Snape and American food

carolynwhite2 carolynwhite2 at aol.com
Sat May 13 14:03:48 UTC 2006


--- In HPFGU-Catalogue at yahoogroups.com, "Debbie" <elfundeb at ...> wrote:

> Sending my owl with much chocolate, yet aware that that sort of 
> dementor doesn't really go away until the job is done.  We need you 
> back!
> 

Owl gratefully received. Am stockpiling industrial quantities. I 
think it was the man upstairs who defined the four main food groups 
as nicotine, alcohol, caffeine and chocolate..

Just for reference, in case anyone is tempted: don't simultaneously 
take on 1)20 worried and frightened staff; 2)high profile industry 
engagement programme; 3)top-level strategic review; 4)major high-
roller project with previously unknown organisation.

> 
> Ok, I've checked the archives, and the consensus seems to be on 
> these 8 categories (with commentary culled from various posts):
> 

Right, done the new categories. This is what you've got (the ones 
marked * previously existed):

2.4.1.1 Snape & Love*
2.4.1.2 Snape transfigured* (old Vampire!Snape now a subcat)
2.4.1.3 ESE!Snape*
2.4.1.4 Good!Snape*
2.4.1.5 Who is Snape working for (*some acronyms shifted here but 
they need checking for relevance)
2.4.1.6 Character studies (new)
2.4.1.7 Young Snape & MWPP (new)
2.4.1.8 Snape & Harry (new)
2.4.1.9 Snape & teaching style (new)
2.4.1.10 Snape as a literary construct (new)

Personally, I think that the Good! and ESE! Snape will prove 
unworkable, but lets see what emerges.


> 
> Now on to more important things --
>  
> In a word, yes.  My son prefers lobster to McDonald's.  
 
> I have to admit I've never seen turtle on a menu anywhere though I 
> don't live far from Baltimore . . . are they endangered?  Nor have 
I  seen Quahog pie, though I've never been to Provincetown so it may 
be served there.  But the rest of it is alive and well and, for the 
> most part, delicious (I can't vouch for Philadelphia Pepperpot).  
> 
> Debbie
>

I have had Maine lobster myself and very good it was too, but I've 
not sampled the other delights. Isn't there an American turtle 
species that is an aggressive menace, and taking over the waterways 
here in the UK as a result of escapees? Maybe it's that one!

Carolyn








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