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Default "traditional Irish" food

Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
Food Options."

I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.


--
Dan Goodman
"You, each of you, have some special wild cards. Play with them.
Find out what makes you different and better. Because it is there,
if only you can find it." Vernor Vinge, _Rainbows End_
Journal http://dsgood.livejournal.com
Futures http://dangoodman.livejournal.com
Mirror Journal http://dsgood.insanejournal.com
Links http://del.icio.us/dsgood
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Default "traditional Irish" food

All of Cleveland area Irish Fest's that I have gone to had NO Irish food.
Pizza, brats, sausage sand w/ peppers and onions, more pizza and lemonaid.
I won't go to another Irish Fest again, not here at least.


"Dan Goodman" > wrote in message
se.com...
> Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
> Food Options."
>
> I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.
>
>
> --
> Dan Goodman
> "You, each of you, have some special wild cards. Play with them.
> Find out what makes you different and better. Because it is there,
> if only you can find it." Vernor Vinge, _Rainbows End_
> Journal http://dsgood.livejournal.com
> Futures http://dangoodman.livejournal.com
> Mirror Journal http://dsgood.insanejournal.com
> Links http://del.icio.us/dsgood



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Default "traditional Irish" food

"Dan Goodman" > wrote in news:46bc9049$0$961$804603d3
@auth.newsreader.iphouse.com:

> Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
> Food Options."
>
> I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.
>
>


Of course it is...Traditional Irsh food is what a traditional Irish person
wouls eat...And that includes Bratwurst.

--

The house of the burning beet-Alan

It'll be a sunny day in August, when the Moon will shine that night-
Elbonian Folklore

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Default "traditional Irish" food

In article om>,
"Dan Goodman" > wrote:

> Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
> Food Options."
>
> I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.
>
>
> --
> Dan Goodman


Potatoes.
--
Peace, Om

Remove _ to validate e-mails.

"My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson
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Default "traditional Irish" food

On 10 Aug 2007 16:20:25 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:

>Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
>Food Options."
>
>I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.



A six-pack and a bushel of potatoes ???

<rj>


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Default "traditional Irish" food

Knit Chic wrote:

> All of Cleveland area Irish Fest's that I have gone to had NO Irish
> food. Pizza, brats, sausage sand w/ peppers and onions, more pizza
> and lemonaid. I won't go to another Irish Fest again, not here at
> least.


The Minnesota one does have some things which I recognize as Irish
food. Plus some which might be Irish, but I don't think are
traditional.
>
> "Dan Goodman" > wrote in message
> > Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of
> > "Traditional Food Options."
> >
> > I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.



--
Dan Goodman
"You, each of you, have some special wild cards. Play with them.
Find out what makes you different and better. Because it is there,
if only you can find it." Vernor Vinge, _Rainbows End_
Journal http://dsgood.livejournal.com
Futures http://dangoodman.livejournal.com
Links http://del.icio.us/dsgood
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Default "traditional Irish" food

On 10 Aug 2007 16:20:25 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:

>Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
>Food Options."
>
>I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.


Don't feel bad. I tried to find colcannon when I was in Dublin and
found out "nobody" eats it anymore.


--

A husband is someone who takes out the trash and gives the impression he just cleaned the whole house.
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Default "traditional Irish" food

sf wrote:

> On 10 Aug 2007 16:20:25 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:
>
> > Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of
> > "Traditional Food Options."
> >
> > I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.

>
> Don't feel bad. I tried to find colcannon when I was in Dublin and
> found out "nobody" eats it anymore.


I wonder if it's available in the US.

Actually, I didn't feel bad; amused, rather.

--
Dan Goodman
"You, each of you, have some special wild cards. Play with them.
Find out what makes you different and better. Because it is there,
if only you can find it." Vernor Vinge, _Rainbows End_
Journal http://dsgood.livejournal.com
Futures http://dangoodman.livejournal.com
Links http://del.icio.us/dsgood
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Default "traditional Irish" food

On 11 Aug 2007 17:49:57 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:

>sf wrote:
>
>> On 10 Aug 2007 16:20:25 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:
>>
>> > Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of
>> > "Traditional Food Options."
>> >
>> > I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.

>>
>> Don't feel bad. I tried to find colcannon when I was in Dublin and
>> found out "nobody" eats it anymore.

>
>I wonder if it's available in the US.


Yep. http://www.chowhound.com/topics/430341


>Actually, I didn't feel bad; amused, rather.



koko
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Default "traditional Irish" food

koko wrote:

> On 11 Aug 2007 17:49:57 GMT, "Dan Goodman" > wrote:
>
> > sf wrote:
> >
> >> On 10 Aug 2007 16:20:25 GMT, "Dan Goodman" >

> wrote: >>
> >> > Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of
> >> > "Traditional Food Options."
> >> >
> >> > I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.
> >>
> >> Don't feel bad. I tried to find colcannon when I was in Dublin and
> >> found out "nobody" eats it anymore.

> >
> > I wonder if it's available in the US.

>
> Yep. http://www.chowhound.com/topics/430341


Thanks.

--
Dan Goodman
"You, each of you, have some special wild cards. Play with them.
Find out what makes you different and better. Because it is there,
if only you can find it." Vernor Vinge, _Rainbows End_
Journal http://dsgood.livejournal.com
Futures http://dangoodman.livejournal.com
Links http://del.icio.us/dsgood


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Default "traditional Irish" food

Dan Goodman > wrote:
>Ad for the Irish Fair of Minnesota includes a listing of "Traditional
>Food Options."
>
>I now know that bratwurst is traditional Irish food.


And curry.

--Blair
"Potatoes aren't."
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Default Buehler's Fresh Foods - What a place

Yesterday I flew in from Cleveland. Sunday morning, I treated a group of
30 people to breakfast in a supermarket. Yes, a supermarket! The
restaurant was their choice, I had never been there before, and I have
never eaten in a supermarket. The food was very good, I tried a dish
called "mush", which is made from cornmeal and you eat it with syrup and
butter.

Buehler's supermarket (in Medina), was different than any supermarket I
have seen. The diner was large enough to feed 100 people, the
supermarket also had a bakery, floral department, sushi bar, deli,
catering, a cooking school, pharmacy, photo lab, and an Ace hardware
store. http://www.buehlers.com/

When you check out at the supermarket, your groceries are placed in
plastic bins, then they are placed on a conveyer. You pull your car up
to the front of the store and they place the groceries in the trunk of
your car.

If you are in the Cleveland area, have a look at Buehler's.

Becca
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Default Buehler's Fresh Foods - What a place

l, not -l wrote:

> And if you visit a Buehler's in Illinois, Indiana or Kentucky - it's a
> different company and not as described earlier in this thread. Not bad,
> just not what you have read about here.


Thanks for the info. Have you ever seen or heard of a supermarket with
conveyer belts that deliver the groceries to your car? It was the most
unexpected thing I have seen in a long while. I wonder if this is new
or if this is happening in other areas of the country.

Becca
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Default Buehler's Fresh Foods - What a place

l, not -l wrote:

> Regardless, the grocery didn't last long; St. Louis has always been a
> very competitive market, with local chains driving out the all other
> general grocers.


We moved around when I was a child, and my mother had to experience new
and different markets each time we moved. The brands were different and
some cuts of meat had different names, depending on where you lived.
When you move, it is an experience. Shopping in different countries is
also unique, but interesting. Buying eggs, and the carton had no lid,
for example. I bought pork in Jamaica, and they had to lift the pig out
of a drum, using a winch. They cut off the piece I wanted, then lowered
the pig back into the drum. It was different.

Becca
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