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Is this sort of humor legitimate?
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2024-08-15 at 4:56 PM UTC
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2024-08-15 at 7:53 PM UTC
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2024-08-16 at 6:46 PM UTC
Originally posted by Charles Ex Machina thats because curry is a type of indian dish.
Thai curry says you're wrong..as well as common sense.
eta also few high caliber Indian resturants put the word "curry" on their menu items.
If it says chicken curry it's probably a hole in the wall Indian resturant on the "curry mile" in Rusholme" -
2024-08-16 at 7:47 PM UTCIdiot really belives the British invented curry.
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2024-08-16 at 9:24 PM UTC
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2024-08-17 at 2:12 AM UTC
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2024-08-17 at 4:12 AM UTCUm excuse me but actually curry is American, indisputable evidence right here:
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2024-08-17 at 2:41 PM UTCThanking himself
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2024-08-17 at 2:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Thai curry says you're wrong..as well as common sense.
eta also few high caliber Indian resturants put the word "curry" on their menu items.
If it says chicken curry it's probably a hole in the wall Indian resturant on the "curry mile" in Rusholme"
it refers to siamese rendition of an indian dish.
just like 'american nazi party' is an "american" rendition of germans national socialistisch party. -
2024-08-17 at 6:10 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Thai curry says you're wrong..as well as common sense.
eta also few high caliber Indian resturants put the word "curry" on their menu items.
If it says chicken curry it's probably a hole in the wall Indian resturant on the "curry mile" in Rusholme"
Go argue your dumb shit with The Encyclopedia Britannica ya pikey scouser.curry, (from Tamil kari: “sauce”), in Western usage, a dish composed with a sauce or gravy seasoned with a mixture of ground spices that is thought to have originated in India and has since spread to many regions of the world.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/curry -
2024-08-19 at 12:19 PM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker Go argue your dumb shit with The Encyclopedia Britannica ya pikey scouser.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/curry
Again dummy...nowhere did I say the base recipe was a British invention...however there ARE British made curries...
I know it's hard for you to comprehend. It's cute that you desperately try to legitimize your flawed argument by frantically googling for something that wasn't even relevant to what I originally said.
Fucking lol as your old whore of a mother used to say -
2024-08-19 at 1:15 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson
Again dummy…nowhere did I say the base recipe was a British invention…however there ARE British made curries…
I know it's hard for you to comprehend. It's cute that you desperately try to legitimize your flawed argument by frantically googling for something that wasn't even relevant to what I originally said.
Fucking lol as your old whore of a mother used to say
There is also spaghetti and pizza made in Britain...
Stop back pedaling and go back to school kid. -
2024-08-19 at 2:14 PM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker There is also spaghetti and pizza made in Britain…
Stop back pedaling and go back to school kid.
You're childish argument is...childish.
Pretty much every dish you can think of has it's origins in other countries...or at least lends from them...using your logic the USA has "invented" no food recipes because they all owe the basis to other countries/cultures.
Again, the discussion was about spicy food...and the delusion food in England is NOT spicy...I gave examples of spicy food loved and enjoyed in England/Britain...the origins are irrelevant.
Just as the term "As American as Apple Pie" is dumb if you want to go by the orgins of apple pie, or hotdogs, burgers etc etc...
No back peddling required dumbo, you're creating a dispute that never existed till you created it -
2024-08-19 at 2:30 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson You're childish argument is…childish.
Pretty much every dish you can think of has it's origins in other countries…or at least lends from them…using your logic the USA has "invented" no food recipes because they all owe the basis to other countries/cultures.
Again, the discussion was about spicy food…and the delusion food in England is NOT spicy…I gave examples of spicy food loved and enjoyed in England/Britain…the origins are irrelevant.
Just as the term "As American as Apple Pie" is dumb if you want to go by the orgins of apple pie, or hotdogs, burgers etc etc…
No back peddling required dumbo, you're creating a dispute that never existed till you created it
I'm not the one who claimed curry is british cuisine. Nor am I the one who has been trying, for days, to walk a claim back. Stay in school kid.
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2024-08-19 at 2:33 PM UTCSpeaking of "alleged" spicy food, when I first came to Tejas many people told me to try TexMex and mentioned how spicy it was...specfically Tamales.
When I did try them it was bland as fuck!
Tamales are for whatever reason a "big deal" here and I can't think why...they are a "nothing burger" on the palate...as tasteless as Wariat's sexual urges. -
2024-08-19 at 2:35 PM UTC
Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Speaking of "alleged" spicy food, when I first came to Tejas many people told me to try TexMex and mentioned how spicy it was…specfically Tamales.
When I did try them it was bland as fuck!
Tamales are for whatever reason a "big deal" here and I can't think why…they are a "nothing burger" on the palate…as tasteless as Wariat's sexual urges.
Poor baby, they lied to you.
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2024-08-19 at 2:43 PM UTC
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2024-08-19 at 2:46 PM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker I'm not the one who claimed curry is british cuisine.
Nor did I...
"At the end of the 18th century, the British officially formalized spice blends known as curry powders to recreate their favorite dishes consistently in the absence of their cooks. The first recipes for curry powder appeared in print in an English cookbook by Hannah Glasse."
Again, an "argument" that you created yourself -
2024-08-19 at 2:49 PM UTC"Definition of curry
It really began with the British, resident in India during the 18th and 19th centuries. They lumped together many Indian dishes and adapted them to suit their own requirements, under the heading of curry. Traditional Indian food, however, remained something rather different." -
2024-08-19 at 3:21 PM UTC