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A Question for Brits...
#61
RE: A Question for Brits...
hmmm... did someone say "cheese"??
Time to tell you about all the wonderful cheeses we have on our fair country, Portugal!

Of course, everyone has fresh cheese (but it seems to be more common in portuguese and spanish countries... curious):


Using wiki's words here to describe it: "a creamy, soft, and mild unaged white cheese".
Goes well with anything. To be eaten in slices.
Can be made from cow, sheep or goat's milk, or a mix of any of these. Usually, we eat the cow variety.

Requeijão (I have no idea how to translate this, not even the wiki helps!)


Looks a bit like fresh cheese, but is a bit less consistent, so it's great for spreading on bread, while getting a bit of a wet crumbly consistency.

On to not so fresh cheeses...
The children's favorite, Flamengo, usually presented as a sphere with a red covering.


Almost like mild gouda cheese, but even milder and with less holes and a bit creamier.
Sorry, no wiki link for this one...not even in portuguese... I don't get it...
These are made of of cow's milk, only.

Serra da Estrela Cheese.


A hard curated outer shell and a creamy interior.
Made from sheep's milk. It tastes a bit of the country herbs found around the mountain area known as "serra da estrela" in Portugal.


On to curated or aged cheeses...

Queijo da Ilha, also known as Sao Jorge cheese, since it's from the island called São Jorge, in the Azores archipelago.


Usually presented a rather large wheel of cheese... at least 50cm in diameter and 20 or 30cm in height.
It's a spicy cheese, not much to my particular liking, but many people find it to be delicious.
It's also a bit hard and usually eaten in small cubes or stripes.

Goat's cheese.


Yes, I know you can have fresh goat's cheese, but this is fully curated, hard like stone and with that old goat taste to it!
Damned good, but you must eat it in very thin slices, or you break you teeth and just become grossed out by the smell.


There are many more throughout our huge country, but these are the main ones.
A bit like beer in Germany, each little town has its own particular cheese. Wink
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#62
RE: A Question for Brits...
Ok, I asked a British bloke from work about Americans and cheese today and he said, yes, we do put cheese on a lot more things than they do in the UK. Apparently after living in Texas for a while he can confirm this.
Everything I needed to know about life I learned on Dagobah.
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#63
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 5, 2014 at 7:19 pm)Rahul Wrote: Ok, I asked a British bloke from work about Americans and cheese today and he said, yes, we do put cheese on a lot more things than they do in the UK. Apparently after living in Texas for a while he can confirm this.

We also put ice in tea which must be sacrilegious to them.
Atheist Forums Hall of Shame:
"The trinity can be equated to having your cake and eating it too."
...      -Lucent, trying to defend the Trinity concept
"(Yahweh's) actions are good because (Yahweh) is the ultimate standard of goodness. That’s not begging the question"
...       -Statler Waldorf, Christian apologist
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#64
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 5, 2014 at 8:17 pm)DeistPaladin Wrote: We also put ice in tea which must be sacrilegious to them.

I've heard that up north they don't normally do that. Has the practice spread?
Everything I needed to know about life I learned on Dagobah.
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#65
RE: A Question for Brits...
I'm curious as to how our kind of Pigs In Blankets don't seem to be very popular in the US. Sausages wrapped in bacon seems like something Americans would be all over.

Maybe if there was cheese involved?
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#66
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 5, 2014 at 9:24 pm)NoraBrimstone Wrote: I'm curious as to how our kind of Pigs In Blankets don't seem to be very popular in the US. Sausages wrapped in bacon seems like something Americans would be all over.

Maybe if there was cheese involved?

And buns
Dying to live, living to die.
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#67
RE: A Question for Brits...
Bacon anything is popular in my house.
Everything I needed to know about life I learned on Dagobah.
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#68
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 5, 2014 at 9:24 pm)NoraBrimstone Wrote: I'm curious as to how our kind of Pigs In Blankets don't seem to be very popular in the US. Sausages wrapped in bacon seems like something Americans would be all over.

Maybe if there was cheese involved?

Our blanket is a croissant roll. And you dip it in mustard. Don't know why we don't use bacon. Seems we got that one backwards.
"There remain four irreducible objections to religious faith: that it wholly misrepresents the origins of man and the cosmos, that because of this original error it manages to combine the maximum servility with the maximum of solipsism, that it is both the result and the cause of dangerous sexual repression, and that it is ultimately grounded on wish-thinking." ~Christopher Hitchens, god is not Great

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#69
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 3, 2014 at 10:45 pm)MitchBenn Wrote: (regarding Dr. Who)
7. It's the coolest smartest wildest most imaginative TV show in the history of the medium, bar none.

Yep, big SciFi fan here, and I seen almost all of it...

Ditto that, "Dr. Who" is very imaginative, funny, fast paced and steampunk, not as good as "Farscape" though, it ranks very highly on my top list, can't think of American show this good, "Battlestar Galactica" came very close, but, that's about it Big Grin
Why Won't God Heal Amputees ? 

Oči moje na ormaru stoje i gledaju kako sarma kipi  Tongue
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#70
RE: A Question for Brits...
(March 5, 2014 at 9:24 pm)NoraBrimstone Wrote: I'm curious as to how our kind of Pigs In Blankets don't seem to be very popular in the US. Sausages wrapped in bacon seems like something Americans would be all over.
Has anyone told Ivy about this?
Sum ergo sum
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