What did you have for lunch or dinner today?
-
@scottalanmiller said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
@LilAng said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
I really want Cornbread for some reason.
Because it is awesome.
Still warm, melty butter
-
Just hit the cafeteria on the 16th floor.
-
Had Al Pastor tacos
-
I had R&R BBQ. Brisket and Ribs. Mac n Cheese. Hush puppies (not actual dogs) and peach cobbler. I smell like campfire but it was fantastic.
-
Had dinner here...
-
@LilAng said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
Hush puppies (not actual dogs)
pfft wimp
-
@tonyshowoff said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
@LilAng said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
Hush puppies (not actual dogs)
pfft wimp
Chinese?
-
-
Mei fun Thai style
-
-
Bought a big chunk of beef bottom round roast on sale yesterday, making some proper chili today.
-
Veggie chicken sandwiches.
-
https://www.hannasbakerycafe.com/
Mine, Chai Tea and baked cheese cake w/chocolate:
Motoko’s, black coffee and cold cheesecake with strawberry geletin:
-
@JaredBusch looks nice never tried chai tea before though.
-
@StuartJordan said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
@JaredBusch looks nice never tried chai tea before though.
What's even crazier is that in many languages "chai" means "tea", but as far as I know, in English speaking countries, I think "chai tea" is some sort of Indian tea. While I'm on the subject though, in all languages the word for "tea" is descended from the original two words for tea, "chai" or "tea". In German it's "tee" and in Slavik languages it's "chaj" or some variant there of.
-
@tonyshowoff said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
@StuartJordan said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
@JaredBusch looks nice never tried chai tea before though.
What's even crazier is that in many languages "chai" means "tea", but as far as I know, in English speaking countries, I think "chai tea" is some sort of Indian tea. While I'm on the subject though, in all languages the word for "tea" is descended from the original two words for tea, "chai" or "tea". In German it's "tee" and in Slavik languages it's "chaj" or some variant there of.
Tea is ちゃ (cha) in Japanese. It uses this Kanji: 茶
-
@JaredBusch said in What did you have for lunch or dinner today?:
Tea is ちゃ (cha) in Japanese. It uses this Kanji: 茶
Not surprising. The han is the same as well as the kanji, pronounced chá in Mandarin. Anyway so as far as languages I am familiar with to spout off with an American-influenced pronunciation key:
German/Finnish: tee (pronounced tay, well a bit different depending on dialect/accent)
Arabic: shay (pronounced shy, and I didn't include the arabic script because of unicode BS flipping things around)
Hungarian: tea (pronounced tay-ah)
Russian: чай (pronounced chai)
Bosnian/Croatian: čaj (pronounced chai)
Serbian/Macedonian: чај (pronounced chai) -
For my Birthday breakfast I am having french toast with fresh stawberries.
-
I had stuffed shells for lunch.
-
Too early for food.