Subj : Tea time To : Denis Mosko From : Ardith Hinton Date : Wed Mar 10 2021 23:56:25 Hi, Denis! Recently you wrote in a message to Ardith Hinton: AH> I eat perhaps one or two a year, unless called upon to AH> make an ambrosia salad... which the local deli will AH> gladly provide if they don't run out of it before I get AH> there. We use the full-sized version only when we're AH> on a camping trip & our daughter insists on 'smores AH> cooked over the fire.... :-)) DM> "Deli" - Delivery service? Good guess... especially since, with restrictions placed on where we can go & with whom because of COVID-19, many people are having food delivered. But what I meant was a delicatessen, a specialty shop &/or a corner of a large grocery store which has e.g. cooked meats & pre-prepared salads for sale. :-) DM> ;() Russian make a nice threat mostly with water and DM> gelatin. AH> Alan said "treat"... not "threat". These are different AH> words, which have different meanings & are also pronounced AH> differently. DM> Treat - Russian "sud" or what? My knowledge of Russian is severely limited, and Uncle Google was of no help there... so I must resort to explaining the idea in English. A treat, where Alan & I come from, may be a food item a person rarely enjoys because it costs more money than they are willing to pay except on special occasions &/or because it's incompatible with their usual fat/calorie/carbohydrate allowance. WRT marshmallows, the original recipe... which included egg whites & marshmallow root... was altered to make them cheaper & easier to produce. All the examples I've seen consist mainly of sugar, corn starch, and water. There are other sweets I'd much rather have if I want to go that route... [chuckle]. --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+ * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716) .