After my recent accident, my short-term is f*cked. So, I can relate.Nickswitz wrote:Well, for me the biggest problem with me is my memory is shot...
...Wait, where am I?
After my recent accident, my short-term is f*cked. So, I can relate.Nickswitz wrote:Well, for me the biggest problem with me is my memory is shot...
no they are called <<pomme-frites>>Mark wrote:Sionnach Glic wrote:It's not too late! Get out while you still can!Lt. Staplic wrote:Greetings from France everyone... found a moment to get on the internet, thought i would pop in and say hi
Snarl at someone!!!! They'll surrender!!
By the way, do the french call fries "American Fries"?
They call them frites.Mark wrote:By the way, do the french call fries "American Fries"?
Which is short for pomme frites, which itself comes from the French term for potatoes which is pommes de terre - "apples of the earth." Ignoring the vernacular in order to make a joke, pommes frites literally translates as "fried apples."Sionnach Glic wrote:They call them frites.
Which is a bit odd, as the name "French fries" comes from the method used to cut them - however, the term "French fries" has long since expanded to include all different shapes of riced, deep fried potato bits, whether they are French-cut or not.Sionnach Glic wrote:AFAIK, the US is the only place to call them French Fries. Everywhere else in the English speaking world just calls them chips (unless you're in a McDonald's).
Agreed.Mikey wrote:Meh, doesn't matter anyway - the only ones worth a damn anyway are good old thick-cut, skin-on Jersey shore boardwalk fries.
Which is why I bought a deep fryer; can't buy 'em? Make them yourself.Mikey wrote:Meh, doesn't matter anyway - the only ones worth a damn anyway are good old thick-cut, skin-on Jersey shore boardwalk fries.