MadModder
The Breakroom => The Water Cooler => Topic started by: NeoTech on April 23, 2013, 04:06:43 PM
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I stumbled across this on the mighty facerape.. I found it kinda amusing.. and well true in most senses.. Welcome to sweden. ;)
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Hi NeoTech,
12-13 , 21-22, Were all true in 1964 (the last time I was there). Don't know about the rest, but I share your view about peanut butter & jelly sandwiches.(what the US calls "jelly" we call "jam") Yuk.
Cheers Dek. :med:
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I can't do anything then agree to this :D
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A nation that eats lutfisk complaining about how awful PB&J is?! One could cut the irony with a knife.
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I hate PB&J. Always have. My wife, who is Swedish American loves it. Eats that for breakfast. She's was a food editor for Natural Health magazine. Go figure. :Doh:
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I have to say that Sweden is one of my favourite countries. I have friends in Goteborg and Lund and really like to people. Yes, some of those things ring true and Midsommer is an interesting time. I'm heading back there next March and really looking forward to it.
Oh - one thing: A Swedish mile is NOT a mile, so don't think you can walk the two miles into town after spending your cab money on beer!
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I have to say that Sweden is one of my favourite countries. I have friends in Goteborg and Lund and really like to people. Yes, some of those things ring true and Midsommer is an interesting time. I'm heading back there next March and really looking forward to it.
Oh - one thing: A Swedish mile is NOT a mile, so don't think you can walk the two miles into town after spending your cab money on beer!
Might I ask how you know that fact? Personal experience? :lol: :lol: :lol: :D :D
Cheers :beer:
Don
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Don - I am not a liberty to divulge that information...
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Hi NeoTech,
12-13 , 21-22, Were all true in 1964 (the last time I was there). Don't know about the rest, but I share your view about peanut butter & jelly sandwiches.(what the US calls "jelly" we call "jam") Yuk.
Cheers Dek. :med:
Isn't it jam if made from berries, and jelly if from fruit? Or the other way around.
Mosey
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Marv, The consumption of lutfisk is dwindling, thank God! I think it's disgusting... But most of that is mostly true, I tried PB&J when I was in Seattle. Not my thing...
Mayhem is right, a Swedish mile is 10 km (about 6 Anglo-Saxon miles)... Takes a couple of hours to walk, if not more, if you spent the cab money on beer... Speaking of which, it's expensive if you don't like stuff as light as American "normal" beer (don't order Pripps Blå, it's as thin as Budweiser...). But Systembolaget (the state owned "off license") is better than you think, the staff know their stuff, and the selection is pretty good at any of their stores.
And, if you ever come here, you must try "Tunnbrödsrulle och en Pucko"! I'll leave to Neo and Saw to explain...
Kjelle (who drinks Swedish coffee almost like the article said, except for before bed...)
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I'd never heard of a Swedish mile before. Seems it used to be 36,000 feet or just over 6.8 English miles, but has been standardised at 10 km, which is somewhat less.
Andy
PS Don't forget marmalade, Mosey.....
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Tunnbrödsrull och en pucko = Flat bread roll and a chocolate milk. Not really but close enough. :drool:
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Very nice in Cornish Pasties with Onion and Tatys.
Trev
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Tunnbrödsrull och en pucko = Flat bread roll and a chocolate milk. Not really but close enough. :drool:
Well a flatbread roll with mashed potatos, sausage picled cucumber and or shrimp in mayonaise, depending on how you like it i guess. I prefet it with some dried onions and blueberry juice ;D
And well.. you shouldnt say "Pucko" to a swede as a one word that can result in a punch in the face.. you relly need to put it in a sentence..
Depending on where you are in the country a "Pucko" is the same as "Stupid, Daft, dumb as ****".. The language barrier can be really funny sometime with anglosaxic languages. ;)
A metric mile is 10km anywhere i guess.. its the standardised of 1000m = 1km x 10 = 10km = 1 Mile
Regarding "Lutfisk" or "Surströmming" its not that common that people eat that anymore. But its funny as **** to serve it to foreigners never seen it before. That and "Pölsa".. :D
And well coffe.. i drink three pots a day or so.. thats about 36 cups of coffe any given day.. i wouldnt function as a human being without it :ddb:
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I remember Gunilla, she taught me "utedas af tegele", forgive the spelling, and she took me home from work for lunch of swedish meatballs.
Mosey