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Postby Syd Smurf » Wed May 02, 2007 9:04 am
I love peanut butter. :smitten:
You may be American then Dominique.....they don't just love peanut butter......they mix it with everything.....I MEAN EVERYTHING !!!

Maybe before I go I should visit a supermarket and write down every peanut buttered flavoured food item I can find there....I may need a week to do it but I just have to know.

I guess other Aussie food would include animals and insects like: Kangaroo, Emu, Crocodile and Witchery Grubs if you follow traditional Aboriginal meals.

Dyar

Postby Ritter_Schlumpfenherz » Wed May 02, 2007 9:09 am
Well, I don't mix peanut butter with anything and everything. :) I love it pure on a piece of bread. :smitten:

Postby Smurfysmurf » Wed May 02, 2007 4:48 pm
One of my co-workers tried to get me to eat a banana today, topped with peanut butter :eek:
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Postby DrunkSmurf » Wed May 02, 2007 5:45 pm
Maybe before I go I should visit a supermarket and write down every peanut buttered flavoured food item I can find there....I may need a week to do it but I just have to know.
Dyar
Is peanut butter not common in Australia? I disliked it as a kid, and used to hate chocolates (like Reese's Peanut Butter Cups) that I always got at school and were nothing but crumbly peanut butter with a layer of chocolate.

But, from having no choice but to eat Reeses I finally started liking it OK, until I worked in California for those three months and practically lived off it. I haven't had any in a few years, though. My wife is Chinese, and peanut butter is not known there.

But, don't worry, them Chinese got their own weird gunk to eat.... :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :dogrun: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :monkey: :eeyore: :eeyore: :eeyore: :eeyore: :eeyore: :eeyore: :turtle: :turtle: :turtle: :turtle: :turtle: :beer:

Postby SA Smurfette » Wed May 02, 2007 7:16 pm

Is peanut butter not common in Australia?
It is common Tim, just not as popular as vegemite :D
I know in some schools and Kindergartens peanut butter is banned as there seems to be a lot of kids these days with peanut allergies.
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Postby Margaret » Thu May 03, 2007 7:46 am
What is vegemite it sounds like a type of bug :-?

Postby Tojo » Sat May 05, 2007 12:44 am
I love peanut butter too & other peanutty foods as well such as satay (yum yum). Just not with jam or anything else. :)

I had to laugh at the warning on my jar of peanut butter though: 'could contain traces of nuts'

I mean what else are peanuts? Fish? Flying winged creatures? :banghead:
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Postby Smurfysmurf » Sat May 05, 2007 4:08 am
I had to laugh at the warning on my jar of peanut butter though: 'could contain traces of nuts'

I mean what else are peanuts? Fish? Flying winged creatures? :banghead:
Yeah, that makes my day also everytime I read it :) :) :)
But the real question is....could contain only "traces of nuts"?

Hopefully there are more than traces of nuts in the peanut butter :-? :) :) :) :)

I think they tried to ban peanut butter in schools here, too....nearly caused another American Revolution 8-) 8-) 8-)
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Postby Tojo » Sat May 05, 2007 4:24 am
This 'banning everything which might cause choking' phobia in the US is one of the things that makes us Europeans laugh I think. It would make more sense to ban hamburgers & fries as they make you fat, & cause heart disease if eaten in large quantities. I think the whole deal is laughable.

Things are changing in Europe as well now though & more & more products are having warnings on them. Thankfully surprise eggs haven't been banned here as a part of our culture would disappear then (& I like some of the figures in them too :) )
Tojo McTonyson - Okarben's Bagpiper Extraordinaire.... :partyon:

Postby FlamingO » Sat May 05, 2007 12:18 pm
What is vegemite it sounds like a type of bug
:sofunny: Hmmm, think I'd steer clear too :)
more & more products are having warnings on them.
Hmmm. Wished they'd make the ones on cigarette packets a bit longer so I have more to read when enjoying a smoke :cool:

Postby eggie smurf » Sun May 06, 2007 10:02 pm
One of my co-workers tried to get me to eat a banana today, topped with peanut butter :eek:
YUM!!!! :smitten:
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Postby Gerda » Wed May 09, 2007 3:34 pm
Japan: Natto (fermented soy beans that taste and smell like unsalty piss )

am I the only one thinking how you know what piss smells and tast like :-?
:) :) :) :) :)
Nope I thought that too when I read it :)

Just for the record you can now buy peanut butter and jelly already together in a jar, it looks like a pinwheel when you open it up. And yes it does keep the brats fed.. you do what you can to shut the holes in there face :) :)


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Postby Smurfysmurf » Wed May 09, 2007 5:18 pm
My coworker had a new variation the other day......

banana topped with peanut butter and Boston Creme fat free yoghurt and nuts.... :eek: :shock:

and I admit I nearly lost my breakfast the first time I saw a cousin mix peanut butter and jelly....it just didn't look yummy..... :-?

but then I used to eat Quark mixed with jelly on a bun...now that was yummy :smitten: :) :) :) sorry, still haven't found Quark in America and still don't know what it is called in America...do you know, Gerda? :? :-?
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Postby Gerda » Thu May 10, 2007 5:53 am
but then I used to eat Quark mixed with jelly on a bun...now that was yummy :smitten: :) :) :) sorry, still haven't found Quark in America and still don't know what it is called in America...do you know, Gerda? :? :-?
I always thought it was cottage cheese, but I just asked my mom and she said it's more like a sourcream, but the american's don't have nothing like it!

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Postby Ritter_Schlumpfenherz » Thu May 10, 2007 7:36 am
Well Gerda,cottage cheese is not as creamy and soft as Quark.

But hang on, I just found the English term: It's called "curd" or "curd cream"

Postby Gerda » Thu May 10, 2007 8:03 am
Well Gerda,cottage cheese is not as creamy and soft as Quark.

But hang on, I just found the English term: It's called "curd" or "curd cream"
Thanks!! :D I don't think we have any curd cream in the stores, at least I never seen any around here


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Postby Ritter_Schlumpfenherz » Thu May 10, 2007 8:12 am
Hi Gerda,

I have just read a topic on curd on German wikipedia and thought this should be interesting for Maureen and you to read:

Ebenso viele andere in Deutschland beliebte Milchprodukte [...] [sind]ein Problemartikel. Curd ist nur in sehr guten Supermärkten zu finden, teuer, und weniger fest als in Deutschland.[...] .

translation of the passage given

[...]additionally getting hold of German milkproducts [...] can be difficult in the US. Curd is only to be found in rarely (decent) supermarkets. It is expensive and not as stiff as in Germany[...].

Postby Gerda » Thu May 10, 2007 8:51 am
Thanks alot.. I know my grandma ate it alot and when she came to live with us she would eat cottage cheese, I guess that is why I got confused, wonder if the taste is close enough to cottage cheese?? :-?


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Postby Ritter_Schlumpfenherz » Thu May 10, 2007 9:46 am
Cottage cheese and curd cream distinguish a lot when it comes to taste them.
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