Indeed!BrassBlower wrote:
If you've ever had the following conversation, you're from the south:
"I think I'll have a Coke."
"What kind?"
"Pepsi."
M
Joseph E. Smith wrote:That explains all the bark in my beard.izzarina wrote:Yay! Birkis! They're reserved for us granola, tree-hugging typesCynth wrote: Where would Birkenstocks fit in?
Hey there. Did you get that new set of pipes? I thought maybe I remembered something about you expecting a new addition to your pipe family---but perhaps I'm mistaken, if so just ignore this!feadogin wrote:The uilleann pipes.peeplj wrote: They've planted their memes within my poor brain. Who knows what comes next?
J.
You know, I lived in SLC quite a number of years when I was little and I don't remember much about the soda situation, probably because we didn't drink them either. I do remember my parents telling us that a lot of other people didn't drink coffee like they did. It must be the sodas with caffeine that people don't drink, right? I'm thinking that something like SevenUp would be okay?Brian Lee wrote:NOT IN UTAH!Cynth wrote:I know plenty of non-Republicans who drink diet sodas or none at all. I even know non-Republicans who wear suits to work . You know, I am actually getting mixed up here. Surely many church-goers drink regular sodas, don't they?...
Add ice cream to that list and I can plead really guilty. James, I didn't mean to imply that I had the sugar situation under control ---far from it, and that is why I am so impressed with your change to sugar-free soda.harpmaker wrote:I drink coffe by the pot, and soda only occasionally...what ever is on sale....but 'refuse chocolate'? Man, you might as well shoot me now!JosephESmith wrote:...refusing chocolate...
Hey, here's another question I've been wanting to ask. Every once in a while I come across a description of a person that is limited pretty much to the fact that he or she is wearing Birkenstocks. If the person is wearing socks with Birkenstocks, the writer mentions that. This leads me to believe that people, like me, who wear socks with Birkenstocks (in the winter, summer I don't) are perceived to be a certain type. Once I saw the word "crunchy" used. So I guess I am giving off the impression of liking granola and trees? Is there anything worse I should know? I mean I am just wondering what sort of ideas people who see me are forming about me, if you understand what I mean. Am I coming across as some sort of ageing hippy type or what? I reckon I'll keep on wearing Birki's, but I'm just sort of curious. I'm not really "crunchy" I don't think----I don't eat organic food and stuff. I do like trees though.izzarina wrote:Yay! Birkis! They're reserved for us granola, tree-hugging typesCynth wrote: Where would Birkenstocks fit in?
I can remember when I was a kid some of my friends would drop salted peanuts in their bottles of pepsi or coke and drink it down. Said it was great! Maybe it was just the salt.peeplj wrote:Never cared for Pepsi, much, with one exception:
When I was a teen, we used to go watch the fireworks on the 4th behind the mall in Texarkana. This was a kind of all-afternoon affair as you had to get there reasonably early if you wanted to park on a real parking lot (as opposed to on the shoulder of the Interstate, which never felt very safe to me).
So we'd pack a cooler full of ice and drinks for when we got tired of wandering from store to store in the mall. (Texarkana still has one indoor mall, so to the residents, it's just "the mall.")
Normally, as I said I don't like Pepsi much.
This year, though, we packed the cooler with the ice left over from making ice cream...it was salty. And we always bought whatever drinks were on sale, so Pepsi is what we happened to have in the house at the time, so that's what we packed the cooler with.
The cans of Pepsi wound up with a thin encrustment of salt around the rims. They were wonderful.
Probably unhealthy, but wonderful.
But that's the only way I care for Pepsi, much.
--James
Cool, Cynth! You're a crunchy granola wannabe, and you don't even know it! Usually people who own Birkis are hippy types...at least they used to be. And those people would wear their Birkis year round, even when the other people would put their sandals away for the winter, which meant they'd have to wear socks with them. So yeah, you look like a crnchy tree hugger Seriously, I don't know if there is a connection. I think the Birkis are enough for people to draw conclusions, socks or not.Cynth wrote:Am I coming across as some sort of ageing hippy type or what? I reckon I'll keep on wearing Birki's, but I'm just sort of curious. I'm not really "crunchy" I don't think----I don't eat organic food and stuff. I do like trees though.
I didn't think I was the only one..chrisoff wrote:amar wrote:Irn Bru's the scottish national pop drink, tastes like bubble gum..
What bubble gum do you chew?
I didn't think I was the only one..amar wrote:
What bubble gum do you chew?
Been there, done that. I laughed, I cried, I feel down, it changed my life, hell... I even bought the T-shirt...beowulf573 wrote: Turns out she had left a little bit left in the can and had put out several cigarettes in it.
Blech.
Tab is forever associated with taking a swig of ash.
My grandmother used to do that. But she also drank Tab, Kava instead of real coffee, and sweetened it with Saccharine tablets, so her taste buds were suspect.rodfish wrote:I can remember when I was a kid some of my friends would drop salted peanuts in their bottles of pepsi or coke and drink it down. Said it was great! Maybe it was just the salt.
But really, diet cokes are for sissies!
My mother couldn't enjoy scrambled eggs for years because her mother (my other grandmother) used to tamp out cigarettes on her breakfast plate, where the ash would mix with the runny part of the eggs, and it was hard, ever after, for my mother to escape that association.Joseph E. Smith wrote:Been there, done that. I laughed, I cried, I feel down, it changed my life, hell... I even bought the T-shirt...beowulf573 wrote: Turns out she had left a little bit left in the can and had put out several cigarettes in it.
Blech.
Tab is forever associated with taking a swig of ash.
... but instead of Tab, it was my father's bottle of Buckhorn beer.
I posted those links, because of reference to the bubblegumesque taste of the drink.djm wrote:What's with al the links about something. Why not go for the thing itself?
http://www.irn-bru.co.uk/home.html
djm