Butterscotch; is that the one that tastes like vomit even before you eat it?
I am open to the possibility that it might have improved somewhat in the 20 years since I last dared to go near any of any flavour so a past-tense 'yes' and a present-tense 'who knows?'.
Why would Mr Rigsby's cat from Rising Damp mean anything to you anyway?
Another dessert! What are the chances? OK so the association is indirect, the Viennese Whirl being named after that particular cat's method of somersaulting through the window, but it's still a spooky coincidence.
Another dessert! What are the chances? OK so the association is indirect, the Viennese Whirl being named after that particular cat's method of somersaulting through the window, but it's still a spooky coincidence.
I thought the name came from the cat's litter deposits?
I thought the name came from the cat's litter deposits?
A common and entirely understandable misconception! It is usually a safe assumption that something is named after what it looks like, but this is so often just an easy mistake - case in point, the black box in an aircraft is usually bright orange, traffic cones are in fact tapered cylinders that do not normally contain ice cream (etc).
Comments
Yeah, until you die.
Well now you know what religious folk feel like.
Even assuming that the word sacred means anything unless one is religious.
Ah yes the message of the last supper.
Yes, that's it really - it's all down to the definition, as always.
Exactly. God means nothing to me, the word atheist means nothing to me.
Even Vienna means nothing to me.
Indeed and Angel Delight
Butterscotch; is that the one that tastes like vomit even before you eat it?
Not even mystic and soulful?
I thought the name came from the cat's litter deposits?
The usual culprits ^^^ and vvv
It doesn't. The television sitcom "Rising Damp" in it's entirety means nothing to me