LexieOnRale wrote: » Tic crackers and cheddar cheese. Hight of sophistication me
magentis wrote: » Always wondered about that maggi stuff,must try it.
whoopsadoodles wrote: » I wouldn't have a man who demands a dinner, nor one I would speak to like that in return! If I'm cooking for you, it means I love you, and that means full effort will be made. Even if it's only spaghetti hoops on toast, it will be done well. That comes from my mam. You can't have a sandwich in my mam's house without feeling like you've been served in a fancy cafe. I'm a much better cook thatn my mam though :P The mutt is a very very fussy eater, and I've been told "she'll eat when she's hungry enough", but she won't. I've tried it, and she's gone days without food. It's awful. She has sensitive skin, and can't eat most dog food, nor chicken or beef. She's on suuuuuper expensive prescription food but I have to hand feed it to her nugget by nugget. So it's worth boiling up a few potatoes and veg a lump of meat that lasts a week to see her push the bowl around trying to get the last bit Today I had some cake on account of it being birthday cake so that doesn't count for calories does it?
Graces7 wrote: » Having someone or a pet to care for is a healing.. Not like a man coming home late demanding his dinner to be told, "Your dinner is in the dog!"
BBDBB wrote: » dry toast and coffee Yesterday I bought myself a bottle of Sazerac rye whiskey as a late birthday treat to myself and decided the best thing to do would be to "sample" it, it was lovely so the sampling became a tasting which became a quaffing as it was going down so nicely. I feel as rough as a badgers arse this morning bleurgh
yermandan wrote: » Mini chicken fillets baked in Maggi So Juicy Sticky BBQ. Bleedn delish man