|
Post by alba on Mar 28, 2008 11:44:14 GMT -5
I like them, but then I also like chocolate pizza ^_^
I'm not that close to Edinburgh, but I'll be staying with friends who live near there over the break, so I'll probably end up in Edinburgh at some point. What's the name of the place?
|
|
|
Post by naoise on Mar 28, 2008 13:08:49 GMT -5
I ... don't know.... but it was on a pretty main street! I'm trying to think of the name. It was long and had lots of shops. I think it was THE main street, maybe.
|
|
|
Post by Clover on Mar 29, 2008 9:14:38 GMT -5
See, I'm wierd. I have a hard time eating oily things. I dunno why... its just very hard for my tummy to accept it. It always makes me want to be ill. Fries I can do in moderation, but really greasy things just make me think slimey. And I can't drink milk too often (lactose intolerant whee!)-- I drink it if I have to, or if its in cereal, but as a general rule, I drink chocolate soy-milk. And yet.. I love sour cream.
|
|
|
Post by acilf on Mar 29, 2008 10:00:06 GMT -5
I'm with clover concerning the oily things. I feel so gross after eatting greasy foods. I'm pretty much good with any milk, though 1% tastes most normal to me because it's what I'm used to. I'm much more picky about the brand I drink verses the %. Also, DQ dessert pizza's are wonderful
|
|
|
Post by naoise on Mar 29, 2008 10:14:47 GMT -5
Yes, I agree on the DQ dessert pizzas! As for grease, I quite dislike it also as a general rule. There are some exceptions though.
|
|
|
Post by Aindel on Mar 29, 2008 11:46:15 GMT -5
I'm a fry addict. My mom is too. We spent a half hour once driving around to different restaurants, trying to find one that a) had good fries and b) wasn't a long wait. We wanted Kelsey's, but they had a half hour wait (but by the time we'd driven all over town, we'd wasted that time anyway, went back, and got seated right away). But overly greasy fries aren't so cool. Like Fritzies. Anyone who knows the chain knows what I'm talking about.
I'm more of a fan of the DQ cakes, personally. I <3 the cookie-fudge layer. My family looks at my sister and I like we're nuts when they watch us eat a slice, because we do it in the same way: vanilla first, starting at the top, and then moving to the side, then chocolate, then cookie-fudge layer.
|
|
|
Post by naoise on Mar 29, 2008 12:10:46 GMT -5
My favourite are those baskin robins gold medal ribbon ice cream cakes!
|
|
|
Post by acilf on Mar 29, 2008 13:42:02 GMT -5
@ Aindel: I agree 100% with everything you just said about the DQ cakes. the cookie-fudge layer is the MOST AMAZING layer in the cake. And your description of how you eat your cake's identical to how I eat them. I lover that layer so much :3
|
|
|
Post by misaki on Apr 2, 2008 13:15:42 GMT -5
*ahem* About AN, though, would anyone be interested in getting a hotel room together and save some cash? Or, even better, would someone in the Toronto area let me come and stay at their house? I'll bake you nice things! Desserts of your choice! (I feel I have the qualifications to back this. :3)
|
|
|
Post by naoise on Apr 3, 2008 6:46:37 GMT -5
I would house you, but I live in my parents house in the GTA, and they might take exception to me asking for a person they don't know to stay over.
|
|
|
Post by misaki on Apr 4, 2008 21:18:52 GMT -5
Ahaha, too true. XD
*sigh*
|
|
|
Post by Clover on Apr 8, 2008 14:33:23 GMT -5
Unfortunately, it's the same with me, Misaki... my stepdad would have a fit and a half. And at this late date, luv, the likelihood of getting a hotel room is slim to none, unfortunately. You can check, but I'm almost positive they'd all be taken.
|
|
|
Post by acilf on Apr 10, 2008 1:05:05 GMT -5
pardon my ignorance, Naoise, what's a GTA?
|
|
|
Post by Clover on Apr 10, 2008 1:23:37 GMT -5
In this context, GTA means Greater Toronto Area. The GTA is distinguished by a relatively steady level of population (that is to say, within the GTA, there are no 'rural' gaps, only areas of less population density), and a general tendency towards the industrialized. The GTA is located within a larger area called the Golden Horseshoe, so called because it stretches in a horse-shoe shape around the far west of Lake Ontario--and Golden, because it is the unofficial capital of Canadian Industry, having within its borders eight of the twenty largest cities in Canada. And now you know.
|
|
|
Post by acilf on Apr 10, 2008 9:37:16 GMT -5
wow, thanks clover. very informative. i like pictures, they make understanding easier too.
|
|