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LessinSF 12-30-2008 02:52 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sidd Finch (Post 375899)
Not guilty. However, I did attend the opening of the Clock Bar (received an invitation from a client). There was a six-foot tall stunningly gorgeous blonde waitress. If necessary, I will kill Atticus to protect her.

Was her name Erin?

Sidd Finch 12-30-2008 03:43 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by LessinSF (Post 375922)
Was her name Erin?

I've either forgotten, or our relationship didn't progress to that point. Mrs. Finch's presence may have been an obstacle.

Flinty_McFlint 12-30-2008 03:47 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sidd Finch (Post 375937)
I've either forgotten, or our relationship didn't progress to that point. Mrs. Finch's presence may have been an obstacle.

A true player would have incorporated her into the game. Just sayin.

Mmmm, Burger (C.J.) 12-30-2008 04:12 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Flinty_McFlint (Post 375938)
A true player would have incorporated her into the game. Just sayin.

Where do you get that? I'm assuming Mrs. Finch is into three-ways, so long as they're anonymous.

Hank Chinaski 12-30-2008 04:19 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Flinty_McFlint (Post 375938)
A true player would have incorporated her into the game. Just sayin.

translation: my "foreplay" involves cell phone pictures I've taken looking up ladies' skirts.

Flinty_McFlint 12-30-2008 04:26 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Hank Chinaski (Post 375944)
translation: my "foreplay" involves cell phone pictures I've taken looking up ladies' skirts.

With other posters, I'd chide them for such a lazy, uninspired insult, but with you, I'll just say "good job Hank, funny."

Sidd Finch 12-30-2008 04:28 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Flinty_McFlint (Post 375938)
A true player would have incorporated her into the game. Just sayin.

Like you'd know a true player if your wife let you out to see one.

Hank Chinaski 12-30-2008 04:30 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Flinty_McFlint (Post 375948)
With other posters, I'd chide them for such a lazy, uninspired insult, but with you, I'll just say "good job Hank, funny."

thanks.

Penske_Account 12-30-2008 04:54 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mmmm, Burger (C.J.) (Post 375941)
Where do you get that? I'm assuming Mrs. Finch is into three-ways, so long as they're anonymous.

The anonymous thing is always the slippery slope, npi.

Sidd Finch 12-30-2008 05:04 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mmmm, Burger (C.J.) (Post 375941)
Where do you get that? I'm assuming Mrs. Finch is into three-ways, so long as they're anonymous.

Maybe at one time. But lately, every time another person gets into her fun parts, we end up having to take it home and change its diapers for a few years.

J. Fred Muggs 12-30-2008 06:28 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sidd Finch (Post 375961)
Maybe at one time. But lately, every time another person gets into her fun parts, we end up having to take it home and change its diapers for a few years.

Tell her to quit picking up guys at the VFW hall.

LessinSF 12-30-2008 08:15 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Atticus Grinch (Post 375822)
It must be true that alcohol precipitates violence, because I want desperately to punch absolutely everyone who had anything to do with this article. Including all of the people in the slideshow.

From this weeks tablehopper.com, a weekly food and beverage e-mail newsletter about the Bay Area scene I recommend to anyone who wants to subscribe - http://www.tablehopper.com/lets_talk/subscribe.html .

Quote:

Every year I do a roundup of ten things I don’t want to see on restaurant menus or in bars anymore. Yeah, it’s time for the tablehopper to cop some ‘tude, arch an eyebrow, and be a little fussy. Hey, you try eating out and drinking five nights a week, and you’d have some things to say, too. Let’s dive in.

No Thanks, I’m Fine: No More in ’09

1. I am so blowing the whistle on cupcakes. Yes, it’s great to have a few shops in each city, but we don’t need more than a few. And really, what is up with the LINES of people (mostly ladies) waiting at some of these places? Ri-donkedonk. Now, I would queue up for a true Parisian croissant… but unless those sprinkles on said cupcakes start coming from happy pills, the frosting on my cupcake is of an unhappy face.

2. Since we’re on dessert, what is up with all the salt ending up in my sweets? Salted caramels, lovely. Salted caramel ice cream from Bi-Rite, bring it. But when I start crunching on large flakes of salt in my chocolate dessert and suddenly need to order more water, I gotta draw the line. Please keep the monster flakes o’ Maldon away from my Madagascar chocolate.

3. You didn’t think I was going to skip fro-yo, did you? Hells no. See, it’s the exact same cycle that happened back in the 80s: too many yogurt shops open at once, the city gets flooded with fro-yo, and then suddenly every place closes shop and we end up with none. It’s a runaway train of fruit-named knockoffs breeding like rabbits. And hilariously, the City doesn't even have a Pinkberry, the mother ship of them all.

4. Ahem on mixology mayhem. Now, I love my cocktails as much as the next boozehound. And we’re blessed to have so many pros in San Francisco who can make a spectacular cocktail—I dig the “kitchen notes” in a lot of drinks that make them pair well with food, or help my cocktail do double duty as an appetizer, heh. But more and more I find myself glazing over when my drink starts to sound like something I should be eating in a haute French restaurant, with a detailed description of each and every ingredient and the techniques used to make the darned thing. Can we dial this back to five, or six? (The hype, and the minutes it takes to make it.) Let’s get back to having the folks behind the stick be bartenders first, mixologists second. Which is why I am finding myself back on Manhattans. They’re quick, because yo, I’m thirsty. And it better not cost $14.

5. I know I’m gonna get some heat on this one, but the cocktail consulting thing at local restos also needs some reining in. A good cocktail list does not a good restaurant make. Yeah, the cocktail program reads great on the restaurant’s press release, and it’s all dandy during the opening when the startenders are there, but what is going on with those drinks a month or two later? That quality control thing is tricky. I’d prefer simpler drinks (see above), less fanfare.

6. This one is a cautionary tale: bacon. I totally dug the pigwich at Orson, and the bacon with apple and maple donut from Dynamo was an item whose time had come. But folks experimenting with bacon better stop acting all OCG (Original Culinary Gangster) because look around, everyone is doing it. Bacon is totally jumping the shark.

7. Ditto on poached eggs. Breakfast, it’s what’s for dinner! Not. I eat far too many eggs every week; they’re definitely going with me to the desert island. But man, can we take it (over) easy? Eggs are making appearances on dinner menus everywhere. Unless the chef is doing something really unique, like Seis Kamimura at Postrio, who is soft-cooking an egg inside a Wolfe Ranch quail, wrapping that puppy in San Daniele prosciutto, then deep frying it, and glazing the quail with a maple Banyuls vinegar gastrique—otherwise, can we just leave the poached eggs to the brunch places, truffle season, pizzas, and bistros serving salade Lyonnaise?

8. Large plates, but small tables, and even smaller portions. ‘Nuff said.

9. Communal tables, especially the big ones that are so wide you can’t hear your friend sitting across from you, especially with all the other people around talkin’ loudly. So much for communal. Yes, they are a clever way to seat single diners or a random group of folks who don’t have reservations, but find me anyone out there who brightens up when the reservationist says, “No, we don’t have any tables available that night, but we do have first-come, first-served spots at our communal table!”

10. Did I just hear that woman at the table next to me ask if the salad was local? Yeah lady, the menu says it’s from County Line Harvest, relax. The intense local / sustainable / organic policing that is happening at restaurant tables is making my head hurt. It’s like the Inquisition! These are fine questions to ask of your salmon, your beef, and your tomatoes during that pesky scare, but what’s coming under the microscope next, the garnish in your drink, and the chocolate shavings on your dessert? Why even eat out?

Penske_Account 12-30-2008 08:28 PM

Another reason I don't FaceBook
 
Who exactly complained about the breastfeeding photos on Facebook? ........

Obviously the complainers don't have firsthand experience of breastfeeding. Once you've done it or been around it, you know it's.......about ......"mmm-mmm, boobies".



[link is to the London Times On line's blogs-pic of a breastfeeding baby is on the page, sfw or not at your own discretion]

Penske_Account 12-30-2008 08:29 PM

Re: Demon rummies.
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Sidd Finch (Post 375961)
Maybe at one time. But lately, every time another person gets into her fun parts, we end up having to take it home and change its diapers for a few years.

I am thinking of getting geriatric canine diapers for my almost 13 yo dog, thoughts?

Icky Thump 12-30-2008 10:37 PM

Re: Another reason I don't FaceBook
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Penske_Account (Post 375980)

What asswipe is going to complain about bare teat in public? Just move the kid's yap out of the way a few times to give us geezers a thrill.


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