When Bethel serves pancakes, do they give you a choice? Is it only 1 choice.
It sure would be a deal breaker for me if I didn't get to choose between bacon, or sausages.
by Quarterback 11 Replies latest jw friends
When Bethel serves pancakes, do they give you a choice? Is it only 1 choice.
It sure would be a deal breaker for me if I didn't get to choose between bacon, or sausages.
Seriously? You'd go there and be only hindered by the food choices?
Sugar and lemon juice in pancakes. Sausages and bacon belong on the same plate as grilled tomatoes, fried mushrooms, two fried eggs and a tower of buttered toast with a steaming mug of strong 'builders' tea on the side. :)
You eat pancakes with scrapple, all covered in maple syrup. And a side of scrambled eggs, with mayonnaise. Toast is optional.
And coffee, strong. Cream and sugar.
Maybe there's a Bethel special menu, you know, pancakes with the JW.org logo stamped on them, maple syrup to baptize your pancakes in, wholesome non-worldy grown veggies, lake of fire toast, all provides by spirit directed cooks. Oh yeah, there's new light recipes so it updarea every now and then ;)
This is, sadly, where our American cousins go wrong.
A 'proper' breakfast is: two sausages, two rashers of smoked bacon ('Canadian' I think they call it), mushrooms, black pudding, grilled tomato, baked beans, two fried eggs, fried bread, served with toast and strong tea.
And for the 'real deal' - if you're Welsh - laver bread rolled in oatmeal and fried in the bacon fat.
Now THAT'S a breakfast.
My mother always gave us pancakes with sugar and orange juice. Don't know if that's a London thing which is where she grew up.
Quorn bacon style slices are surprisingly good with scrambled eggs and toms.
do jw's eat black pudding? is it allowed?
according to wiki-
"Black pudding is the native British version of blood sausage. It is generally made from pork blood and a relatively high proportion of oatmeal. In the past it was occasionally flavoured with pennyroyal, differing from continental European versions in its relatively limited range of ingredients and reliance on oatmeal and barley instead of onions to absorb the blood. [ 1 ] It can be eaten cold, as it is cooked in production, but is often grilled, fried or boiled in its skin."
Sounds rather disgusting to me but to each his own! and no, I don't want to know how hot dogs are made.
Carla, LOL!
Taylor ham, well done.
Just gave away where I live!