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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....

How do you call your cow's eye egg?


In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
And you?
Cheers
Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
Cheeers


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Damsel in dis Dress
 
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Default How do you call....

On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
wrote:

>How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
>In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>And you?
>Cheers
>Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>Cheeers


Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.

Carol
--

http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/head_trollop/my_photos
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aem
 
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Default How do you call....


Pandora wrote:
> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?


As best as I can tell, you break the yolk of a fried egg and cover up
your incompetence by giving it a cute name. -aem

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Wayne Boatwright
 
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Default How do you call....

On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?

> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?
> Cheers
> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> Cheeers
>
>
>


What does it look like?

--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
_____________________________________________

A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!
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kevnbro
 
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Default How do you call....

> How do you call your cow's eye egg?

We call it one of the many products found in "potted meat"



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Wayne Boatwright
 
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On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:33:36p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Damsel in
dis Dress?

> On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
> wrote:
>
>>How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>>In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>And you?
>>Cheers
>>Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>>Cheeers

>
> Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.
>
> Carol


I think it just means the appearance of the egg, Carol, like poached or
sunny side up.

--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
_____________________________________________

A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!
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-L.
 
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Default How do you call....


Pandora wrote:
> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?
> Cheers
> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> Cheeers


I think there's a wee bit of a language barrier here....Do you mean an
egg where the yolk is intact? Most "names" we give to eggs refer to
the way they are cooked. "Sunny side up" is probably the closest name
to what you are describing - the egg looks like the sun.

How is your egg prepared?
-L.

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Pandora
 
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"Damsel in dis Dress" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
> On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
> wrote:
>
>>How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>>In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>And you?
>>Cheers
>>Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>>Cheeers

>
> Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.
>
> Carol


Me too ROTFLASTC! But I'm serious!
Cheers
Pandora
> --
>
> http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/head_trollop/my_photos



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kevnbro
 
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>Me too ROTFLASTC!

Rolling On The Floor Laughing And Spasming 'Til Comatose?

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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"aem" > ha scritto nel messaggio
ps.com...
>
> Pandora wrote:
>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> And you?

>
> As best as I can tell, you break the yolk of a fried egg and cover up
> your incompetence by giving it a cute name. -aem


You must thank the God that I haven't killed you! Because you are the
brother of Shellacked! And I thank you for this!
I love you and welcome to my killfile!
Cheers
Pandora
>





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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
> On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?
>
>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> And you?
>> Cheers
>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>> Cheeers
>>
>>
>>

>
> What does it look like?


To a cow's eye, of course!!!
Pandora
http://images.google.com/images?q=uo...a +con+Google
But I make them more fried and burnt! I like them like this!
Cheers
Pandora


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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
> On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:33:36p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Damsel in
> dis Dress?
>
>> On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
>> wrote:
>>
>>>How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>>
>>>
>>>In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>>And you?
>>>Cheers
>>>Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>>>Cheeers

>>
>> Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.
>>
>> Carol

>
> I think it just means the appearance of the egg, Carol, like poached or
> sunny side up.


You are a phsycologist, Wayne! ROTFL!
Pan
>
> --
> Wayne Boatwright *¿*
> _____________________________________________
>
> A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!



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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"-L." > ha scritto nel messaggio
oups.com...
>
> Pandora wrote:
>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> And you?
>> Cheers
>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>> Cheeers

>
> I think there's a wee bit of a language barrier here....Do you mean an
> egg where the yolk is intact? Most "names" we give to eggs refer to
> the way they are cooked. "Sunny side up" is probably the closest name
> to what you are describing - the egg looks like the sun.


WONDERFUL!!!! yes ! Is like a sun!!!! It is beautiful the name that you give
to this cooked egg!
Cheers and thank you
Pandora
>
> How is your egg prepared?


yes! Like you say...I think
Pan
> -L.
>



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Wayne Boatwright
 
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Default How do you call....

On Thu 08 Dec 2005 01:13:12p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?

>
> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
> ...
>> On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
>> Pandora?
>>
>>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>>
>>>
>>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>> And you?
>>> Cheers
>>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for
>>> dinner! Cheeers
>>>
>>>
>>>

>>
>> What does it look like?

>
> To a cow's eye, of course!!!
> Pandora
> http://images.google.com/images?q=uo...hl=it&btnG=Cer
> ca+con+Google But I make them more fried and burnt! I like them like
> this! Cheers
> Pandora
>
>


That's what we call sunny side up.


--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
_____________________________________________

A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!
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Pandora
 
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"kevnbro" > ha scritto nel messaggio
oups.com...
> >Me too ROTFLASTC!

>
> Rolling On The Floor Laughing And Spasming 'Til Comatose?


Yes! Something similar
Pan
>





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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
> On Thu 08 Dec 2005 01:13:12p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?
>
>>
>> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
>> ...
>>> On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
>>> Pandora?
>>>
>>>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>>> And you?
>>>> Cheers
>>>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for
>>>> dinner! Cheeers
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> What does it look like?

>>
>> To a cow's eye, of course!!!
>> Pandora
>> http://images.google.com/images?q=uo...hl=it&btnG=Cer
>> ca+con+Google But I make them more fried and burnt! I like them like
>> this! Cheers
>> Pandora
>>
>>

>
> That's what we call sunny side up.


You american are always romantic! ))
Thank you
Pandora
>
>
> --
> Wayne Boatwright *¿*
> _____________________________________________
>
> A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken!



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Pandora
 
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Default How do you call....


"L, not -L" > ha scritto nel messaggio
. com...
>
> On 8-Dec-2005, Damsel in dis Dress > wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
>> wrote:
>>
>> >How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>> >
>> >
>> >In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> >And you?
>> >Cheers
>> >Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>> >Cheeers

>>
>> Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.
>>
>> Carol

>
> Probably meant sunny-side up eggs which look like a target, sometimes
> known
> as a bulls-eye.


Oh! yes you are near! Bue = OX
So it is an Ox eye egg.
Cheers
Pandora
and thank you for having helped me!
>
> --
> To email, replace Cujo with Juno



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Melba's Jammin'
 
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Default How do you call....

In article >,
"Pandora" > wrote:

> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
> ...
> > On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?
> >
> >> How do you call your cow's eye egg?


> > What does it look like?

>
> To a cow's eye, of course!!!


But cow's have brown eyes, Pandora. Egg yolks are yellow-to-gold.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-6-05, Skyline Aglow - the 35mm picture

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aem
 
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Default How do you call....


Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article >,
> "Pandora" > wrote:
>
> > "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
> > ...
> > > On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?
> > >
> > >> How do you call your cow's eye egg?

>
> > > What does it look like?

> >
> > To a cow's eye, of course!!!

>
> But cow's have brown eyes, Pandora. Egg yolks are yellow-to-gold.
> --

She's already said she fries them hard and burnt. Undoubtedly closer
to brown than to yellow. -aem

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Melba's Jammin'
 
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Default How do you call....

In article . com>,
"aem" > wrote:

> Melba's Jammin' wrote:


> > >
> > > To a cow's eye, of course!!!

> >
> > But cow's have brown eyes, Pandora. Egg yolks are yellow-to-gold.
> > --

> She's already said she fries them hard and burnt. Undoubtedly closer
> to brown than to yellow. -aem


Ah. I missed that part.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-6-05, Skyline Aglow - the 35mm picture



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aem
 
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Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article . com>,
> "aem" > wrote:
>
> > Melba's Jammin' wrote:

>
> > > >
> > > > To a cow's eye, of course!!!
> > >
> > > But cow's have brown eyes, Pandora. Egg yolks are yellow-to-gold.
> > > --

> > She's already said she fries them hard and burnt. Undoubtedly closer
> > to brown than to yellow. -aem

>
> Ah. I missed that part.
> --

Of course, I could be wrong but I'll never know because she's killfiled
me. Sob! -aem

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Chris
 
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Default How do you call....


"Damsel in dis Dress" > wrote in message
...
> On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 20:19:49 +0100, "Pandora" >
> wrote:
>
>>How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>>In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>>And you?
>>Cheers
>>Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>>Cheeers

>
> Are you going to eat a cow's eye? Stop, you're scaring me.
>



On my husband's first trip to Germany, he went out to a restaurant with some
German friends, and decided to just pick something out on the menu by
pointing, rather than asking them to translate everything. The thing he
picked out was: cow's head -- guaranteed at least one eye.

He decided to pass on that and ended up with a stuffed portobello mushroom
instead.

Moooo!

C


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The Joneses
 
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Default How do you call....

Pandora wrote:

> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
> ...
> > On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Pandora?
> >
> >> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
> >>
> >>
> >> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> >> And you?
> >> Cheers
> >> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> >> Cheers

> >
> > What does it look like?

>
> To a cow's eye, of course!!!
> Pandora
> http://images.google.com/images?q=uo...a +con+Google
> But I make them more fried and burnt! I like them like this!
> Cheers Pandora


Could we call them Egg a la Penguin? Penguins have yellow eyes, so do owls & coyotes (but
they have black middles). Some cats have yellow eyes, but their middle is long and not
like an egg at all. Here's a link to a yellow eye bean from Maine:
http://www.truestarhealth.com/Notes/2003004.html
I need to get out more....
Edrena


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Puester
 
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Default How do you call....

Pandora wrote:
> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?
> Cheers
> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> Cheeers
>
>



I believe it's what we call "sunny-side up",
a fried egg that is not turned over.

gloria p
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Syssi
 
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"Pandora" > wrote in message
...
> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?
> Cheers
> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> Cheeers
>----------------------


Every bone in my body is fighting with my hands to not type what I'm
thinking...

Haha - the bones lost.

First off, I never had a cow. Our neighbors had cows and even boarded them
in our back pasture... All of them had eyes but none had eggs that I was
aware of. We did have chickens for a few years and they had both (literally
2!) eyes and laid eggs but neither the cows or the chickens had eye eggs.

Okay, funny stuff aside, are you eating eyes? I've heard that they are a
delicacy...

I've had pig snouts and maybe their ears... bull/cow 'oysters', and various
cuts of other animals (even chicken feet at a Cook-in!) but not eyes...
interesting thought though.

--
Syssi




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Syssi
 
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Default How do you call....




"Syssi" > wrote in message
news:Hi8mf.15216$H84.3563@trnddc04...
>
>
> "Pandora" > wrote in message
> ...
>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> And you?
>> Cheers
>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>> Cheeers
>>----------------------

>
> Every bone in my body is fighting with my hands to not type what I'm
> thinking...
>
> Haha - the bones lost.
>
> First off, I never had a cow. Our neighbors had cows and even boarded
> them in our back pasture... All of them had eyes but none had eggs that I
> was aware of. We did have chickens for a few years and they had both
> (literally 2!) eyes and laid eggs but neither the cows or the chickens had
> eye eggs.
>
> Okay, funny stuff aside, are you eating eyes? I've heard that they are a
> delicacy...
>
> I've had pig snouts and maybe their ears... bull/cow 'oysters', and
> various cuts of other animals (even chicken feet at a Cook-in!) but not
> eyes... interesting thought though.
>
> --
> Syssi
>00000000000000000


Piggy backing on my last posting as I now have seen the OP explanation...
darn... I was thinking this might get fun.

Ooops... it's late. Gotta go.
--
Syssi


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Denny Wheeler
 
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Default How do you call....

On 8 Dec 2005 12:09:37 -0800, "kevnbro" > wrote:

>>Me too ROTFLASTC!

>
> Rolling On The Floor Laughing And Spasming 'Til Comatose?


When I use that, it's '...And Scaring the Cats'

--
-denny-
"Do your thoughts call ahead or do they just arrive at your mouth unannounced?"

"It's come as you are, baby."

-over the hedge
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-L.
 
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Pandora wrote:
>
> yes! Like you say...I think
> Pan


By the way, Pandora, the phrase we use is "What do you call..." when
naming something, not "How do you call..."

-L.

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Pandora
 
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"Melba's Jammin'" > ha scritto nel
messaggio ...
> In article >,
> "Pandora" > wrote:
>
>> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
>> ...
>> > On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
>> > Pandora?
>> >
>> >> How do you call your cow's eye egg?

>
>> > What does it look like?

>>
>> To a cow's eye, of course!!!

>
> But cow's have brown eyes, Pandora. Egg yolks are yellow-to-gold.


perhaps Dante Alighieri has seen a bull with an orange colured eye DDDDD
Cheers
pandora
> --
> http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-6-05, Skyline Aglow - the 35mm
> picture
>



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Pandora
 
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"The Joneses" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
> Pandora wrote:
>
>> "Wayne Boatwright" > ha scritto nel messaggio
>> ...
>> > On Thu 08 Dec 2005 12:19:49p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
>> > Pandora?
>> >
>> >> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> >> And you?
>> >> Cheers
>> >> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for
>> >> dinner!
>> >> Cheers
>> >
>> > What does it look like?

>>
>> To a cow's eye, of course!!!
>> Pandora
>> http://images.google.com/images?q=uo...a +con+Google
>> But I make them more fried and burnt! I like them like this!
>> Cheers Pandora

>
> Could we call them Egg a la Penguin? Penguins have yellow eyes, so do owls
> & coyotes (but
> they have black middles). Some cats have yellow eyes, but their middle is
> long and not
> like an egg at all. Here's a link to a yellow eye bean from Maine:
> http://www.truestarhealth.com/Notes/2003004.html
> I need to get out more....
> Edrena


I think that who invented the name thought only to the shape
Cheers
Pandora
>
>





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Pandora
 
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"-L." > ha scritto nel messaggio
oups.com...
>
> Pandora wrote:
>>
>> yes! Like you say...I think
>> Pan

>
> By the way, Pandora, the phrase we use is "What do you call..." when
> naming something, not "How do you call..."
>
> -L.


I thank you for your answer. At school, they have teach me to use "How do
you call"..
But I believe in you: your are an English girl )
Cheers
and thank you
Pandora
>



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Dee Randall
 
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Default How do you call....


"Pandora" > wrote in message
...
>
> "-L." > ha scritto nel messaggio
> oups.com...
>>
>> Pandora wrote:
>>>
>>> yes! Like you say...I think
>>> Pan

>>
>> By the way, Pandora, the phrase we use is "What do you call..." when
>> naming something, not "How do you call..."
>>
>> -L.

>
> I thank you for your answer. At school, they have teach me to use "How do
> you call"..
> But I believe in you: your are an English girl )
> Cheers
> and thank you
> Pandora


Pandora, take this correction in the good-natured spirit you usually do.
"At school, they taught me...."

"Have teach" is "not an option."
P.S. "not an option" is a 'hated phrase' for me. The way I am using the
phrase 'not an option,' it's an idiom for "it is never used."

Dee Dee




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Julia Altshuler
 
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Default How do you call....

Pandora wrote:

> I thank you for your answer. At school, they have teach me to use "How do
> you call"..
> But I believe in you: your are an English girl )



Pandora,


Tell us more about the teacher who taught you English. Where was he or
she from? Until this moment, I thought all of your English was
self-taught from books and the Internet. (That's a compliment.
Learning from books alone is hard.)


(I just now realized that "English teacher" could have several meanings.
It could be any teacher from England, or it could be the teacher who
teaches the English language to those who don't speak it from birth, or,
the way we use it here, it is generally the teacher who teaches English
literature.)


--Lia

  #34 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Margaret Suran
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....



Pandora wrote:
> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>
>
> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
> And you?
> Cheers
> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
> Cheeers
>
>


In Austria (Vienna) we called it Spiegelei, Mirror Egg, I do not know
why. Perhaps because the cooked yolk was so shiny, you could almost
see your reflection in it.

Later on I found out that in Germany it was called Oxenaug, Eye of an
Ox. Very similar to your Cow's Eye. ) Again, I do not know why,
but the name did not appeal to me. (


  #35 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Pandora
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....


"Dee Randall" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
>
> "Pandora" > wrote in message
> ...
>>
>> "-L." > ha scritto nel messaggio
>> oups.com...
>>>
>>> Pandora wrote:
>>>>
>>>> yes! Like you say...I think
>>>> Pan
>>>
>>> By the way, Pandora, the phrase we use is "What do you call..." when
>>> naming something, not "How do you call..."
>>>
>>> -L.

>>
>> I thank you for your answer. At school, they have teach me to use "How do
>> you call"..
>> But I believe in you: your are an English girl )
>> Cheers
>> and thank you
>> Pandora

>
> Pandora, take this correction in the good-natured spirit you usually do.
> "At school, they taught me...."


Oh yes! No problem! I Am happy if you correct me!!!!! I Am here to learn!
>
> "Have teach" is "not an option."
> P.S. "not an option" is a 'hated phrase' for me. The way I am using the
> phrase 'not an option,' it's an idiom for "it is never used."


BTW whrn do you use . How do you call and when what do you call?
Cheers and thank you
Pandora
>
> Dee Dee
>
>
>
>





  #36 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Damsel in dis Dress
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....

On Fri, 9 Dec 2005 18:35:01 +0100, "Pandora" >
wrote:

> BTW whrn do you use . How do you call and when what do you call?


When you want to know the name of something, say, "What do you call
.... ?"

When you want to know how to ask someone or something to come to you,
say, "How do you call (your family to the dinner table)?" for example.

Carol
--

http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/head_trollop/my_photos
  #37 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Pandora
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....


"Margaret Suran" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
>
>
> Pandora wrote:
>> How do you call your cow's eye egg?
>>
>>
>> In Italy we call: Uova all'occhio di bue".
>> And you?
>> Cheers
>> Pandora who is making "uova all'occhio di bue" and focaccia for dinner!
>> Cheeers

>
> In Austria (Vienna) we called it Spiegelei, Mirror Egg, I do not know why.
> Perhaps because the cooked yolk was so shiny, you could almost see your
> reflection in it.


Ohhh! That's very interesting!
>
> Later on I found out that in Germany it was called Oxenaug, Eye of an Ox.


yes! Like we call in Italy! Ox eye egg! Ihave said cow, but is wrong: it is
an OX.



Very similar to your Cow's Eye. ) Again, I do not know why,
> but the name did not appeal to me. (


Yes! BTW the eggs cooked in this way are so Yummy and Gnammy )))
Cheers
pandora
>
>



  #38 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Pan Ohco
 
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Default How do you call....

On Fri, 9 Dec 2005 13:32:57 +0100, Pandora wrote:

>
>"-L." > ha scritto nel messaggio
roups.com...
>>
>> Pandora wrote:
>>>
>>> yes! Like you say...I think
>>> Pan

>>
>> By the way, Pandora, the phrase we use is "What do you call..." when
>> naming something, not "How do you call..."
>>
>> -L.

>
>I thank you for your answer. At school, they have teach me to use "How do
>you call"..
>But I believe in you: your are an English girl )
>Cheers
>and thank you
>Pandora
>>

>

Pandora the translation from italian should be "how do you say" (not
call). And you are doing very well, in english.Lie palar englese,
multibene.

  #39 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Pandora
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....


"Damsel in dis Dress" > ha scritto nel messaggio
news
> On Fri, 9 Dec 2005 18:35:01 +0100, "Pandora" >
> wrote:
>
>> BTW whrn do you use . How do you call and when what do you call?

>
> When you want to know the name of something, say, "What do you call
> ... ?"
>
> When you want to know how to ask someone or something to come to you,
> say, "How do you call (your family to the dinner table)?" for example.

I have understand the first example but not the second.
BTW, thank you Carol!

Pandora
>
> Carol
> --
>
> http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/head_trollop/my_photos



  #40 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
Pandora
 
Posts: n/a
Default How do you call....


"Pandora" > ha scritto nel messaggio
...
>
> "Damsel in dis Dress" > ha scritto nel messaggio
> news
>> On Fri, 9 Dec 2005 18:35:01 +0100, "Pandora" >
>> wrote:
>>
>>> BTW whrn do you use . How do you call and when what do you call?

>>
>> When you want to know the name of something, say, "What do you call
>> ... ?"
>>
>> When you want to know how to ask someone or something to come to you,
>> say, "How do you call (your family to the dinner table)?" for example.

>
> I have understand the first example but not the second.
> BTW, thank you Carol!


I have understood, sorry.....
>
> Pandora
>>
>> Carol
>> --
>>
>> http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/head_trollop/my_photos

>
>



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