Andy M.
Certified Pretend Chef
Our grandkids use salad forks for dinner. They're proportionately sized for their smaller hands.
+1 and SO too.
Our grandkids use salad forks for dinner. They're proportionately sized for their smaller hands.
I've been doing the same, Kayelle. It's easier for chopped salad and short pasta dishes.I remember Larry mentioning that he eats all of his meals with a soup spoon and that sounded curious until I thought about him being a vegetarian. While I need a knife and fork for meat, more and more I'm eating chopped salads and such with a spoon. A spoon also makes sense for short pasta dishes etc. I wouldn't do it in public but it's my kitchen, my option for "rules". Thanks Larry.
I've been doing the same, Kayelle. It's easier for chopped salad and short pasta dishes.
I really want a set of those eating utensils used on Star Trek. The forks only have 2 dangerous prongs, and the spoons are oddly offset.
I really want a set of those eating utensils used on Star Trek. The forks only have 2 dangerous prongs, and the spoons are oddly offset.
And a Klingon wine mug that looks like a Nuclear power plant cooling tower.
I did a quick google for Star Trek Flatware” and didn’t come up with much. This page, a blog, does have some cool stuff, but mostly just mugs and similar fare for rabid Trekkies. There are several items that are actually quite humorous.They look pretty cool...
That was interesting. Thanks for sharing, Kay.GG, I know you love reading about stuff like this too...fun read.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts...dalous-fork-to-the-incredible-spork-64593179/
Are you having a slow day?
If your Trekkie neighbor is ever planning a trip to New York (Ticonderoga, to be exact), he might want to make a pilgrimage to the replica of Star Trek's U.S.S. Enterprise set.I have a neighbor who is a major Treky." I bet he has a set. He owns several props from the TV shows.
He also has a full-size functional replica of the robot from Lost In Space.
CD
Yeah, I was.
Another stray thought and a little perspective on time: Can you remember the 70s? That was 40 years ago. Just think if you were the same age in the 70s that you are now. You would remember the 30s. If you were the same age you are now in the 30s, you'd remember the 1890s just as clearly. If you remember the 60s today, then in the 30s you'd be remembering the 1880s. Laura Ingalls Wilder's daughter was born in 1886.
Today is a slow day also.
If your Trekkie neighbor is ever planning a trip to New York (Ticonderoga, to be exact), he might want to make a pilgrimage to the replica of Star Trek's U.S.S. Enterprise set.
He has probably been there. I know he goes to the Star Trek Convention in Vegas. Besides, In a few more years, his house will be a Star Trek set replica.
CD