Pastafarians join ranks of those persecuted for religion

http://www.timescolonist.com/news/b-c/pastafarian-s-icbc-woes-come-to-a-head-1.1414080
At least the colander can still be used for a delicious meal.
Comments
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Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster! Ha!
I wonder if they develop their doctrine by throwing ideas at the refrigerator to see if they stick?"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Our pasta, who art in a colander,
Draining be your noodles.
Thy noodle come,
Thy sauce be yum,
On top some grated parmesan.
Give us this day our garlic bread,
And forgive us our trespasses,
As we forgive those who trample on our lawns.
And lead us not into vegetarianism, but deliver us some pizza,
For thine is the meatball, the noodle, and the sauce, forever and ever.
-RAmen.0 -
That's as good a way of developing doctrine as any other, and better than some.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0
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"RAmen" LOLdignin said:Our pasta, who art in a colander,
Draining be your noodles.
Thy noodle come,
Thy sauce be yum,
On top some grated parmesan.
Give us this day our garlic bread,
And forgive us our trespasses,
As we forgive those who trample on our lawns.
And lead us not into vegetarianism, but deliver us some pizza,
For thine is the meatball, the noodle, and the sauce, forever and ever.
-RAmen.)
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
You people suck.
In having mentioned this thread to my husband, I am - as of tomorrow and declared against my will! - committed to making fettucine alfredo with shrimp and asparagus.
Probably garlic bread too.
Fuckers!0 -
Ah, but a little vino, a warm belly full of good chow, a little after dinner smoke and you will quickly forgive us one and all!hedonist said:You people suck.
In having mentioned this thread to my husband, I am - as of tomorrow and declared against my will! - committed to making fettucine alfredo with shrimp and asparagus.
Probably garlic bread too.
Fuckers!
Bon Appétit!
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Fettucine alfredo, against your will? And garlic bread too?? He's a cruel, cruel man.hedonist said:You people suck.
In having mentioned this thread to my husband, I am - as of tomorrow and declared against my will! - committed to making fettucine alfredo with shrimp and asparagus.
Probably garlic bread too.
Fuckers!my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
If only you could see my hand slung dramatically across my damp forehead.
Somehow, someway...I SHALL endure - nay, prevail!
Really craving this dish now too. And I've publicly committed to it.
Fuck
Pumpkins' "Tonight Tonight" just kicked in as well on our random music channel thingy.
Tomorrow, Corgan, tomorrow!0 -
You'll come through this a stronger person, hedonist.
Or if not stronger, then at least more, how shall we say..... well-rounded.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
oftenreading said:
You'll come through this a stronger person, hedonist.
Or if not stronger, then at least more, how shall we say..... well-rounded.
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I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!0 -
You are clearly more than half way to being a Pastafarian already, hedonist.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0
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My heart, soul and (well-rounded
) ass would agree!
However, I never have and probably never will don a colander on my head.
(intentionally)0 -
Hedonist - you think that's something? Take a look at the coffee and chocolate industries - both astonishing end products that are so commonplace and delicious, but in their original forms are absolutely vile, and the amount of processing necessary to extract their goodness is totally mind-blowing. The fact that people took the time and energy to go through the R & D to make something good out of them consistently leaves me flabbergasted.hedonist said:I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!'05 - TO, '06 - TO 1, '08 - NYC 1 & 2, '09 - TO, Chi 1 & 2, '10 - Buffalo, NYC 1 & 2, '11 - TO 1 & 2, Hamilton, '13 - Buffalo, Brooklyn 1 & 2, '15 - Global Citizen, '16 - TO 1 & 2, Chi 2
EV
Toronto Film Festival 9/11/2007, '08 - Toronto 1 & 2, '09 - Albany 1, '11 - Chicago 10 -
Yes! This gets me too. Who even thought something so tasty and comforting and healthy would come from that initial nastiness?benjs said:
Hedonist - you think that's something? Take a look at the coffee and chocolate industries - both astonishing end products that are so commonplace and delicious, but in their original forms are absolutely vile, and the amount of processing necessary to extract their goodness is totally mind-blowing. The fact that people took the time and energy to go through the R & D to make something good out of them consistently leaves me flabbergasted.hedonist said:I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!
What else is there in front of us? Second time today - maybe more than that - I go back to "imagine".
Speaking of the how's and why's, I'll also say that earlier this morning while doing my nails, I wondered what cavemen (encompasses both genders, ya feminists) did when theirs grew too long. Did they naturally get lopped off in the course of survival or did they grow and become cumbersome, leading to some form of what we now call nailclippers?
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That thought has crossed my mind a number of time too, benjs. How did people come up with stuff like that and what about baking powder? Who the heck figured out how to make that stuff? And then there's the deadly hit and miss of figuring out which plants are good to eat and which will make you sick or kill ya. Yikes!benjs said:
Hedonist - you think that's something? Take a look at the coffee and chocolate industries - both astonishing end products that are so commonplace and delicious, but in their original forms are absolutely vile, and the amount of processing necessary to extract their goodness is totally mind-blowing. The fact that people took the time and energy to go through the R & D to make something good out of them consistently leaves me flabbergasted.hedonist said:I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
I'll see your baking powder and raise you baking soda!brianlux said:
That thought has crossed my mind a number of time too, benjs. How did people come up with stuff like that and what about baking powder? Who the heck figured out how to make that stuff? And then there's the deadly hit and miss of figuring out which plants are good to eat and which will make you sick or kill ya. Yikes!benjs said:
Hedonist - you think that's something? Take a look at the coffee and chocolate industries - both astonishing end products that are so commonplace and delicious, but in their original forms are absolutely vile, and the amount of processing necessary to extract their goodness is totally mind-blowing. The fact that people took the time and energy to go through the R & D to make something good out of them consistently leaves me flabbergasted.hedonist said:I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!
And yeah, the plants.
One word, and bless the poor guinea pigs before us:
Mushrooms.0 -
Oh yes, especially mushrooms! They can fill our tummies, enlighten us or flat out kill us. I had a biology prof years ago who told us a story about a fairly bright naturalist/science teacher he knew who found some mushrooms and tried to identify them. He was fairly certain they were edible but not 100% sure so he cooked a few up and gave them to his cat and waited several hours. The cat was fine so he cooked up the rest and went to bed well fed and happy. The next morning the cat was dead. He immediately went to the hospital where he was informed he had eaten a mushroom with a very slow but irreversibly reacting neurotoxin and, yes, later that day he died. :-(hedonist said:
I'll see your baking powder and raise you baking soda!brianlux said:
That thought has crossed my mind a number of time too, benjs. How did people come up with stuff like that and what about baking powder? Who the heck figured out how to make that stuff? And then there's the deadly hit and miss of figuring out which plants are good to eat and which will make you sick or kill ya. Yikes!benjs said:
Hedonist - you think that's something? Take a look at the coffee and chocolate industries - both astonishing end products that are so commonplace and delicious, but in their original forms are absolutely vile, and the amount of processing necessary to extract their goodness is totally mind-blowing. The fact that people took the time and energy to go through the R & D to make something good out of them consistently leaves me flabbergasted.hedonist said:I'm watching some cooking show while waiting for the mud-mask on my face to do its thing.
The host made her own pasta - just flour and eggs - and it got me thinking about (and thankful for!) whomever discovered and perfected the process. How many tries it must've taken - just the idea alone - then getting the ingredients right but the prep wrong, or the cooking wrong. Kneading it, flattening it, using different shapes for different sauces. Learning to cook it al dente, to mix it with the sauce, to let the flavors marry and get it on for awhile.
That's amore!
And yeah, the plants.
One word, and bless the poor guinea pigs before us:
Mushrooms.
So yes, blessings upon those who found for us those wonderful edible and safe fungi! :-)
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
:bz -kill
What a story! And I'm not sure what it says of me, but I feel worse for the cat.
I've only gone the belly-filling route (too much of a wuss to try the enlightening kind).0 -
Yeah, I always felt like the cat was an innocent victim. Don't experiment with the cat!hedonist said::bz -kill
What a story! And I'm not sure what it says of me, but I feel worse for the cat.
I've only gone the belly-filling route (too much of a wuss to try the enlightening kind).
The enlightenment mushroom is on my bucket list- but not the mushroom that would make me kick the bucket!!. ;-)
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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