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  3. What do 8 year olds think of food?

What do 8 year olds think of food?

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  • C Corporal Agarn

    So questionable food is okay, but beer has standards? :laugh: I actually have not had a beer for 30 plus years, so I do not know what is out there. Just thought Bud was a good redneck beer. Guess I should have said Duff's.

    P Offline
    P Offline
    Paul Conrad
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    :laugh: I used to like Bud Light, but my preference these days is Guinness :-\

    "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

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    • J Jimmy Savile

      PecuniousPete wrote:

      To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food,

      Your about to get flamed.

      Richard DeemingR Offline
      Richard DeemingR Offline
      Richard Deeming
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      The Reincarnation wrote:

      Your about to get flamed.

      And you're about to get berated for your appalling grammar! ;P


      "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer

      "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined" - Homer

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      • P PecuniousPete

        I was having dinner with my wife, daughter, and mother on a recent trip to the UK (from France). My mother had prepared some boil in the bag lamb shanks (the end of the leg) which had a sweet minty sauce (the British like sweet sauces) and my daughter says: "It is too sweet, it needs some red wine or something." I could have hugged her! To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food, cooking restaurant quality food for my family every night, red wine and orange sauces to go with duck, scallop bisque sauces to go with salmon etc, and my 8 year old daughter has such educated taste buds she can identify an unbalanced sauce and suggest cure! What an epicure! What a gourmet! My 8 year old! :) She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

        K Offline
        K Offline
        Kyudos
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        First - how can you put 'boil-in-the-bag' and "dinner" in the same sentence, wherever you currently live or hail from? Second - 'mint sauce' is an abomination that perfectly ruins any food it accompanies (though it might improve boil-in-the-bag...) Third - you think the British like sweet? Visit NZ and try some kiwi versions. They even put sugar in their marmite, the most savoury of savouries. And don't get me started on them putting vanilla in EVERYTHING....

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        • P PecuniousPete

          I was having dinner with my wife, daughter, and mother on a recent trip to the UK (from France). My mother had prepared some boil in the bag lamb shanks (the end of the leg) which had a sweet minty sauce (the British like sweet sauces) and my daughter says: "It is too sweet, it needs some red wine or something." I could have hugged her! To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food, cooking restaurant quality food for my family every night, red wine and orange sauces to go with duck, scallop bisque sauces to go with salmon etc, and my 8 year old daughter has such educated taste buds she can identify an unbalanced sauce and suggest cure! What an epicure! What a gourmet! My 8 year old! :) She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

          B Offline
          B Offline
          bryce
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          PecuniousPete wrote:

          She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

          no dude, she wanted some booze to drink to mask the food- you have created another english lush ;) Bryce

          MCAD --- To paraphrase Fred Dagg - the views expressed in this post are bloody good ones. --
          Our kids books :The Snot Goblin, and Book 2 - the Snotgoblin and Fluff The Snotgoblin for the Ipad

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          • P PecuniousPete

            I was having dinner with my wife, daughter, and mother on a recent trip to the UK (from France). My mother had prepared some boil in the bag lamb shanks (the end of the leg) which had a sweet minty sauce (the British like sweet sauces) and my daughter says: "It is too sweet, it needs some red wine or something." I could have hugged her! To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food, cooking restaurant quality food for my family every night, red wine and orange sauces to go with duck, scallop bisque sauces to go with salmon etc, and my 8 year old daughter has such educated taste buds she can identify an unbalanced sauce and suggest cure! What an epicure! What a gourmet! My 8 year old! :) She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Joe Woodbury
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            The smugness will last until your daughter tells you a Big Mac is delicious.

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            • P PecuniousPete

              I was having dinner with my wife, daughter, and mother on a recent trip to the UK (from France). My mother had prepared some boil in the bag lamb shanks (the end of the leg) which had a sweet minty sauce (the British like sweet sauces) and my daughter says: "It is too sweet, it needs some red wine or something." I could have hugged her! To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food, cooking restaurant quality food for my family every night, red wine and orange sauces to go with duck, scallop bisque sauces to go with salmon etc, and my 8 year old daughter has such educated taste buds she can identify an unbalanced sauce and suggest cure! What an epicure! What a gourmet! My 8 year old! :) She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Mycroft Holmes
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              I have a photo of my grandkids, about 2 and 4 chasing my wife down the hall demanding an olive. They also have the habit of raiding the cheese bin for the "special" cheese, the stinky one and sharp cheddars. They have never eaten at a Muckers but then thay haven't started school yet either :sigh: Start em young, teach them right to enjoy good food, worked for us and our kids!

              Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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              • P Paul Conrad

                Budweiser = X| I only drink imported beers ;P

                "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

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                P Offline
                PecuniousPete
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                Paul Conrad wrote:

                Budweiser = X|

                I went to the original home of Budweiser, in Hungary (place called Budowice). I stayed at a hotel there. It ran out of beer.....

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                • S S Houghtelin

                  Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

                  I suppose, our taste buds on this side of the pond are less sophisticated.

                  You know as well as I do, America has food snobs too. ;) Makes me think of a “high toned” person I used to know who would at every opportunity would spout off about how sophisticated his tastes were. He had invited my brother and me to a grooms dinner for his daughters wedding and he was going on about the wine we were served about how it was dry and this that and whatever else they say about wine and declared it a good wine. Several people around him were nodding their heads in agreement. I didn’t particularly like it myself. I had a good laugh when I went to the bathroom later and happened to see the server through the kitchen door refilling the bottle with wine from a cardboard box. Made me wonder how many other sophisticated connoisseurs of finer spirits approved of the wine

                  It was broke, so I fixed it.

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                  P Offline
                  PecuniousPete
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Ha ha ha! Classic! I hate wine snobs who get misled by the label and ignore the taste. I remember as a lad at a dinner party with my dad and one of the guests served up a supposedly good claret. Tasted like vinegar to me so I told them all. I was the only one with the honesty of child to call it what it was, spoiled wine! :laugh:

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                  • K Kyudos

                    First - how can you put 'boil-in-the-bag' and "dinner" in the same sentence, wherever you currently live or hail from? Second - 'mint sauce' is an abomination that perfectly ruins any food it accompanies (though it might improve boil-in-the-bag...) Third - you think the British like sweet? Visit NZ and try some kiwi versions. They even put sugar in their marmite, the most savoury of savouries. And don't get me started on them putting vanilla in EVERYTHING....

                    P Offline
                    P Offline
                    PecuniousPete
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    Kyudos wrote:

                    First - how can you put 'boil-in-the-bag' and "dinner" in the same sentence, wherever you currently live or hail from?

                    Well, that is the UK. Actually these lamb shanks aren't too bad themselves, just the sauce that is wrong.

                    Kyudos wrote:

                    Second - 'mint sauce' is an abomination that perfectly ruins any food it accompanies

                    WRONG! POLICE! QUICK, PERSON TALKING TREASON AND HERESY! :) Mint sauce is great with lamb. Actually, think of it as a cut down salsa verde. Just add some parsley and anchovy and olive oil to mint sauce and you have a salsa verde which like mint sauce goes well with all sorts of things.

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                    • B bryce

                      PecuniousPete wrote:

                      She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

                      no dude, she wanted some booze to drink to mask the food- you have created another english lush ;) Bryce

                      MCAD --- To paraphrase Fred Dagg - the views expressed in this post are bloody good ones. --
                      Our kids books :The Snot Goblin, and Book 2 - the Snotgoblin and Fluff The Snotgoblin for the Ipad

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      PecuniousPete
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      Hmm, god I hope not! :omg:

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                      • J Joe Woodbury

                        The smugness will last until your daughter tells you a Big Mac is delicious.

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                        P Offline
                        PecuniousPete
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #31

                        Actually she does like their kids meals, nuggets and chips, well, she often cant eat the chips they are so gross, but she much prefers home cooked chicken goujons! :)

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                        • M Mycroft Holmes

                          I have a photo of my grandkids, about 2 and 4 chasing my wife down the hall demanding an olive. They also have the habit of raiding the cheese bin for the "special" cheese, the stinky one and sharp cheddars. They have never eaten at a Muckers but then thay haven't started school yet either :sigh: Start em young, teach them right to enjoy good food, worked for us and our kids!

                          Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                          P Offline
                          P Offline
                          PecuniousPete
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #32

                          Cool, good one! My daughter also loves green olives. She isnt terribly adventurous with food, but she loves vinegar so olives, salad dressing, skate in brown butter, all that kind of thing she loves.

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                          • P Paul Conrad

                            :laugh: I used to like Bud Light, but my preference these days is Guinness :-\

                            "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

                            A Offline
                            A Offline
                            Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #33

                            If you like Guinness, you should try Marston's Oyster Stout[^].* If that's not what Guinness should be, I'm a pastafarian. * No, it doesn't actually contain oysters. You have to buy them separately.

                            Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

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                            • P PecuniousPete

                              Kyudos wrote:

                              First - how can you put 'boil-in-the-bag' and "dinner" in the same sentence, wherever you currently live or hail from?

                              Well, that is the UK. Actually these lamb shanks aren't too bad themselves, just the sauce that is wrong.

                              Kyudos wrote:

                              Second - 'mint sauce' is an abomination that perfectly ruins any food it accompanies

                              WRONG! POLICE! QUICK, PERSON TALKING TREASON AND HERESY! :) Mint sauce is great with lamb. Actually, think of it as a cut down salsa verde. Just add some parsley and anchovy and olive oil to mint sauce and you have a salsa verde which like mint sauce goes well with all sorts of things.

                              K Offline
                              K Offline
                              Kyudos
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #34

                              Don't get me wrong - I like mint. I can get away with mint jelly. A mint raita is nice. Fresh pineapple dipped in mint sugar is awesome. But that runny green diarrhoea they call mint sauce? Non!

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                              • P Paul Conrad

                                Budweiser = X| I only drink imported beers ;P

                                "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Mark H2
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #35

                                I'd just like to point out Budweiser is most definitely NOT a beer. It is yellow-ish water in a bottle or can purporting to be such. The same can be said for Miller. :)

                                If your neighbours don't listen to The Ramones, turn it up real loud so they can.

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                                • P PecuniousPete

                                  I was having dinner with my wife, daughter, and mother on a recent trip to the UK (from France). My mother had prepared some boil in the bag lamb shanks (the end of the leg) which had a sweet minty sauce (the British like sweet sauces) and my daughter says: "It is too sweet, it needs some red wine or something." I could have hugged her! To have brought her up in a country that appreciates food, cooking restaurant quality food for my family every night, red wine and orange sauces to go with duck, scallop bisque sauces to go with salmon etc, and my 8 year old daughter has such educated taste buds she can identify an unbalanced sauce and suggest cure! What an epicure! What a gourmet! My 8 year old! :) She is a star act, she REALLY knows her food!

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Mark H2
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #36

                                  After two holidays (two months each) to France and Italy my 12 year old son has developed similar abilities.. :)

                                  If your neighbours don't listen to The Ramones, turn it up real loud so they can.

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                                  • Richard DeemingR Richard Deeming

                                    The Reincarnation wrote:

                                    Your about to get flamed.

                                    And you're about to get berated for your appalling grammar! ;P


                                    "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer

                                    K Offline
                                    K Offline
                                    KP Lee
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #37

                                    Shoot. I can't vote a 5.

                                    Richard Deeming wrote:

                                    And you're about to get berated...

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                                    • E Ennis Ray Lynch Jr

                                      Specifically the States, a certain 10 year-old, who I will leave nameless bought a King Sized Twix candy bar. (For those that don't know it contains four large pieces). He dropped the first piece on the ground in a wet parking lot and then picked it up and said, "Five Second Rule". I stopped him and asked, "Are you really going to do that?", He said, "Why not" and plopped it in his mouth. I suppose, our taste buds on this side of the pond are less sophisticated.

                                      Need custom software developed? I do custom programming based primarily on MS tools with an emphasis on C# development and consulting. "And they, since they Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs" -- Robert Frost "All users always want Excel" --Ennis Lynch

                                      K Offline
                                      K Offline
                                      KP Lee
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #38

                                      Some people eat tar-tar style, your son just cut the process in half. (American efficiency.) PS I'm from the states, I'm not flambee-ing us.

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                                      • E Ennis Ray Lynch Jr

                                        I don't drink, but every once in a while I have tasted wine out of curiosity (like, what's the big deal why does every one drink it?) and it is nasty. Probably due to the fact that the only sips I took were from under $20 bottles. Recently I had an opportunity to taste some ice wine, that stuff is good. So, yeah, there is a difference but I think most just drink it to be different from beer swilling dolts. Nascar is to beer as ? is to wine. (I think you will find it doesn't matter :) )

                                        Need custom software developed? I do custom programming based primarily on MS tools with an emphasis on C# development and consulting. "And they, since they Were not the one dead, turned to their affairs" -- Robert Frost "All users always want Excel" --Ennis Lynch

                                        K Offline
                                        K Offline
                                        KP Lee
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #39

                                        Personally, I go by taste. Quite often, I find in-a-box tastes better to me than an expensive bottle. Of course I don't pass myself off as an expert on wine either. That's what is funny about him praising the wine, since it would taste completely different to him if he saw it come out of a box.

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                                        • M Mark H2

                                          I'd just like to point out Budweiser is most definitely NOT a beer. It is yellow-ish water in a bottle or can purporting to be such. The same can be said for Miller. :)

                                          If your neighbours don't listen to The Ramones, turn it up real loud so they can.

                                          P Offline
                                          P Offline
                                          Paul Conrad
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #40

                                          :thumbsup:

                                          "Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus

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