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On March 25 2014 01:48 caelym wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 01:43 wei2coolman wrote:On March 25 2014 01:40 caelym wrote:On March 25 2014 01:14 AsmodeusXI wrote:On March 25 2014 01:10 Requizen wrote:On March 25 2014 01:05 jcarlsoniv wrote:On March 25 2014 01:01 wei2coolman wrote: Melee too annoying to gear up. Not worth my time to try. Simply too many stats they need to be optimized for. I have no idea what this is supposed to mean He's talking about D3, not SSBM Speaking of which, I'll probably do my next character as a HC Monk or Barb. Want to know what melee is like in this game. I highly recommend Monk. Dashing everywhere plus Five-Point-Palm-Exploding-Heart Technique too fun. Monk is a lot of fun. Back in the day, fighting with DH for the same gear in the AH was such a bitch. Monk is probably the hardest to gear because you need to optimize a specific resistances as well as dps and vit/armor. one with everything is crutch for eco-gear, it was easier to optimize when AH was open, so you could look for specific resist stuff. How do people get uncraftable item sets now? It seems almost impossible without AH. it is impossible.
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On March 25 2014 01:30 Alzadar wrote: Boba tea looks really strange to me. All my asian friends seem to love it but I've never seen a white person at the boba tea stand. There are like chunky balls floating in the bottom?
yeah idk, it's always skeeved me out - I know plenty of white people who like it though
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On March 25 2014 02:00 jcarlsoniv wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 01:30 Alzadar wrote: Boba tea looks really strange to me. All my asian friends seem to love it but I've never seen a white person at the boba tea stand. There are like chunky balls floating in the bottom? yeah idk, it's always skeeved me out - I know plenty of white people who like it though white people are the most culinary conservative people I know.
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On March 25 2014 02:08 caelym wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 02:00 jcarlsoniv wrote:On March 25 2014 01:30 Alzadar wrote: Boba tea looks really strange to me. All my asian friends seem to love it but I've never seen a white person at the boba tea stand. There are like chunky balls floating in the bottom? yeah idk, it's always skeeved me out - I know plenty of white people who like it though white people are the most culinary conservative people I know.
Supper tonight: mashed potatoes, steak and broccoli. Aww yeah.
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On March 25 2014 02:12 Alzadar wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 02:08 caelym wrote:On March 25 2014 02:00 jcarlsoniv wrote:On March 25 2014 01:30 Alzadar wrote: Boba tea looks really strange to me. All my asian friends seem to love it but I've never seen a white person at the boba tea stand. There are like chunky balls floating in the bottom? yeah idk, it's always skeeved me out - I know plenty of white people who like it though white people are the most culinary conservative people I know. Supper tonight: mashed potatoes, steak and broccoli. Aww yeah.
i'm coming over - address?
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On March 25 2014 02:13 jcarlsoniv wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 02:12 Alzadar wrote:On March 25 2014 02:08 caelym wrote:On March 25 2014 02:00 jcarlsoniv wrote:On March 25 2014 01:30 Alzadar wrote: Boba tea looks really strange to me. All my asian friends seem to love it but I've never seen a white person at the boba tea stand. There are like chunky balls floating in the bottom? yeah idk, it's always skeeved me out - I know plenty of white people who like it though white people are the most culinary conservative people I know. Supper tonight: mashed potatoes, steak and broccoli. Aww yeah. i'm coming over - address?
I'm in Ottawa. 24 Sussex Drive.
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see you tonight, Mr. Prime Minister
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Aaaah ended up googling boba tea and it's what I thought. Had it once in Paris, they called it taiwanese tea iirc. Weird stuff. Not bad, but I'm not sure I'd call that "tea", the taste doesn't have much to do with traditional tea with all the stuff they had for "flavour".
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On March 25 2014 00:38 AsmodeusXI wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 00:35 jcarlsoniv wrote: It's actually really funny and strange to me how large the states are outside of New England. Like, my entire life, I've been used to things being so close. The 3 hour drive up to Vermont felt long. I'm so accustomed to being able to traverse a state in 1 hour. Felt the same as you until I went to Ohio for college. The Boston area ---> Cleveland area drive teaches you what driving through a real state is like. Mass ("Wow, that wasn't so bad") -> New York ("Damn this is taking a while.") -> Ohio -> ("FFFFFFFFFFFFF"). And that's driving across the smaller part of Ohio (E->W). I can't even imagine driving across shit like Texas or N->S Cali. What?? Ohio is like 4ish hrs to drive across like nearly any direction. Then you want to drive across Pennsylvania and it's like 10hrs or something silly. My mind always gets blown when people drive to Florida. They cross the borderr and then still have 8 hrs to go??? Never done it but it seems crazy and the map in my head is a tad different than the reality I'm guessing
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On March 25 2014 02:23 Alaric wrote: Aaaah ended up googling boba tea and it's what I thought. Had it once in Paris, they called it taiwanese tea iirc. Weird stuff. Not bad, but I'm not sure I'd call that "tea", the taste doesn't have much to do with traditional tea with all the stuff they had for "flavour". The base is still tea though, at least it's not like all the other crap that they call tea but aren't tea leaves like chamomile, mint, lavender, etc.
The recent trend in LA is to serve the tea with the tapioca pearls warm, it's so much better that way.
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On March 25 2014 02:29 kainzero wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 02:23 Alaric wrote: Aaaah ended up googling boba tea and it's what I thought. Had it once in Paris, they called it taiwanese tea iirc. Weird stuff. Not bad, but I'm not sure I'd call that "tea", the taste doesn't have much to do with traditional tea with all the stuff they had for "flavour". The base is still tea though, at least it's not like all the other crap that they call tea but aren't tea leaves like chamomile, mint, lavender, etc. The recent trend in LA is to serve the tea with the tapioca pearls warm, it's so much better that way. So many good tea flavors. I still think my go-to is thai tea.
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Asian tea in general tastes way different than European tea. I personally prefer Asian tea over Euro stuff.
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Tea sucks, as do all other hot beverages such as coffee or hot chocolate. Liquids should only be consumed cold, heathens. If God wanted us to drink things hot he would have given us fire.
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Woah, don't diss chamomile. So relaxing. I feel like such a tea scrub, despite drinking it every night. What do you look for when buying tea? I wanna try and get in on that. On another note, the difference between store bought meat and meat from a butcher is amazing. The cuts are crazy, and the selection is the shit. Cooked a shoulder cut last night that was so surprisingly tender. I cooked it at low for a while and used both a marinade and onions cooking over it for pretty much the whole time, but shit, the difference is crazy.
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today i learned that bubble tea is actually boba tea. thanks hometown, why do you have to keep embarrassing me.
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I really want to get half a cow, got my freezer in January so I really need to get on it. I just don't know where to start lol
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On March 25 2014 02:40 ComaDose wrote: today i learned that bubble tea is actually boba tea. thanks hometown, why do you have to keep embarrassing me.
Well Bubble is an anglicism that both makes sense (tapioca balls = bubbles) and sounds similar, seems alright.
What throws me off are anglicized french words and I'm not sure if I should pronounce them correctly or the same way as most English people do. e.g. deja vu or dejaa vooo
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On March 25 2014 02:43 Alzadar wrote:Show nested quote +On March 25 2014 02:40 ComaDose wrote: today i learned that bubble tea is actually boba tea. thanks hometown, why do you have to keep embarrassing me. Well Bubble is an anglicism that both makes sense (tapioca balls = bubbles) and sounds similar, seems alright. What throws me off are anglicized french words and I'm not sure if I should pronounce them correctly or the same way as most English people do. e.g. deja vu or dejaa vooo haha a good example of this came up when a person with a heavy french canadian accent was giving me directions in Montreal and told me to turn on "john guy" street in her best english accent.
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