Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:
> In article <vyoksbabpfs$.d...@falcon.sloth.hell.pl>,
> Szymon Sokó� <szy...@bastard.operator.from.hell.pl> wrote:
> >On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:42:52 -0800 (PST), cryptoguy wrote:
> >
> >> On Nov 19, 3:15 pm, Michał Dwużnik <"michal[dot]dwuznik[at]cern[dot]
> >> ch"@think.a.bit.before.replying> wrote:
> >>> Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>>>>> Any way of getting _ripe_ and not yet _rotting_ on the other side mangos
> >>>>>>> in Estonia? In Poland that's next to impossible...
> >>>>>> Greenhouses?
> >>>>> They certainly don't grow them here. I think that's also the case with
> >>>>> Poland.
> >>>
> >>>> If you have a local Indian community, check their markets. One of
> >my friends
> >>>> and co-workers was from India and he was adamant that the ones sold there
> >>>> were much better than anything from a general grocery store.
> >>>
> >>> "Local Indian community" is some two Indians per 100000 Poles...
> >>> There's no such thing as "Indian supermarket" here.
> >>> Michal
> >>
> >> I beg to differ:
> >> littleindia.pl
> >> namasteindia.pl
> >>
> >> Never underestimate the power of google (search time, about 1 minute).
> >>
> >> pulled from:
> >>
> >> http://www.polishforums.com/life-poland-7/indian-stores-warsaw-19402/
> >
> >It is worth mentioning that Michal, like myself, lives in Cracow (the
> >second-biggest city in Poland), and I guess by "here" he meant "in the
> >town". Or in a 300 km radius, for that matter, because that's the distance
> >from Cracow to Warsaw. And going 300 km to buy fresh mangos is not a viable
> >option.
> >
>
> I've driven that far to lunch a number of times :-)
The following captured from
<http://www.amazon.co.uk/Bill-Bryson-Complete-Notes-Country/dp/
038560131X>
> In the opening chapter of _Notes from a Small Island_, Bryson writes:
> "If you mention in the pub that you intend to drive from, say, Surrey to Cornwall,
> a distance that most Americans would happily go to get a taco, your companions
> will puff their cheeks, look knowingly at each other, and blow out air as if to
> say, "Well, now that's a bit of a tall order..."
I've never had Cornish tacos...are they really so good as to inspire such an
expedition?...r
--
A pessimist sees the glass as half empty.
An optometrist asks whether you see the glass
more full like this?...or like this?
That's about 150 miles each way, as the crow flies. I'd say that it
would take a pretty extraordinary taco to make me do that.
I *have* driven over 100 miles each way to visit a nice restaurant,
but that's unusual. I've done over 100 *round trip* many times; just
last Friday I drove that much to share a beer with a friend.
pt
>=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Robert_Carnegie=3A_Fnord=3A_cc_talk=2Dorigins=40moderators=2Eisc=2E?=
>filted:
>>
>>The following captured from
>><http://www.amazon.co.uk/Bill-Bryson-Complete-Notes-Country/dp/
>>038560131X>
>>
>>> In the opening chapter of _Notes from a Small Island_, Bryson writes:
>>> "If you mention in the pub that you intend to drive from, say, Surrey to =
>>Cornwall,
>>> a distance that most Americans would happily go to get a taco, your compa=
>>nions
>>> will puff their cheeks, look knowingly at each other, and blow out air as=
>> if to
>>> say, "Well, now that's a bit of a tall order..."
Around 60 years ago, they'd have been dead right.
In Cornwall itself, many roads were (still are?) narrow lanes between Cornish
hedges.
Their idea of a 'hedge' is a stone wall covered by vegetation...
>I've never had Cornish tacos...are they really so good as to inspire such an
>expedition?...r
Yes.
But the locals call them 'pasties'.
They're delicious meat and veg wrapped in a pastry shell.
Folklore has it that they were invented to feed tin miners; their wives would
bring the hot pastys to the mine at lunch time and drop them down the shaft to
their men. The shell was needed to keep the ingredients together when they hit
the bottom...
Some versions had apple at one end, so the miner could get the tradtional meat
and 2 veg, followed by dessert.
Naturally, avoid any pastie marketed for emmets (tourists).
For fish lovers, see also: Starry Gazey Pie
> In Cornwall itself, many roads were (still are?) narrow lanes between Cornish
> hedges.
> Their idea of a 'hedge' is a stone wall covered by vegetation...
They have those in Wales, too, I learned on my lone trip to the UK.
--
Erilar, biblioholic medievalist
>That's about 150 miles each way, as the crow flies. I'd say that it
>would take a pretty extraordinary taco to make me do that.
>
>I *have* driven over 100 miles each way to visit a nice restaurant,
At the conclusion of a successful project, a customer once flew me
ninety miles each way to visit a nice restaruant. It was rather
flattering.
--
Michael F. Stemper
#include <Standard_Disclaimer>
Why doesn't anybody care about apathy?
Those would be empanada equivalents. I'm not aware of a 'traditional'
British food that resembles a taco.
pt
> In article <kurdg5p43qr0dmg9o...@4ax.com>,
> Strobe <Str...@nyc.Beep!Beep!.com> wrote:
>
>> In Cornwall itself, many roads were (still are?) narrow lanes between Cornish
>> hedges.
>> Their idea of a 'hedge' is a stone wall covered by vegetation...
>
> They have those in Wales, too, I learned on my lone trip to the UK.
And in Ireland, except there they are usually not covered by vegetation.
--
Szymon Sokół (SS316-RIPE) -- Network Manager B
Computer Center, AGH - University of Science and Technology, Cracow, Poland O
http://home.agh.edu.pl/szymon/ PGP key id: RSA: 0x2ABE016B, DSS: 0xF9289982 F
Free speech includes the right not to listen, if not interested -- Heinlein H
- and in most of england, too, except they are usually with-
out the stone (or brick) wall inside the vegetation...
- love, a ppint. living in north-wet england, which is one
of the areas where they tend to lack both
vegetation, and any form of mortar to hold
hold the stones in place - nor need either.
[drop the "v", and change the "f" to a "g", to email/cc...]
--
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- roger thomas, 19/3/97 (3/19/97 for merkins)
Tucson International Airport has so few direct flights to
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plane, about 105 miles (170 km) one way. Our visitors are usually
surprised when we tell them to fly into Phoenix and we'll pick
them up there.
--
************* DAVE HATUNEN (hat...@cox.net) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *
Do you mean "...African or European restaurant?"?
Dave 'finessing the BoMP with a punctuation nitpick' DeLaney
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