Well I think BoB will be fuming when he sees how out of control this thread has got. Haha!
I don't have any curry puns. I just really enjoy putting words in italics.
Printable View
Well I think BoB will be fuming when he sees how out of control this thread has got. Haha!
I don't have any curry puns. I just really enjoy putting words in italics.
What about pudding?
I'm not a massive curry fan, but they're okay. However, I will mention that I love a good laksa. It's effectively both a curry and a soup. I'll let you think on what that means from my perspective. ;)
I guess it means that you also think curry is a drink :D
I thought Curry was just a sweet transvestite from Transsexual, Transylvania.
India - India in this context means, "i dinny" which is slang for "I do not" - EoFF Management (Matt) - believe all these curry puns.
I think Matt is India Nile about his ability to create culturally significant or food-relevant puns. But it ain't no thang but a chicken wangAttachment 60801. It's not everyday you find someone who can cook up non-stop tasty puns.
For those that think i'm crazy, here's the reasoning.
http://i.imgur.com/SenJbJp.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/YqwRfij.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/0GFJP3z.jpg
My girlfriend made me some curry yesterday. that trout ain't liquid!
Depends on the kind of curry, really. A dry curry quite naturally has no liquid at all. I don't think I've ever had a curry that was entirely liquid (like soup can often be). I'm not sure if I'd want to. I don't like curry much to begin with, but the curry I do like - laksa and tikka masala - have both liquid and food (well, liquid is debatable for the tikka masala I like).
I just made curry. Its kind of like chili in that its kind of liquid and kind of not (depending on the chili)
It was yummy though