Sunday, December 18, 2011

Name That Dish

See if you can come up with the most delicious name for this dish. You may want to spin it like you're trying to sell something in one of those gourmet holiday catalogs.


Have fun with it and when the comments are in, I'll let you know exactly what it is.

9 comments:

  1. no comments yet!? must have been a busy Christmas week.

    I like the evocative names of British dishes that seem to have nothing to do with the actual food, like "bubble & squeak" and "toad in the hole". So I will call this dish "Roundhouse Oil Can".

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  2. Well, they don't call me Thomas the Tank Engine for nothing. Actually, they don't call me Thomas the Tank Engine at all.

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  3. Jeepers, I've been out of it here for quite awhile! Hmm; inasmuch as you folks had pumpkin coming out of your ears, how about Chumpkin Souffle! That would be a combination of pumpkin and chocolate:)

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  4. Very creative, Mom, but no pumpkins were harmed in the making of this dish. Maybe the orange dish suggested it to you - but it is only chocolate. I have to say, though. I'm not so sure I would eat Chumpkin Souffle any more than I would eat Roundhouse Oil Can. It reminds me of a Dwarf in the Chronicles of Narnia called 'Trumpkin'.

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  5. Wait...you never said what it actually is did you? You can't just say it's chocolate. Surely it has a real name? Chocolate spoon bread??

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    Replies
    1. Ummm. It's chocolate...cake. From a box. Sorry for the letdown. It looked so delectable I thought I should post it. It did actually taste pretty good, though.

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    2. Ummm. It's chocolate...cake. From a box. Sorry for the letdown. It looked so delectable I thought I should post it. It did actually taste pretty good, though.

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    3. I have a soft spot in my heart (and a literal one in my tummy) for box mix cakes. They're pretty good!

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