having been offered from a colleague, I've just had one of these for lunch.
https://digitalcontent.api.tesco.com...eg?h=540&w=540
the single most depressing thing I think I've ever eaten.
Printable View
having been offered from a colleague, I've just had one of these for lunch.
https://digitalcontent.api.tesco.com...eg?h=540&w=540
the single most depressing thing I think I've ever eaten.
Then you, my friend, have never eaten this. Just one of your English pounds. :yikes:
https://www.tesco.com/groceries/en-G...B&gclsrc=aw.ds
Indeed. Whose claw?! What claw?! The mind boggles..
Started that ‘Now we shall be entirely free’ thingy. Started a bit slow with him just moping about. Hoping it’ll pick up now there’s been a war crime, some rape and an assassination mission.
His deafness is irritating me. It had better turn out to have some narrative significance.
Looking at that cheap pizza, I would eat most of it except the cake-sized circumference which would go straight in the bin ...or left out for the birds
bb "Claws on toast "
Sounds like a mild bush-tucker trial delicacy
:clap: There's no faulting that logic
Ah. I'm not sure you have entirely appreciated that my current prediliction is for novels in which nothing much happens, really. I like legthy descriptions of the exact colour of the sea, a lot of wistful peering out of rain-spattered windows and the unspoken hint of a stolen kiss.
I remember reading on the blurb that our hero had returned from the Peninsular 'carrying with him a terrible secret'; I am afraid I took this rather literally and spent ages trying to work out which of the items unpacked from his rucksack by Nell contained the 'terrible secret'. For much of the book i was therefore expecting the small shrivelled potato to reappear and reveal its secret within. :hehe:
I've got a new one for you: 'The Glass Woman' by Caroline Lea. 17th century Iceland. Precisely nothing happens.
1. would you rather a say Cheese Melt?
2. Aubergine pickle [see below]
3. Fúck off ;-)
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/wiIAA...sBq/s-l640.jpg