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So trivial, yet it really ticks you off.

Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
There are people here who wear those all year round, dead-of-winter included. I can't help but admire their toughness -- either that, or the lack of nerve endings in their feet.

I'm a do-whatever-you-like-as-long-as-you-don't-frighten-the-horses guy, so sandals in the winter - whatever makes you happy. That said, my poor feet would freeze to death.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Meanwhile, what's a "honeycrisp" apple and what's the big hairy deal about it? Apparently the Boys have convinced a great swath of the public that it's the greatest thing since Pumpkin Spice, which is another annoying marketing gimmick I wish would go away.

As for apples, nothing beats a McIntosh. McIntosh apples are as emblematic of Northern New England as brown eggs and snow tires in October.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
You do? In my 55 years as a Californian on this rock I've never heard anyone use the word "polecat" in any context except in a movie or television show.

I hear that word mostly in the small towns that I visit on the
days I go cruising with my
'46 pickup.
Stopping for a " Bar-B-Q"
sandwich which is also very
common along my neck of the woods.
 
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Denton

A-List Customer
Messages
324
Location
Los Angeles
Meanwhile, what's a "honeycrisp" apple and what's the big hairy deal about it?

I remember reading a newspaper article years ago (I think this was back in the 80s) about the laboratory at the University of Minnesota that developed the Honeycrisp apple. The excited botanists were describing it as an explosive device that would assault you with "shards of apple flavor." That phrase stuck with me, and I remember it every time I taste a Honeycrisp apple -- always supersweet and with little remarkable apple flavor.

McIntosh is a great apple but it doesn't keep well and maybe doesn't ship well. I like lots of different kinds of apples, leaning to the tart side, Cortland, Macoun, Liberty . . . Once in an orchard in Connecticut I was given something called a Sheep's Nose apple that looked ugly and not really like an apple, but it tasted very nice indeed.

My least favorite thing about living in California might be the substandard apples.
 

Inkstainedwretch

One Too Many
Messages
1,037
Location
United States
Sometimes the Boys hit a homer. A few decades back, fruit merchants experimentally imported a fuzzy little Asian fruit that looked odd but tasted good. It was the Chinese Gooseberry and they couldn't give them away. Americans weren't about to eat something that looked and sounded so funny. Then some marketing genius decided that all that was needed was a name change. He dubbed it the "Kiwi Fruit" and they sold so well grocers couldn't keep their shelves stocked.
 
Messages
12,978
Location
Germany
Mmmmh, classic Gooseberries. First suck the heavenly sweet with the pips out and then chew the sour peel and gulp it down, as final klingon-fruit-test. :D
 
Messages
12,018
Location
East of Los Angeles
It was a favorite of pulp-western writers ninety years ago. "Yuh consarned mangy polecat, reach for your irons!"
Now that you mention it, the only "western" themed novel I've ever read was the one the movie Dances With Wolves was based on, and that was almost a waste of time because the movie was 99.9% faithful to the novel. Regardless, the word "polecat" was not used in either of them.

I hate "sweet" as a flavor. An apple is supposed to be astringent, sour, tart...
This is why I prefer Granny Smith (green) apples--they have that "sour/tart" flavor that offsets and complements the "sweet" flavor so nicely. Apples without that are just boring. :D
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
My grandparents had a gnarled, misshapen ruin of an apple tree in their backyard. I used to eat the apples off it -- I have no idea what kind of apples they were, probably some kind of forgotten 19th century mutt of an apple, but they were perfect -- sour, crunchy, and not insipid sicky sweet like some of these ones you get today.

That tree has been dead and gone for thirty years, but I would know that taste with one bite if I ever tasted it again.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I used to enjoy corn on the cob as a kid.

Today the corn on the markets is very sweet.
It’s like biting into a piece of chocolate candy that’s
so rich, you can hardly breathe.
I don’t enjoy it anymore.
 
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