schtroumph_c: (ot4-berlinghoff)
schtroumph_c ([personal profile] schtroumph_c) wrote2008-08-23 12:03 am
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The new Stargate

So, someone can explain to me how Appearances by former cast members from "SG-1" and "Atlantis" are very possible. when these young peoples will be lost in space without any contact with Earth? Until Caldwell come to save them in the second season. Hologrammes?

There is a way to keep the attention of the 'old' fans: place it in the future and make one of them Cassandra, Torren or/and Jinto, and have them talking about their family.

The news came with two bad (story rejected and period), and I just feel down, so I made myself some chocolate cream, the kind in pastry, with the easy recipe from my baker of granddad (but seeing it's in French, the translation will be so-so):

3 tablespoons of flour
3 tablespoons of sugar
3 tablespoons of powder chocolate or 1 block and half grated. The powder is way easier.
Some vanilla. I always forgot it, it's not worse for it.
1/4L milk

Heat while blending with a whisk non stop until it began difficult to do it and the bubbles appear.

Let cool off a few seconds before eating it warm or let it cool off in the fridge a little longer for cold and, well, not solid, but consistant? I'm sure you can guess. Not in the mood to look for the correct term. Thick! Or almost thick. Set!

I'm going to wait for the Shrine, now.
florahart: (Default)

[personal profile] florahart 2008-08-22 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
MAGIC.

Obviously.

The WTF, is is big. Biiiiiig.

I think the term in English you want is maybe "set" since I'd say this is roughly what Americans call pudding (which is not the same thing as what the English call pudding). Though I usually do pudding with eggs and stuff when I do it. Yours is easier. Heh.

[identity profile] schtroumph-c.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 10:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I want to keep my forty-old space guys!!! And the two young two. And Chuck, and Zelenka, and Caldwell, and Marks, and Todd, and Woosley, and, and...

At least, they had the chance to make Atlantis fly before it's over.

Set, yeah, I think it's the word. Thanks you!

Well, this cream is more for the éclairs or the cream puff. I don't know if it'll work in cake, the recipe is probably different, and more classic.

[identity profile] scarah2.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 10:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Heh, I was thinking about this too.

Americans just eat a bowl of this and call it pudding. American pudding (http://www.helpendhungernow.org/_images/pudding_bowl_caa4.jpg)

I think in UK English "pudding" is used in a couple of ways. Specifically it's something like this (http://www.fashion-era.com/images/xmas/xmas_food_recipes/beeton_Xmas_plum_pudding_1890s.jpg). Like a cake. I think it is also used more generally to mean most "sugary dishes eaten after dinner." Americans would use "dessert" as this general term.

I have seen a lot of Americans who think that Luna Lovegood is always talking about a bowl of what you've made, but I don't think that's the case.

[identity profile] schtroumph-c.livejournal.com 2008-08-22 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I didn't even realised there was different definitions. I thought pudding was a jelly thing in the form of the cake in the photo, only sometimes, it was in a pot.

Learn something every day :)