Subject: I only have one thing to say.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-07-23 14:46:00 UTC
Mm, tea.
Well, another one: I'll be echo Ix here and say that I'm a bit jealous right now.
Subject: I only have one thing to say.
Author:
Posted on: 2015-07-23 14:46:00 UTC
Mm, tea.
Well, another one: I'll be echo Ix here and say that I'm a bit jealous right now.
On the 11th of July, Scapegrace, the Irish Samurai, Kaitlyn and I met up in Canterbury for yet another PPC Gathering. Naturally, everyone expected it would take months for me to write up the report (my personal best is two years, I think ^^).
Well, they were wrong! Entirely by accident, I managed to get the thing put together in under two weeks. I'm really not sure how that happened... ^^
So if you want to find out what happens when England's zaniest PPCers get together in a city not noted for its zaniness... here you go:
UK PPC Gathering, Canterbury 2015: Gatherdammerung
It was heaps of fun. ^_^ Thanks, guys!
hS
I get the impression that this report may mislead newbies who don’t know Scapegrace. Mentioning that two persons on this group picture identify as female might have helped.
HG
And for one memory that didn't make it in:-
Welcome to Hufflepuff
Not with anything you've said about me in the report, but just by writing it so quickly. I still haven't got round to writing up the Chicago Gathering from September last year. And how does one "accidentally" write a Gathering Report anyway? I suspect foul play of some sort.
Was that really the route we took? Yeah, that looks... less than optimal in terms of efficiency. However, it has given me a new goal: host a Gathering myself, and deliberately lead the group on a path that forms an amusing shape when viewed on a map (I'm sure we can all guess what shape first sprang to mind*). Because, apparently, I'm mature like that.
That shot you got of me at the door in Bree is a good one; I've rarely looked so mischievous.
- Irish
*A giant smiley face, obviously
Because it clearly doesn't mean "place where ink is forcibly injected into your skin-flesh," as it does in United Statesian.
And it is hilarious.
Kaitlyn, call up the Archibishop of Canterbury; I'm going to make him an offer he won't want to refuse!
hS
Mm, tea.
Well, another one: I'll be echo Ix here and say that I'm a bit jealous right now.
Has anyone ever read the fanfic "Princess Celestia Hates Tea"?
“Whoever wrote that piece of claptrap should be hanged from their tonsils.” Agent Des balled the printout and threw it behind him. “Hate tea? What nonsense is this? Not to mention, why the karak did I get an MLP fic? I didn't even watch the show!”
I believe that it was very clear that I addressed the question to the entire PPC, not just to you personally.
And what of the comedy as things just spiral out of control?
But now I'm wondering, which ones pollute their tea with sugar?
I like to drink my black and oolong tea varieties without sugar.
Unless I'm putting milk in. Then a little sugar brings out all the lovely complex flavors, especially if it's something like Earl Grey, whose citrusy floral notes would get buried under the dairy without a bit of sweetness to boost them. Any flavored black tea can benefit from sweetening, really. I typically use about half a teaspoon in my 12-oz mug. If it's spicy, though, like a chai, I use a full teaspoon. Chai is supposed to be sweet.
Of course, there's also the lemon-and-honey-and-maybe-whiskey route, which is excellent if you've got a sore throat. I've only done that with a robust black tea, like a breakfast blend. Wouldn't try it with, say, a Darjeeling.
I usually drink green teas straight, but if I feel like sweetener, only honey will do—these days, I like creamy honeys better than your standard amber honey. It can be really nice with your more astringent greens, like gunpowder or the historical Hyson tea I picked up in DC a couple years ago. Obviously not with genmaicha, though. That would be weird.
Then there's herbals, which I suppose you could discount as not actually tea if you're being a purist, but I will say that fruity teas (or infusions, if you like) need sugar. It's fruit, for crying out loud; and they tend to be rather acidic. Sweetness balances acid.
The trick, of course, is not to overdo it. You're adding sweetness to enhance the flavor of your tea; if you add so much that all you can taste is sugar, you're doing it wrong.
If you really want to get adventurous, try adding salt sometime. Salt interferes with bitter flavors, so if you accidentally oversteeped your brew, a tiny bit of salt will fix you up.
~Neshomeh, tea guru.
... without thinking of War of the Worlds.
OOOO-lonnnng
Oooo-lonng
The chances of anything
Coming from Mars...
^_^
hS doesn't drink tea
When I go back to steal all their fudge, I'll buy myself the Anarchy in the UK t-shirt. I'll see if I can't find one for you while I'm there, too. ^_^ Look how nice I'm am!
hS
... whether to respond to this with a dignified silence.
Or with a hammer.
hS
(The hammer is inflatable and makes a despairing 'SQUEEEeoooeeaaaakkkk...' whenever you hit someone with it)
. . . that you'll break your parents' hearts?
:(
-Kaitlyn, not an anarchist, no sugar please
Fudge covers a multitude of sins.
hS
I'm no heretic.
*chugs*
I am not an echo. What makes you think that?
I probably sound like a broken record at this point, but aw man am I jealous!
I gotta dash, so I'll put a more detailed post of thoughts later. :)