Also that you can make bread with them https://www.theguardian.com/food/2023/jan/18/beans-in-toast-uk-should-switch-to-broad-bean-bread-say-researchers
― Dan Worsley, Wednesday, 18 January 2023 19:41 (three years ago)
that's where I learned it!
― ledge, Wednesday, 18 January 2023 20:42 (three years ago)
Fava beans are a big area of interest in crop science rn, ppl have started brewing with them too which is significantly greener than just using cereals
― pilk/pall revolting odors (wins), Wednesday, 18 January 2023 22:49 (three years ago)
I was reading about this yesterday - apparently faves/faba are same species as broad bean but different variety to the ones traditional in British cuisine. https://hodmedods.co.uk/blogs/news/what-are-fava-beans-are-they-just-broad-beans
― Alba, Thursday, 19 January 2023 09:39 (three years ago)
In US English however the name fava refers to fresh broad beans ... ?
― ledge, Thursday, 19 January 2023 09:57 (three years ago)
can we have some US english people on here to adjudicate please
I call them fava beans. Might be a regional divide on the issue though
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Thursday, 19 January 2023 12:26 (three years ago)
Noel Redding resigned from the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Hadn't realised he'd left voluntarily. Thought Jimi was just into expanding his sound. That would explain why Mitch Mitchell was back playing with Hendrix a few months after Woodstock/Band of Gypsies a bit better..
― Stevolende, Thursday, 19 January 2023 13:14 (three years ago)
I'm growing fava beans this year!! I wanted to make ful medames last year and couldn't find fava locally, either dried or canned. It made me get interested in growing and drying them. Experiment to be updated in May-June.
― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Thursday, 19 January 2023 15:23 (three years ago)
that poster fastnbulbous isn't Anthony Fantano. no, not intended as a diss. somehow years ago from a post I read I thought someone confirmed this, but in browsing google today....no, very much not. though I think they're also named Tony.
p big mistake there, lol.
― fentanyl young (Neanderthal), Friday, 20 January 2023 17:21 (three years ago)
dude if fantano posted here, you would likely know for sure
― POLIZISTEN VERSINKEN IM SCHLAMM (forksclovetofu), Friday, 20 January 2023 18:27 (three years ago)
Lol that was the first thought this morning that made me question my long standing wrong belief
― fentanyl young (Neanderthal), Friday, 20 January 2023 18:28 (three years ago)
Abernethy biscuits are not actually from Abernethy (in Perth & Kinross), despite always being marketed as Scottish iirc, and are named after the person who invented them, who was English.
― A Drunk Man Looks At Partick Thistle (Tom D.), Friday, 20 January 2023 18:32 (three years ago)
"Big" Don Abernethy
― fentanyl young (Neanderthal), Friday, 20 January 2023 18:35 (three years ago)
Just realized the name of the movie service mubi is a funny way of writing "movie."
― nickn, Monday, 23 January 2023 19:45 (three years ago)
etymology of "arena"
The word derives from Latin harena, a particularly fine-grained sand that covered the floor of ancient arenas such as the Colosseum in Rome, Italy, to absorb blood.[1]
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 24 January 2023 00:47 (three years ago)
Hence the collocation "blood and sand."
― Cry for a Shadowgraph (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 24 January 2023 01:01 (three years ago)
Aka Sangre y arena.
― Cry for a Shadowgraph (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 24 January 2023 01:02 (three years ago)
There's a village in Powys called Three Cocks and another in Norfolk called Three Holes. Googling the two to see if they are twinned was not a good idea.
― Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 24 January 2023 01:04 (three years ago)
pythagoras and confucious and the buddha (probably) all lived at the same time.
― ledge, Friday, 27 January 2023 10:18 (three years ago)
in the same house (sitcom proposal)
― mark s, Friday, 27 January 2023 10:22 (three years ago)
I think there was a non fiction book a few years ago talking about great revelation coinciding at several points around the globe at the start of the common era. Think I looked at a copy over last couple of weeks but going blank on title.
― Stevolende, Friday, 27 January 2023 11:54 (three years ago)
I remember learning about this in R.E. at school. "The axial age." Also Zoroaster and Plato and the Hebrew prophets.
― Alba, Friday, 27 January 2023 12:17 (three years ago)
Oh, looking it up now, that covers a longer period.
― Alba, Friday, 27 January 2023 12:18 (three years ago)
Anyway, g8 days
apologies for spelling confucius wrong, i was confuced.
― ledge, Friday, 27 January 2023 12:25 (three years ago)
'suggs' was graham mcpherson's graffiti name before he joined madness
― o shit the sheriff (NickB), Friday, 27 January 2023 12:52 (three years ago)
that iggy pop's pre-stooges band the prime movers also included allmusic founder michael erlewine and experimental composer "blue" gene tyranny
― na (NA), Friday, 27 January 2023 14:52 (three years ago)
xxp I think this may have been book I was thinking aboutKaren Armstrong. The Great Transformation
― Stevolende, Friday, 27 January 2023 20:05 (three years ago)
Thanks stevolende, that looks interesting.
― peace, man, Monday, 30 January 2023 13:53 (three years ago)
That Pink Floyd etc bassist Guy Pratt is the son of Mike (Randall and Hopkirk Deceased) Pratt
― Ward Fowler, Sunday, 5 February 2023 11:45 (three years ago)
That came as a surprise to me when I found out. There was a nice little twitter thread a few weeks ago about the things he’d use to show his character’s hip credentials. Was more surprised to discover he was a musician too.
As I've got the day off, I thought I'd share my obsession with Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) screen grabs which helped to establish Jeff Randall's hip credentials. A thread, starting with Martin Sharp's poster for the 'legalise cannabis' rally in Hyde Park, July 16, 1967. 1/6 pic.twitter.com/bw9FrJEBNy— Marco Rossi (@marcosquawks) January 24, 2023
― Dan Worsley, Sunday, 5 February 2023 12:12 (three years ago)
Guy Pratt chiming in to confirm they were all his dad's!
― Andrew Farrell, Sunday, 5 February 2023 12:17 (three years ago)
The expression “va-va-va voom” can be traced back to Art Carney, who said it on TV in 1949
― Josefa, Sunday, 5 February 2023 22:05 (three years ago)
!
― And Your Borad Can Zing (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 5 February 2023 23:53 (three years ago)
Although I can hear him say it.
The word "glamour" originates from Scotland.
― Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Monday, 6 February 2023 17:04 (three years ago)
Up there with "Drambuie" as things often erroneously assumed and pronounced as French, in certain places at least.
― anatol_merklich, Monday, 6 February 2023 20:42 (three years ago)
glamour and (related) gramarye are both scottish -- the first popularised by walter scott -- but their shared root is old french gramaire (meaning learning, spells, mumbo-jumbo) from latin grammatica
― mark s, Monday, 6 February 2023 21:00 (three years ago)
learning, spells, mumbo-jumbo
my major in college
― ꙮ (map), Monday, 6 February 2023 21:04 (three years ago)
And here I thought it was something to do with the thane of Glamis
― Auf Der Martini (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 6 February 2023 21:29 (three years ago)
Carb Rangoon, things of that bat
_learning, spells, mumbo-jumbo_my major in college
― Alicia Silver Stone (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 6 February 2023 23:30 (three years ago)
Yeesh zing c’mon man
― Alicia Silver Stone (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 6 February 2023 23:31 (three years ago)
What I always think of when I hear the word glamour:
'I went to the l-l-library and l-looked it uh-uh-up,' Bill said. 'I think It's a gluh-gluh' — hepaused, throat straining, and spat it out — 'a glamour.' 'Glammer?' Eddie asked doubtfully. 'G-G-Glamour,' Bill said, and spelled it. He told them about an encyclopedia entry on thesubject and, a chapter he had read in a book called Night's Truth. Glamour, he said, was theGaelic name for the creature which was haunting Derry; other races and other cultures atother times had different words for it, but they all meant the same thing. The Plains Indianscalled it a manitou, which sometimes took the shape of a mountain-lion or an elk or an eagle.These same Indians believed that the spirit of a manitou could sometimes enter them, and atthese times it was possible for them to shape the clouds themselves into representations ofthose animals for which their houses had been named. The Himalayans called it a tallus ortaelus, which meant an evil magic being that could read your mind and then assume the shapeof the thing you were most afraid of. In Central Europe it had been called eylak, brother ofthe vurderlak, or vampire. In France it was le loup-garou, or skin-changer, a concept that hadbeen crudely translated as the werewolf, but, Bill told them, le loup-garou (which hepronounced 'le loop-garoo') could be anything, anything at all: a wolf, a hawk, a sheep, evena bug.
― peace, man, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 12:09 (three years ago)
I think of the novel by Christopher Priest.
― And Your Borad Can Zing (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 7 February 2023 13:11 (three years ago)
I read that NME C86 is short for class of 86 and not as I thought a play on C90 cassette tapes. Mind blown if true.
― Dan Worsley, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 14:42 (three years ago)
https://www.ft.com/content/830fe611-602d-4f54-b4c3-11b18d0d7d98
― Dan Worsley, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 14:44 (three years ago)
Nah it was named after C81 which was 81 minutes long
― Tim, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 15:01 (three years ago)
Happily I can’t see FT articles
― Tim, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 15:02 (three years ago)
https://archive.is/ZRwBe
― koogs, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 15:24 (three years ago)