Originally posted by Imy
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I had the best chilli sauce in my life a few weekends agoOriginally posted by EwarWoo View PostHot or sweet? If it's sweet I don't wanna hear about it.
Its called Gaby's Hot Chilli Sauce and its expensive but absolutely sublimeI saw a dead fish on the pavement and thought "what did you expect?"
There's no water round here stupid, should have stayed where it was wet
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Me too - like when he told us in mid-April about the takeover being done and dusted and definitely about to be announced that week. The guy's a legend in the "insider" stakesOriginally posted by TheElephantMan View PostI don't care, I certainly wouldn't call someone an idiot for posting something they've discovered elsewhere. The person who posted elsewhere probably found the information out from someone who heard the information from someone else. I appreciate Cream's posts - he/she has brought quite a few things to my attention.
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This thread is funny! Who gives a **** about all this stuff in the grand scheme of things? I HATE transfer season with a passion. Everyone quoting stuff they've heard
and people getting annoyed with them. ****s sake, just wait and see what happens. WHO CARES????????
RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFA! RAFAEL! RAFAEL BENITEZ!
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Well we're hardly living in the Siberian wastelands here you know - 90 degrees yesterday in sunny Surrey, but it's plenty hot enough here in any summer to grow just about any fruits and vegetables that originated in warmer climes. Believe it or not, we can grow chillies in back gardens in England too. Yes, I know it's unbelievable, but there you are. I have some on the go now. I also grow tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, courgettes and a whole host of herbs. All outdoors too, not in a greenhouse. I've also got a peach tree in my garden.Originally posted by EwarWoo View PostGood man. One of the great things about living in oz, you can grow chilli's in a pot in your back garden.
Love 'em
Though I have some Habanero's atm which are too hot even for me, waiting for a big crop then I can mash 'em into a sauce.
A lot of people in Australia have links with the UK so it surprises me the lack of awareness about things like this. It reminds me of a time on one of my many trips to the USA when I was talking to a lady in Atlanta about the weather there at the time. We had 4 inches of rain one day, followed by three inches of rain the next day. When I told her that we never, ever get rain like that in England and, in fact they'd just had about a third of London's annual rainfall in two days, she simple refused to believe me. As far as many Americans are concerned, when it's not raining in England it's foggy (in 35 years of working in London I can recall fog a mere handful of times). I suppose that's what happens when they take their view of a country from old Sherlock Holmes movies
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The internet warriors.Originally posted by Red_hot View Post
This thread is funny! Who gives a **** about all this stuff in the grand scheme of things? I HATE transfer season with a passion. Everyone quoting stuff they've heard
and people getting annoyed with them. ****s sake, just wait and see what happens. WHO CARES????????
They're watching our every move
Brandt - Keita - Van Dijk - Sessegnon
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I had to explain to a particularly thick American girl that it was in fact Welsh people, not English that all live in castles.Originally posted by Redspin View PostWell we're hardly living in the Siberian wastelands here you know - 90 degrees yesterday in sunny Surrey, but it's plenty hot enough here in any summer to grow just about any fruits and vegetables that originated in warmer climes. Believe it or not, we can grow chillies in back gardens in England too. Yes, I know it's unbelievable, but there you are. I have some on the go now. I also grow tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, courgettes and a whole host of herbs. All outdoors too, not in a greenhouse. I've also got a peach tree in my garden.
A lot of people in Australia have links with the UK so it surprises me the lack of awareness about things like this. It reminds me of a time on one of my many trips to the USA when I was talking to a lady in Atlanta about the weather there at the time. We had 4 inches of rain one day, followed by three inches of rain the next day. When I told her that we never, ever get rain like that in England and, in fact they'd just had about a third of London's annual rainfall in two days, she simple refused to believe me. As far as many Americans are concerned, when it's not raining in England it's foggy (in 35 years of working in London I can recall fog a mere handful of times). I suppose that's what happens when they take their view of a country from old Sherlock Holmes movies3rd place. Worst champions ever.
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Lol. I was born and raised in the UK and only moved over here about 7 years ago, I know plenty about the climate over there, and we could only grow Chillli's in a greennhouse otherwise the frost killed 'em. And even then you had to treat 'em as annuals. Possibly an harsher climate further north.Originally posted by Redspin View PostA lot of people in Australia have links with the UK so it surprises me the lack of awareness about things like this. It reminds me of a time on one of my many trips to the USA
Whose making American style assumptions?
But anyways....
Someone tell us what Kenny's doing so we stop needing to go off topic
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Originally posted by TheElephantMan View PostI don't care, I certainly wouldn't call someone an idiot for posting something they've discovered elsewhere. The person who posted elsewhere probably found the information out from someone who heard the information from someone else. I appreciate Cream's posts - he/she has brought quite a few things to my attention.
Another MASSIVE game
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