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Is this sort of humor legitimate?

  1. #61
    Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson "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."

    Curry is a dish that originated in the Indian subcontinent and is thought to have originated as early as 2500 BCE in what is now Pakistan. The word "curry" comes from the Tamil word kari, which means "sauce" or "soup" to be eaten with rice. The dish is made with a sauce or gravy seasoned with a mixture of ground spices, such as coriander, turmeric, cumin, and red chili.
  2. #62
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker Curry is a dish that originated in the Indian subcontinent and is thought to have originated as early as 2500 BCE in what is now Pakistan. The word "curry" comes from the Tamil word kari, which means "sauce" or "soup" to be eaten with rice. The dish is made with a sauce or gravy seasoned with a mixture of ground spices, such as coriander, turmeric, cumin, and red chili.

    Yes that's talking about the origins...for the umpteenth time there are British developed curries...that doesn't mean the base idea was created in Britain.

    ..and again, India was part of the British Empire...so what was there wasn't then ours...stay in school kid.

    ETA: and again an irrelevant fabricated in your head problem that has nothing to do with the discussion about "spicy food" and your uninformed idea that there isn't any in Britain..a place you have never been and yet "argue" with a person who lived there for 30yrs and is more than familiar with spicy foods that are available and enjoyed...NO MATTER THE ORIGIN.
  3. #63
    Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    In 2500 BCE there was no Britain
  4. #64
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker In 2500 BCE there was no Britain

    There was no curry either...or Kari...or India...or Pakistan...

    Great comeback kid
  5. #65
    No Chicken Tikka Marsala either
  6. #66
    Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson There was no curry either…or Kari…or India…or Pakistan…

    Great comeback kid

    Double post frustion on diplay here folks, no ticket required, step right up.

    "In 2500 BCE, the Indus Valley civilization was the earliest known urban culture in the Indian subcontinent, and one of the world's three earliest civilizations. The civilization flourished in present-day Pakistan and northwest India from 2500–1900 BCE, and was centered around cities that developed on the Indus Valley's plains after 3000 BCE. By 2500 BCE, the civilization was large enough to include two major cities, Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, which were 400 miles apart. Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of these cities, as well as over 1,000 other towns and villages, and have learned a great deal about the civilization."
  7. #67
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker Double post frustion on diplay here folks, no ticket required, step right up.

    "In 2500 BCE, the Indus Valley civilization was the earliest known urban culture in the Indian subcontinent, and one of the world's three earliest civilizations. The civilization flourished in present-day Pakistan and northwest India from 2500–1900 BCE, and was centered around cities that developed on the Indus Valley's plains after 3000 BCE. By 2500 BCE, the civilization was large enough to include two major cities, Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, which were 400 miles apart. Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of these cities, as well as over 1,000 other towns and villages, and have learned a great deal about the civilization."

    Spelling frustration wrong shows how irate you are...as does repeating your copy/pasta which you're trying to pass off as your knowledge, fucking lol

    "uhhh I got him this time!!! I mean google has!"...

    Again India/Pakistan didn't exist in 2500 BCE...
    The origins of something do not equate to the modern day adoption of something.
    Chicken Tikka masala was first made in Britain, not India, not Pakistan.

    Stay in school kid
  8. #68
    Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Chicken Tikka masala

    We were talking about curry in the general sense at the very start. But go ahead and move the goal post.



    Origin of Chicken Tikka masala
  9. #69
    Faghots
  10. #70
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Thai curry says you're wrong..as well as common sense.

    no one said indian dishes are exclusive to people of indian culture or ethnicity.

    fish heads too can make their own curry.

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