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q16
q16.
i: day shares with Bridget?
ii: did Ramsay combine with Turtle Soup?
iii: was named after Margaretha, Märtha and Astrid?
iv: was inspired through an invitation to see Elsa of Brabant?
v: was Tom’s intended fate prior to his rescue from beneath the attic?
vi: according to the Captain, always ate better if it did not scald your gullet?
vii: is a sweetened combination of egg yolk and a Sicilian wine?
viii: creation formerly had the sobriquet “solognotte”?
ix: do Margrethe’s subjects use as a shibboleth?
x: moistens the lip and brightens the eye?
INCOMPLETE: we need vi and viii, and a confirm on i!
i: day shares with Bridget?
ii: did Ramsay combine with Turtle Soup?
iii: was named after Margaretha, Märtha and Astrid?
iv: was inspired through an invitation to see Elsa of Brabant?
v: was Tom’s intended fate prior to his rescue from beneath the attic?
vi: according to the Captain, always ate better if it did not scald your gullet?
vii: is a sweetened combination of egg yolk and a Sicilian wine?
viii: creation formerly had the sobriquet “solognotte”?
ix: do Margrethe’s subjects use as a shibboleth?
x: moistens the lip and brightens the eye?
INCOMPLETE: we need vi and viii, and a confirm on i!
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St Brid is 1st feb. That's also the pre-christian festival of spring - Imbolc - and the Official First Day Of Spring in civilised places eg ireland.
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Although i can't think of a pudding connection.
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Not that i remember! Essential accessory of la le brid is a cross made of rushes.
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a) there is both BRIDE CAKE and FORFAR BRIDIES (not actually the same thing)
b) St Bridget's Day, 1 Feb, marks the beginning of the Celtic Spring (so-called bcz the coldest/wettest/iciest bit of the year is about to begin :D
c) diminutives of Bridget include BRIDE *and* BRIDIE
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(Anonymous) 2016-01-12 10:57 am (UTC)(link)no subject
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iii: Sounds very much like Norwegian and/or Danish royalty. We have something called prinsesseterte, ie princess tart or cake, which could be named after this lot.
vii: I think this is zabaione / zabaglione (sp etc).
ix: Danish phonology is infamously difficult for foreigners, with its complex of vowel glides, semi-stopped throat sounds etc (nb possible misuse of technical language). See for instance wikipedia's phonetic rendering of the name of composer Per Nørgård (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Per_N%C3%B8rg%C3%A5rd)! The term "rødgrød med fløde", ie thick red fruit soup/pudding with cream, is the classic test for this. Here is a video where Nikolaj Coster-Waldau demonstrates (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERpGwQggj_g).
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The original recipe first appeared in the 1948 Prinsessornas Kokbok cookbook, which was published by Jenny Åkerström, a teacher of the three daughters of H.R.H. Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland.
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Vi sounds like something emma's grumpy father would say.
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" The Duke of Orléans gave a dinner party to celebrate her triumph. For the occasion, Auguste Escoffier created a new dessert, and to display it, he used an ice sculpture of a swan, which is featured in the opera. The swan carried peaches which rested on a bed of vanilla ice cream and which were topped with spun sugar. "
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"the tarte Tatin was created accidentally at the Hotel Tatin in Lamotte-Beuvron, France ... by two sisters, Stéphanie and Caroline Tatin."
"Historians and gourmets have argued, whether it is a genuine creation of the Demoiselles (sisters) Tatin, or the branding of an improved version of the "tarte solognote", a traditional dish named after the Sologne region which surrounds Lamotte-Beuvron."
google/wikipedia