Moderator: Community Team
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Butterball Turkeybigtoughralf wrote:What do people in the US eat for Christmas? Butter?
We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts. Here's a British woman and her boyfriend -- who is either a flamboyant Sodomite or the toughest Alpha Male in Peckham -- eating pumpkin pie.bigtoughralf wrote:What do people in the US eat for Christmas? Butter?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Pumpkins are fruit. There are many popular non-sweet/semi-sweet fruit. Others include tomatoes, peppers, avocados, tomatillos, cucumbers, eggplant, and other squashes such as zucchini.saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.
why you gotta do me like that, VotanicVotanic wrote:Pumpkins are fruit. There are many popular non-sweet/semi-sweet fruit. Others include tomatoes, peppers, avocados, tomatillos, cucumbers, eggplant, and other squashes such as zucchini.saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.
However, sweet potatoes are a root vegetable.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
There's a lot of politicized rhetoric and biased propaganda on the forums, I prefer to stick to the facts.saxitoxin wrote:why you gotta do me like that, VotanicVotanic wrote:Pumpkins are fruit. There are many popular non-sweet/semi-sweet fruit. Others include tomatoes, peppers, avocados, tomatillos, cucumbers, eggplant, and other squashes such as zucchini.saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.
However, sweet potatoes are a root vegetable.

I'm not sure why they would stop baking muffins/crumpets (How 'bout scones?) in Summer, but Pomegranates are a late Summer/Fall fruit. Crop seasonality is the reason. This distinction is lost on some nowadays due to International shipping.jonesthecurl wrote:When I was a kid. there were things which were seasonal for no reason... you couldn't get ('English") muffins in the summer, nor crumpets. I remember pomegranates being my favourite Xmas treat. For some reason, you could get them late autumn, then they would disappear until Xmas.
I also thought about it. In the past, transportation and storage technologies were not as advanced as they are today. It was difficult to transport and store food for long periods of time. I am happy to live in our timejonesthecurl wrote:When I was a kid. there were things which were seasonal for no reason... you couldn't get ('English") muffins in the summer, nor crumpets. I remember pomegranates being my favourite Xmas treat. For some reason, you could get them late autumn, then they would disappear until Xmas.
Yup, that's going to happen today, add Easter to the list.Votanic wrote:*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.
Tha's a funny coincidence. I didn't even look at the calendar. Happy Canadian Thanksgiving All.2dimes wrote:Yup, that's going to happen today, add Easter to the list.Votanic wrote:*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.
It's all disgusting crap.Votanic wrote:Many people serve a similar or identical meal at both U.S. Thanksgiving* and Christmas (or other year-end holidays).
I'm completely fine with that because I love all the classic Thanksgiving dishes: turkey, stuffing, gravy, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, yams, various greens, and pumpkin pie.
It's a meal too good to be eaten only once a year.
*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.
Of course you don't like Christmas food, or anything Christmas-related, Jew.Dukasaur wrote:It's all disgusting crap.Votanic wrote:Many people serve a similar or identical meal at both U.S. Thanksgiving* and Christmas (or other year-end holidays).
I'm completely fine with that because I love all the classic Thanksgiving dishes: turkey, stuffing, gravy, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, yams, various greens, and pumpkin pie.
It's a meal too good to be eaten only once a year.
*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.
I do eat it, since I've married three Canadians in a row so I always get invited to all these stupid Thanksgiving dinners by my various in-laws and I'm not boorish enough to insult a free dinner, but I see no value in it.
Turkey=most boring meat imaginable. Potatoes, pumpkin, turnip=disgusting, carbohydrate-laden, bland, texture-free vegetables. Stuffing=a way to recycle bread that should have been fed to the hogs.