Don't bother. It tastes like fishy chicken.
CD
I'm the ultimate poor boy who has " stuff" now but ballet and the arts are not my thing. Wife just told me this morning , funny thing happened at the ballet last night. Near the end someone had a low beeping noise coming from them. Everyone was leaving and the noise was from a woman wearing an ankle bracelet. She was arrested when leaving the theater.
Dont get me wrong, my kids have been bought up with the arts etc. They appreciate stuff like that.
We have 2 watercolors worth a lot of money, bought on my wifes advice 30 years ago.
Russ
I actually liked it okay. I thought it was pricey for something that tasted like chicken. I had it pounded out and fried. I do like chicken better, though.I don't think the rest of it is something you would want to eat, too many bones to work around, kind of like chicken feet, which was a 1 and done for me, as was alligator tail. Maybe neck and backstrap would be easy to eat, but, again, alligator wasn't something I will knowingly put in my mouth again.
Yeah, I prefer a hard rock concert. My next oldest sister loves ballet and opera. She gets season tickets. Funny thing is, she is the one who used to run with a biker gang in the 70s, but she later evolved into becoming a state department employee and her world changed. Mine didn't.I'm the ultimate poor boy who has " stuff" now but ballet and the arts are not my thing. Wife just told me this morning , funny thing happened at the ballet last night. Near the end someone had a low beeping noise coming from them. Everyone was leaving and the noise was from a woman wearing an ankle bracelet. She was arrested when leaving the theater.
Dont get me wrong, my kids have been bought up with the arts etc. They appreciate stuff like that.
We have 2 watercolors worth a lot of money, bought on my wifes advice 30 years ago.
Russ
I thought it tasted like fishy chicken.I actually liked it okay. I thought it was pricey for something that tasted like chicken. I had it pounded out and fried. I do like chicken better, though.
Ok my wife has had them. Me, never knew.
I did a little reading - apparently, they’re grown in two places; NZ and Washington state. If you’re getting them here in the spring/summer, they came from NZ. If it’s autumn/winter, they came from Washington state.Wow. Surprised me. Taste good??
Russ
I did a little reading - apparently, they’re grown in two places; NZ and Washington state. If you’re getting them here in the spring/summer, they came from NZ. If it’s autumn/winter, they came from Washington state.
As to the taste…very juicy, not terribly sweet, but the real kicker is they actually have a sort of fizzy aspect to them. MrsT’s reaction was, “Weird…they’re juicy and drying my mouth out at the same time.”
I did a little reading - apparently, they’re grown in two places; NZ and Washington state. If you’re getting them here in the spring/summer, they came from NZ. If it’s autumn/winter, they came from Washington state.
As to the taste…very juicy, not terribly sweet, but the real kicker is they actually have a sort of fizzy aspect to them. MrsT’s reaction was, “Weird…they’re juicy and drying my mouth out at the same time.”
I grew up with granny smith. If I was lucky?
Russ
About USD $4.I'm curious what those Ancho Chilis set ya' back. That's some fancy looking packages.
About USD $4.
They do a 200g bag for $12.That's better than I expected. But, I pay less than that for an 8OZ (225G) bag here. Ancho chilis are a very common commodity in Texas, so they are pretty cheap. Many dried chilis are pretty cheap here.
CD