
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Congrats, blurredblurred wrote:Shall be opening up a bottle of vin rouge this evening, toasting the fact that I've just become an uncle

I'm waiting for my chicken to cook before I have a chicken salad. Then to gig. Fun fun fun.
"Young people, nowadays, imagine money is everything."
"Yes, and when they grow older they know it."
"Yes, and when they grow older they know it."
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Nowhere near 13 hours for me - but from 11.00am to 9.00pm - long enough. and my wife cooked a chicken stir fry, with black beans and a brill chilli zing...
bottle of cotes du rhone village, 2007... full of fruit and tannin and just coats the tongue in a way that makes you feel... life's good... My first meeting tomorrow 1.00pm... nice...
oh - got the wigan away ticket today... my only other trip to the jjb we won 3-1... let's have a repeat...
bottle of cotes du rhone village, 2007... full of fruit and tannin and just coats the tongue in a way that makes you feel... life's good... My first meeting tomorrow 1.00pm... nice...
oh - got the wigan away ticket today... my only other trip to the jjb we won 3-1... let's have a repeat...
Loan is through, and god bless it. Being poor in France is w*nk, having all your tax money and living in france is marvellous. Oven chips with a luxury burger topped with a tad of roquefort. Feckong ambrosia. Lovely, properly lovely with(and I'm not normally able to sample good wine)a 7 (like more than a fiver!!) euro sauvignon. Delish.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Yep, Nat. I asked her if I could finish it. Good kid, that one.CrazyHorse wrote:Pretty much nothing but Strongbow. Though I am planning on having a cheeky Strongbow or two before I go to bed.
DSB, I hope the pizza was discarded by your child and not some random kid who dropped it on the street...
Just opened another Stella. Have the sneaking suspicion I may not be the most interesting contributor to this thread. But William's Guardian recipe sounds like just the ticket for tomorrow morning.
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Man, that sounds good soul food. But red wine, surely? The italian primitivo I did would have been perfect...Di Stefano wrote:Roasted courgette & onion with a couple of chopped up spicy sausages, held together with a tin of chopped tomatoes and topped with a couple of spoons of freshly grated parmesan, all baked for 30 mins. Washed down with a glass of Sauv Blanc.

See I hate this thread. Because I bloody love red wine, but it HATES me. It really does. Plus I'm normally poor and thus can't afford things. Since loan day things have been good though. Went to a belting Italian on a side street off one of the touristy streets in Paris (rue moufftard). 15euros for a proper pizza, and two glasses of surprisingly nice pichet wine. Impressed.William the White wrote:Man, that sounds good soul food. But red wine, surely? The italian primitivo I did would have been perfect...Di Stefano wrote:Roasted courgette & onion with a couple of chopped up spicy sausages, held together with a tin of chopped tomatoes and topped with a couple of spoons of freshly grated parmesan, all baked for 30 mins. Washed down with a glass of Sauv Blanc.
In a world that has decided
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Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
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Probably, but the white was already open!William the White wrote:Man, that sounds good soul food. But red wine, surely? The italian primitivo I did would have been perfect...Di Stefano wrote:Roasted courgette & onion with a couple of chopped up spicy sausages, held together with a tin of chopped tomatoes and topped with a couple of spoons of freshly grated parmesan, all baked for 30 mins. Washed down with a glass of Sauv Blanc.
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- Worthy4England
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haha - thats the name of the gaffWorthy4England wrote:Fook me - what' wrong with "The Red Lion" and "The Queens Arms"?General Mannerheim wrote:Vermillion Cinnebar
WTF is a Vermillion Cinnebar? (Red, red mercury sulphide?)
its a restaurant on one floor and a cocktail lounge on another - and both a smart as fook!
the restaurant is thai. its a bit too far from manc centre to just call in at, more the type of place you would spend the whole evening - and to be honest you would not get bored - its smart as fook!
it was built when they thought there was going to be a big casino near by, and many thought it would not survive long when it got pulled - but its still open & it was hammered last night
http://www.vermilioncinnabar.com
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Fantastic. if you or anyone else can tell me how to best poach an egg then I really will be all ears/eyes etc.William the White wrote:recipe in todays guardian...
asparagus, chorizo and poached egg...
Was great... to make it a main course did side of chips... a rare treat for me.....
Now then, I've always been led to believe that asparagus from Worcestershire are the best available. However, I find it difficult to differentiate between Worcestershire asparagus and Herefordshire asparagus.
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Always used the little poaching pan before, but if you crack an egg in a plastic cup (or similar), add a little milk and pop it in the microwave for 30 secs or so, the result in not at all bad.Bruce Rioja wrote:Fantastic. if you or anyone else can tell me how to best poach an egg then I really will be all ears/eyes etc.William the White wrote:recipe in todays guardian...
asparagus, chorizo and poached egg...
Was great... to make it a main course did side of chips... a rare treat for me.....
Now then, I've always been led to believe that asparagus from Worcestershire are the best available. However, I find it difficult to differentiate between Worcestershire asparagus and Herefordshire asparagus.
Si Deus pro nobis, quis contra nos?
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Egg poaching - this is what my ma did, and something akin recommended in guardian... break egg into saucer, cup, whatever, pan of boiling water, add a dash of vinegar, swirl water till you get a real good centrifugal force, pour egg into dead centre for exactly three mins... perfect every time... if you don't like vinegar, omit, but egg in slightly more danger of breaking apart - and vinegar taste only v slight... One of my favourite starters is poached egg slid into bowl of cold yoghurt, sprinkled with fresh thyme and chilli flakes (didn't invent it's from the Moro cookbook, and had it at the moro restaurant which is my fave in UK)...Bruce Rioja wrote:Fantastic. if you or anyone else can tell me how to best poach an egg then I really will be all ears/eyes etc.William the White wrote:recipe in todays guardian...
asparagus, chorizo and poached egg...
Was great... to make it a main course did side of chips... a rare treat for me.....
Now then, I've always been led to believe that asparagus from Worcestershire are the best available. However, I find it difficult to differentiate between Worcestershire asparagus and Herefordshire asparagus.
Worcester/hereford... all asparagus is good... and that sweet scent with next morning's wee...

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