T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
344.1 | "Set" not "Suck" | FOREST::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Tue Apr 07 1987 15:31 | 11 |
|
The phrase I've always heard was "Don't try to teach Grandma to *set* eggs".
Presumably, setting eggs was/is a field of grandmotherly expertise, although
I'm not sure what it means. Does it have to do with incubating eggs (either
by placing them in an incubator or under a hen?)
Anyhow, setting eggs sounds much more genteel than sucking eggs.
Larry
|
344.2 | "Suck" not "Set" | LYMPH::LAMBERT | How long can you tread water? | Tue Apr 07 1987 16:29 | 15 |
| No, the phrase is "suck", as in "Go teach your grandmother to suck eggs."
There's also the old phrase "He looks as guilty as an egg-suck dog."
I believe that it references the practice of poking holes in both ends of
an eggshell and sucking out the contents. Something chicken-stealing,
poor, hungry folks (or dogs) might be willing to try.
And if someone tells you to teach your grandma how to do it, it implies
that you *know how* (meaning you're less than the "salt of the earth"),
and that you're "shiftless" enough to not be able to get your grandma
food any other way.
Both of the phrases come out of the depression-era South, I believe.
-- Sam
|
344.3 | nope -- it's "egg-sucking" all right... | PSTJTT::TABER | Relax, the sun came back again. | Tue Apr 07 1987 16:34 | 10 |
| In these days of good dental care, it's rare to have old people who must
suck eggs any more. It was an expression that referred to the fact
toothless people preferred to eat eggs -- usually softboiled -- and of
course, you couldn't just bite in to them, you had to suck them off the
spoon. I imagine women who lived long enough to be grandmothers back
then had a fair amount of experience.
Chicken farmers still refer to "egg sucking dogs" when they chase
off/shoot dogs who eat the eggs.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
344.4 | trivia | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:17 | 2 |
| "Grandma" Helen Stone uses the expression in "THE ROLLING
STONES" . (Robert Heinlein - mid 50's ? )
|
344.5 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:53 | 12 |
|
Re: .4
Actually, Heinlein evidently had some trouble with the expression,
too. In at least one place he changed it to:
Don't teach your grandmother how to steal sheep.
This has a nicer ring to it, don't you think?
JP
|
344.6 | | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Wed Apr 08 1987 09:41 | 4 |
| > I believe that it references the practice of poking holes in both ends of
> an eggshell and sucking out the contents.
Isn't this the method used to preserve the eggshell whole (for painting
and decorating and such)?
|
344.7 | maybe you could set the eggs under the sheep | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Apr 08 1987 09:45 | 34 |
| "Don't teach your grandmother how to steal sheep" is a Westernism.
I couldn't begin to explain to an Easterner the depth of knavery
conveyed by that simple phrase. See, sheep aren't worth stealing
in the first place, so if you know how to steal sheep, it means
you've got so little property, and integrity, and other human virtues,
that you're stealing what no decent person would willingly even
own.
There are a number of related expressions, such as, "A man (woman)
who would do that (whatever you don't like) would steal sheep."
Which reminds me of the supposedly true story of the hippie wedding
in Montana in 1972. Two kids from Deer Lodge decided to get married
in the true 'love generation' spirit -- the ceremony was held beside
a lake at a local park, the bride wore a white muslin dress and
carried only a few local flowers, the groom had long hair and a
headband hand-embroidered by the bride. After they exchanged vows
promising equality and honor to each other, the guests were treated
(using the word loosely) to a reception of herbal teas and vegetarian
dishes.
The bride's elderly aunt didn't think much of it. She plumped herself
down on a picnic bench with a plate of hummus and whole-wheat pita
bread. "Hmph," she said to her friend. "I don't know what this world is
coming to. Something like this could never have happened when *we*
were young!"
"That's right," agreed her friend. "Imagine, a cattleman's son marrying
a sheepman's daughter!"
|
344.8 | Eggsactly | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 08 1987 10:13 | 19 |
| Re .4:
The expression is far older. Egg-sucking goes back to at least
the Medieval period, and is, as was suggested earlier, a relatively
unmessy way to consume the contents of an egg, if the eater doesn't
mind raw eggs. Presumably, "grandma" knew how to do this long before
the listener was born, nor is it a terrible difficult technique;
hence the expression.
Re .6:
That's known as "blowing out" an egg: instead of sucking out the
contents, they can be blown through the hiole away from the person's
mouth. I suppose which method is used depends upon how hungry the
person is at the time. ;-) Because of other connotations, the verb
isn't used that often these days.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
344.9 | Don't drive on it | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Apr 08 1987 12:01 | 2 |
| RE -1: and blowing out an egg is nothing like blowing out a tire.
|
344.10 | good with hangovers too! | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Wed Apr 08 1987 18:53 | 2 |
| And an egg with a small hole pierced in each end is less susceptible to
being spilt than a spoon by someone with old and shaky hands.
|
344.11 | Depends on the End | KAOA08::CUSUP_LAPLAN | | Fri Apr 10 1987 17:02 | 6 |
| In addition you can only blow the contents of an egg out by blowing
in the hole at a specific end; the one with the air sac. It won't
work if you blow through the other end.
I don't know about 'sucking eggs' though; Grandma never taught me.
|
344.12 | soak an egg | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon Apr 13 1987 17:47 | 19 |
| Reminds me of a magic effect we used to love to do as kids.
The effect is that you present a milk bottle (remember them???) with
an egg inside, clearly too large to have gotten in there, but it's
in there just the same. HOW DID HE DO IT ?
Answer:
Soak an egg (yes, soak, not suck) for a few days in a cup of vinegar.
Shell disolves and egg gets rubbery, kind of like a water balloon.
Now, throw a lit match into the milk bottle, and put egg on top.
As match burns (or is it after it goes out ?), low pressure sucks
egg into bottle.
If egg doesn't break as it hits bottom of bottle, you've got your
effect (or is that "affect" ??). Now just fish the match out.
/Eric
|
344.13 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Apr 14 1987 11:04 | 11 |
| Re .12:
To maske it work better, once the egg's establisged a seal, turn
the bottle on its side.
Also, beware some of the current crop of thin-shelled eggs.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: Now how do we relate this to words? How about the expression,
"Funny as a rubber egg"? :-)
|
344.14 | Visit civilization sometime :-) | ECLAIR::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Tue Apr 14 1987 11:51 | 4 |
| > The effect is that you present a milk bottle (remember them???)
Yes. Three delivered on my doorstep each morning.
|
344.15 | maybe that's why they switched to cardboard | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Apr 14 1987 12:49 | 8 |
| When my now-teenaged daughter was about 4, she asked me,
"Mama, doesn't it hurt the cow when the milk bottles come out of
her udder?"
(There, those are words!)
--bonnie
|
344.16 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Tue Apr 14 1987 19:18 | 2 |
| And I thought that they bred the hen inside the bottle, and
the problem was getting it out again after it had laid the egg!
|
344.17 | you do! | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Apr 15 1987 11:10 | 4 |
| You wait until the hen dies and then you pick it out bone by bone.
--bonnie
|
344.18 | It's kind of like Bonnie's chicken trick! | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Wed Apr 15 1987 22:26 | 6 |
| Hey! That reminds me... Have you ever seen a bottle of brandy with a
whole peach in it? What they do is stick a branch with a flower on it
into the empty bottle and let the fruit *grow* inside. When the fruit
reaches maturity, the branch is plucked away and the bottle is filled.
John M.
|
344.19 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Apr 16 1987 09:46 | 5 |
| Re .18:
Makes it rough for the pollinating bees, I'll bet. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
344.20 | I've always wondered | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 10:24 | 3 |
| But what kind of seeds do you plant if you want to grow a ship?
--bonnie
|
344.21 | ... Burpees Ships Seeds ... | MLCSSE::CIUFFINI | Personal name SET HIDDEN | Thu Apr 16 1987 11:04 | 8 |
|
Re. -1
Please be specific.
Exactly what kind of "ship" do you want to grow?
:-)
jc
|
344.22 | Gratuitous Irish joke... | PSTJTT::TABER | April: cruel month or just taxing? | Thu Apr 16 1987 11:36 | 6 |
| Mrs O'Toole: What's in the bottle ye have in the kitchen, Mrs. O'Taber?
Mrs O'Taber: Faith, 'tis prob'ly me hoosband Patrick.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
344.23 | Ship out! | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Apr 16 1987 11:47 | 10 |
| Re .21:
You can use the seeds of consideration if you want to grow a
friend_ship_.
You can use the seeds of attraction if you want to grow a
relation_ship_.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
344.24 | shiply fascinating | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 13:15 | 10 |
| Thank you, all, this will no doubt help my garden and my liquor
cabinet.
However, I was thinking more of those little wooden clipper ships
you see in the windows of tobacco shops and such.
Maybe you have to grow the pine trees first, and then cut them down?
--bonnie
|
344.25 | | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Fri Apr 17 1987 09:10 | 2 |
| You know how when you lap a lollipop, it gets smaller? Well, those
vessels you've seen in bottles have been ship lapped.
|
344.26 | You asked for it... | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | | Fri Apr 17 1987 09:13 | 2 |
| re.23,.24 put a calf in the bottle and grow bull_ship.
Great fertilizer. :-)
|
344.27 | groan | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Apr 17 1987 10:29 | 9 |
| re: .25 --
I thought maybe the ships just shrank from being in the salt water
so much -- start out with a clipper, after 20 years you have a fishing
boat, after 50 years you stick it in a bottle and sell it to the
tourists.
--bonnie
|
344.28 | creak... | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Fri Apr 17 1987 10:59 | 11 |
| Re .27:
Actually, what's done is that you mold a _humungous bottle, march
in some shipwrights. Then you sprinkle the whole thing, inside
and out with alom. When the bottle is small enough, you put in
miniaturized wood. The shipwrights buld a miniatyure clipper or
what-have-you, then they march out the neck of the bottle.
Don't know what they do with 'em afterwards....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
344.29 | gourd us | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Fri Apr 17 1987 15:36 | 11 |
| The flower only needs to be pollinated once.
So, as long as the bee be done before the bottle is put over the flower,
we're all set.
That's a cute idea about the peach ! It might be interesting to do
it with some sort of vegetable that doesn't rot, such as a gourd,
just to have a gourd-in-the-bottle on the living room coffee table
as a conversation piece.
/Eric
|
344.30 | The parse that refreshes | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Fri Apr 17 1987 15:57 | 10 |
| Re .29:
If you fill the bottle with a strong enough alcohol, any fruit or
vegetable would last indefinitely.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
To make this even relate vaguely to grammar, I suppose one choive
of bottle contents might be a certain pome fruit. Then, we could
hand the bottle to the orchard man and say, "Pears this."
|
344.31 | Pickle in a bottle | JON::MORONEY | Don't cloud the issue with the facts! | Fri Apr 17 1987 20:11 | 10 |
| I had a dill pickle in an old soda bottle once. The bottle was placed over an
immature pickle, rather than a flower. When grown, it was pickled. The vinegar
would preserve it nearly forever. It was grown and pickled by the mother of
a friend of mine.
I read somewhere the Japanese grow cubical watermelons by placing them in boxes
when small. The idea is so they would stack nicely in stores, after the boxes
were removed from them when grown.
-Mike
|
344.32 | connected to language? | QUILL::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Sat Apr 18 1987 14:01 | 6 |
| Isn't an excuse to make bad puns an adequate reason?
Besides, pearsing syntax is one of our main jobs!
--bonnie
|
344.33 | define BOAT, please | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Fri Apr 24 1987 16:03 | 10 |
| Your discussion back there reminds me off an old definition of BOAT:
BOAT n.
A hole in water, surrounded by wood, into which one pours money.
/Eric
|
344.34 | boat disposal | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Apr 24 1987 16:58 | 5 |
| What is Cecil the Seasick Sea Monster's favorite meal?
Fish and ships.
|
344.35 | Ssssss... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Apr 24 1987 17:30 | 2 |
| That's Cecil the Seasick Sea *Serpent*!
Ann B.
|
344.36 | ? | TWEED::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Sat Apr 25 1987 00:07 | 4 |
| Where do you get seeds for plants that grow pickles - is that
like the velcro and veals (cf Dave Barry I think)?
Bonnie J>
|
344.37 | The same place that breeds Naugas for luggage sells them | JON::MORONEY | Don't cloud the issue with the facts! | Sun Apr 26 1987 23:49 | 4 |
| Alright, it was a cucumber plant! I think they have varieties of cucumbers
bred specifically for pickling, though.
-Mike
|
344.38 | How about relish bushes? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Mon Apr 27 1987 17:48 | 3 |
| Yes there are cucumbers bred just for making pickles but that takes
all the fun out of it :-).
|
344.39 | | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Tue Apr 28 1987 09:23 | 2 |
| Sandwiches have strange names - hero, reuben, submarine, hoagy. I've
invented another sandwich - the Idea. Now you can relish it.
|
344.40 | the sandwich of many names | PSTJTT::TABER | April: cruel month or just taxing? | Tue Apr 28 1987 09:49 | 19 |
| Re: .39
Something interesting is that three of the sandwiches mentioned are the
same thing:
hero (because it's large)
submarine (because it's shaped like one)
hoagy (from the name of a place that made them)
I've also heard the same sandwich reffered to as:
Italian (which leads to...)
grinder (for "organ grinder.")
spuckie (who knows why?)
In fact, I think that particular sandwich must be the sandwich with the
most names in the world. Are there any more? Does anyone know where
"spuckie" came from? (Had anyone ever heard it before? I've never heard
it outside the northern suburbs of Boston.)
>>>==>PStJTT
|
344.41 | ... Nibbles and Bytes ... | MLCSSE::CIUFFINI | Personal name SET HIDDEN | Tue Apr 28 1987 10:02 | 7 |
| Re: 39
"The Idea", a great name for a sandwich. I suppose next you'll
claim that it's food for thought.
jc
(mea culpa.... I couldn't resist!)
|
344.42 | oh, what memories | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Apr 28 1987 10:04 | 27 |
| I haven't heard 'spuckie' for years -- my dear departed grandfather,
a gentleman of considerable temper, brought it home from Europe
with him after living in Italy for a number of years after World
War I. I believe he spelled it "spucci." He used it in an
unquestionably derogatory sense, when he was upset with my
grandmother's cooking, as in "I can't eat this thing. You might
as well serve me a spuckie."
Hoagies didn't move into our part of Montana until the 50's or so, and
then mostly thanks to the snack counters at Woolworth's. There was,
however, an older version called a Shepherd's sandwich that consisted
of sliced roast meat (usually beef, venison, or horse), sliced onions,
and perhaps other sliced vegetables in a split loaf of round bread (the
kind the Basque shepherds make), usually wrapped in a cloth. You don't
eat it all at once, you just take out your handy-dandy knife (the kind
Basque shepherds use to slice each other up) and cut out a wedge, then
wrap the rest of it back into its cloth. When the bread gets too
dry, you soak it in your water first.
The common lunch in our part of the country was the pastie or pasty, a
small meat pie. The miners in Butte brought it with them from the
Balkans (places like Serbia and Dalmatia and Croatia). If you're in the
old part of town at lunch time, you'll still see the old men sitting on
benches in front of the saloons, each with a mug of beer and a pasty
wrapped in brown paper.
--bonnie
|
344.43 | yum | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Apr 28 1987 10:46 | 17 |
| Re .39:
"Grinder," I'd been given to understand (and I'm always open to
correction) didn't derive from "organ grinder" (although I'm sure
that a case could be made for that origin if it was filled with
chopped liver) but rather from the idea that such sandwiches were
frequently used by college stuidents right before midterm and final
exam times, when they were "grinding" -- that is, studying long
into the night.
I've gone to Greek estaurants where their (very tasty) "gyro"
sandwishes are pronounced approximately "hero." Is that the derivation
for "hero"? [As an ex aerospace type and pilot, "gyro" means something
else to me, anmd I trip all over myself pronouncing it "hiero,"
in Greek restaurants.]
Steve Kallis, Jr
|
344.44 | Of heroes and spuckies | PSTJTT::TABER | April: cruel month or just taxing? | Tue Apr 28 1987 16:04 | 21 |
| Well, when I was a kid, the "long" term for grinder was "guinnea
grinder" and the explanation was that it was the sandwich carried by the
Italian organ grinders. (We actually had a organ grinder in the
neighborhood. A hurdy-gurdy man to be more correct; he had a giant
push-cart with a handle coming out the side. Turning the handle produced
absurd music that sounded like a series of regular explosions in a band
locker. I can still hear it to this very day... it sounds like summer
to me.)
In the Boston area at least, the Greek restaurants pronounce it "YE-roo"
with a slight rolling of the "r." I have wondered if it elided into
"hero" too, but I don't know. Gyro is usually served in syrian bread,
so I tend to believe the people who say it is "hero" because of its
size. (Large things have heroic proportions, after all.)
My neighborhood was very Italian with sprinklings of just about every
other group that emigrated to the U.S. through Boston, so "spuckie"
could indeed be the Americanization of "spucci." Does anyone who knows
Italian know if "spucci" is a word?
>>>==>PStJTT
|
344.45 | How about the Dagwood? :-) | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Apr 28 1987 17:39 | 15 |
| Re .44:
I don't kniow Italuan, but the -ucci ending has always been an "oochie"
ending when I've encountered it, making the sandwich pronounced
something on the order of "spoochie." Of course, if "spuckie" came
from an Americanization of the written form (just as I tend to
pronounce "gyro" as "djeyerow" rather than either "kheero" or "yeerro"
when I see it), then it seems like a legitimate evolution.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: "Idea" for a sandwich title would probably be corrupted quickly
to "I.D." and then to something like "hidey." That's word biz.
|
344.46 | | IRT::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Fri May 01 1987 23:08 | 2 |
| Regarding the location of the Nauga-breeding industry (.37). You've
heard of Naugatuck CT, perhaps?
|
344.47 | Latin Derivation... | MARRHQ::MALLONEE | | Mon May 11 1987 15:33 | 13 |
| "Spucci" is, indeed an Italian word. It is a generic term used
to decribe pudding-like foods. The derivation of this word is,
indeed, Latin. The root is "spuntz"; interchangeably either a verb
or noun describing small explosions of (organic) material, or the
substance yielded from such an explosion. Admittedly a rather
distasteful term, it was used in rome to describe the bursting of
large acne deposits. When squozen, the pimple would surely "spuntz".
The material that wound up on one's fingers, was called, simply,
"spuntz", the noun. In more loose usage, this word was used to
describe other, even more distasteful, explosions. The common factor
in all the usages was the pudding-like appearance of the substance
involved. This probably explains the current day use of the Italian
form of the word to describe pudding.
|
344.48 | I can barely imagine... | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Charmed, I'm sure... | Mon May 11 1987 16:35 | 9 |
| re: < Note 344.47 by MARRHQ::MALLONEE >
> In more loose usage, this word was used to
> describe other, even more distasteful, explosions.
The mind boggles at the prospect. Yuck.
:-)
-- Sam
|
344.49 | Squozen? | IPG::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Tue May 12 1987 09:32 | 2 |
| Re: .47 Has this verb gained strength in its travels? :-)
|
344.50 | This topic is getting revolting... | IRT::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Tue May 12 1987 10:17 | 1 |
|
|
344.51 | Then get off the sidetrack! | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue May 12 1987 10:43 | 7 |
| Re .50:
So let's "unrevolt" it. Specifically, are there any equivalent
phrases that spring to mind that are analogous to the title phrase?
Such as "Don't try to teach Scrooge to be a miser"?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
344.52 | | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Tue May 12 1987 13:14 | 11 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
What about:
You can't have your cake and eat it.
Taking coals to Newcastle.
A wink is as good as a nod to a blind
horse.
and numerous other energy consuming
futilities.
Max
|
344.53 | Squozen Charmin | MARRHQ::MALLONEE | | Tue May 12 1987 13:15 | 1 |
| OK, if you insist, I'll desist. Seeyalaterbye.
|
344.54 | Or, as Groucho said ... | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Tue May 12 1987 14:56 | 4 |
| when surrounded by numerous members of the opposite sexgender:
"There's more girls here than you can shake a stick at."
"... if that's your idea of a good time."
|
344.55 | RE: .40 | WAGON::BRACK | | Mon Oct 19 1987 17:20 | 8 |
|
Having just read the discussion about the different names for a particular
type of sandwich, I recall another name for that type of sandwich. In the
Midwest it is sometimes called a poor boy sandwich. The reasoning I heard
for that name was that it was the only kind of meal a poor boy could afford
to buy.
- - - Karl
|
344.56 | what rock song talked about WISH SANDWICH | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Thu Oct 22 1987 18:05 | 8 |
| Does anyone remember the song, and who performed and wrote it, the one
in which someone states
You know what a WISH SANDWICH is ?
That's when you have two pieces of bread and you WISH you had
some meat.
/Eric
|
344.57 | a clue or two | LEZAH::BOBBITT | when EF Hutton jumps people listen | Fri Oct 23 1987 11:54 | 9 |
| two groups which come to mind are Sha Na Na and The Blues
Brothers...they also discuss a Cool-Water-Sandwich on a
Sunday-go-to-meeting-bun, bow...bow...bow.
Any one else have any clues - it came out maybe late 70's, early
80's, but the song style sounds older than that.
-Jody
|
344.58 | "What did I say to make you mad this time, BABE?" | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Will that redeem us Uncle Remus? | Fri Oct 23 1987 14:58 | 19 |
| I believe the name of the song is "Rubber Biscuit". It's "Elwood Blues"'s
(aka Dan Akroyd) big song.
It's on the Blues Brother's _Briefcase Full of Blues_ album, thought, as
with all the songs on that album, they didn't write it themselves. It's
an older song. I'll try to remember to look up the credits (and verify
the name of the song) over the weekend.
For those unfamiliar with it, that album is *fantastic*. They use the
same band as from the movie, "The Blues Brothers". Great band, and it
shows a side of both Belushi and Akroyd that you'd never believe.
"A rubber biscuit is the kind of a biscuit that you thow against the wall
and let it bounce back into you mouth. If it don't bouce back, you go
HUNGRY! Bow, bow, bow..."
Whaddya want for nothing, RUBBER BISCUIT?
-- Sam
|
344.59 | Poor boy <> Sub | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Will that redeem us Uncle Remus? | Fri Oct 23 1987 15:04 | 10 |
| But back to the previous tangent... :-)
re: .55
I've always understood a "Poor Boy" sandwich (usually heard pronounced,
"poah boi sammich") to be something very specific. Maybe something like
a "sloppy joe"? Not sure what's in it, but I had always thought it had
specific, and cheap, ingredients.
-- Sam
|
344.60 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Fri Oct 23 1987 16:18 | 6 |
| re .59:
Depends on where you are. In some places, yes, it's a "sloppy joe." In
others, it's a sub, a.k.a. grinder, a.k.a. hoagie, etc.
Jon
|
344.61 | It's after 5:00 and your making me hungry! | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Digital Internal Use Only | Fri Oct 23 1987 18:08 | 5 |
| Around here, a "sloppy Joe" is some type of roll covered with meat cooked in a
spicy sauce. The sauce varies greatly and so does the variety of meat.
A grinder etcetera is generally a sandwich of almost any filling on a long
(French or Italian) roll.
|
344.62 | Back to sucking eggs. | LDP::BUSCH | | Mon Oct 26 1987 09:46 | 9 |
| Being new to this file, I'd like to comment on the original subject of this
note. In "The Hobbit" by J.R.R. Tolkein, in the chapter called "Riddles in
the Dark", Gollum remembers the time in his youth "...sitting under the
riverbank teaching his grandmother to suck eggs..."
This is a British story and I doubt that it has any origins in American
sub-culture. However, just what the significance of the reference is, I don't
know.
Dave
|
344.63 | | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Thu Nov 19 1987 16:49 | 8 |
|
In Biloxi (biLUXee) Mississippi, a Po'Boy was made on a hot dog
roll with leftover whatevers from the fridge (there's a word to
play with, eh?) and was wrapped with bacon. You broiled a Po'Boy
and then smeared catsup or mustard all over its outside.
Perry
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