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		Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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		bigtoughralf wrote:What do people in the US eat for Christmas? Butter?






		












		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












			






















		Saxi wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.













		

























		saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.





















		






		Votanic wrote:saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.
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.
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












			saxitoxin wrote:Votanic wrote:saxitoxin wrote:We eat vegetable-based deserts, not fruit-based deserts.
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.
However, sweet potatoes are a root vegetable.
why you gotta do me like that, Votanic





















		























		






















		


















			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.





















		






		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.





















		Votanic wrote:*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.













		2dimes wrote:Votanic wrote:*Perhaps Canadian Thanksgiving too.
Yup, that's going to happen today, add Easter to the list.





















		












		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.






























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		Dukasaur wrote: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.
It's all disgusting crap.
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.






















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