4th of July
-
-
AnonymousJuly 5, 2006 at 2:54 am
We didn’t eat hotdogs and watch fireworks yesterday (since the sun doesn’t go down until nearly 10.00pm in south England this time of year, setting off our own fireworks isn’t feasible), but we had Kentucky Fried Chicken (tastes pretty much the same on this side of the Pond, but you can’t get mashed potatoes and gravy) and apple pie. Of course, we watched football–the World Cup match between Germany and Italy. When you’re Americans living outside the US, you make your own traditions.
And the trivia question: it’s US population:
1915: 100 million
1967: 200 million
2006: 300 million (supposed to be born in September)An English friend, who loves all things American and who knows more trivia about US history than I ever imagined existed, mentioned this to me.
Deb
-
AnonymousJuly 5, 2006 at 12:30 pm
Wow at that rate we will hit 400 million in 2019.
[quote=eightplusfive]We didn’t eat hotdogs and watch fireworks yesterday (since the sun doesn’t go down until nearly 10.00pm in south England this time of year, setting off our own fireworks isn’t feasible), but we had Kentucky Fried Chicken (tastes pretty much the same on this side of the Pond, but you can’t get mashed potatoes and gravy) and apple pie. Of course, we watched football–the World Cup match between Germany and Italy. When you’re Americans living outside the US, you make your own traditions.
And the trivia question: it’s US population:
1915: 100 million
1967: 200 million
2006: 300 million (supposed to be born in September)An English friend, who loves all things American and who knows more trivia about US history than I ever imagined existed, mentioned this to me.
Deb[/quote]
-
AnonymousJuly 5, 2006 at 11:29 pm
Hi Deb,
The Brits on our side of the pond complained about having to work…one of my friends says he wanted to celebrate giving up America.
We’re sending you an emergency packet of Kentucky fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy.
Watched Italy vs. Germany game today. The men are very attractive, although I always cheer for the British.
Love,
Marge -
AnonymousJuly 7, 2006 at 2:50 am
Hi, Gang.
I’ve no idea why KFC here doesn’t serve mashed potatoes and gravy. Few restaurants serve mash, unless it’s with bangers (sausages). You can’t get those lovely, greasy biscuits here either (of course here, if you ask for a biscuit, you’ll get a flat, sweet cookie).
Recently KFC started serving corn on the cob, so maybe things are looking up. When it comes to food, the Brits have a lot to learn from the Americans. And from the Italians. And from the French. And from the Belgians. And from the Australians. And from the Canadians. And from…
Deb
-
AnonymousJuly 7, 2006 at 4:06 pm
I should know better, Deb. Used to fly to Wimbledon, which is fairly sophisticated, and Maidenhead, which is not. We celebrated someone’s anniversary at the company with an Italian lunch in Wimbledon–food was fantastic.
I made Shepherd’s Pie for the British boyfriend once, watched him taste it, listened to him whine, and disposed of it–it only took 5 minutes. The English breakfast…forget it. There was no way I was cooking bacon, sausage, eggs, fried bread, tomatoes, mushrooms, coffee, etc., etc., etc. for him.
Chico, as soon as I find out how to do it, we’re downgrading you to Zeppo.
Cheers,
Margaret Dumont
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.