lapalazala--disqus
lapalazala
lapalazala--disqus

Sounds good, well except maybe for the berries. Strange that I've had herring pickled, smoked, deep fried in batter and salted but all of these are sold prepared. I don't think I've ever seen an actual fresh herring to prepare how I see fit at any fishmonger.

Ha, thanks for using a spoiler tag. TAZ is the only podcast I 'binge', meaning I deliberately hold of on listening until at least half an arc of episodes have come out.
I read your spoiler anyway, because I don't care that much about the plot and more about the atmosphere and I have a very bad memory for fiction in

I'm not sure why the article calls it 'wine sauce', because the description below doesn't mention any wine, except if the vinegar is made from it. But that basically sounds like rollmops. To truly be rollmops, the fish should be rolled up in the jar.
Personally I think pickling is for vegetables and I don't like any

I'm probably desensitized to the stuff, because I use shrimp paste and fish sauce liberally and hardly smell it afterwards. But when I take leftovers to work, I'm quickly reminded not all people are used to food that smells like a dead dog in brackish water.

Yeah, I think a piece of herring wouldn't be out of place at all in a maki.

Held by the tail might be fun and the way "it's supposed to be eaten" but there is no shame in getting it chopped in bite sized chunks and eating it with a plastic fork. Onions falling of is one of the annoyances of holding it by the tail, but to me the biggest issue is the smell that's almost impossible to get of

You mention an old Dutch lady and feature a picture of raw herring being eaten, held by the tail in the traditional way. But you fail to explain that the best way to eat herring is "raw". I'm using the quotes, because Dutch raw herring is actually salted and lightly fermented in its own gastric juices. Sounds

See also the compilation Last Week Tonight did some time ago of people calling things selfies that aren't, that included a photograph of a turtle.

But, you don't understand. It's not about ME experiencing things. It's about other people knowing about the experiences I pretend to have.

Easy! Apple-sized hail of course. It's like I'm being stoned for the sons of myself and my forefathers.

So I went through all this trouble building a time machine and killing baby Hitler and now I'M THE BAD GUY??

There are many reasons why they could have decided not to go public with this.
- Maybe he doesn't want the attention; as far as I know, he hasn't been a very public figure in the past
- Maybe the company doesn't want hubbub about the succession because it might hurt the brand
- Maybe he has fallen ill and doesn't want to

Why even hint at there being a scandalous reason for this, without any information? The guy had been working there for almost 40 years. If you don't have anything to indicate the contrary, why not just assume he has retired?

I'll give it a try. Only enrages you sometimes, seems to be the very best you can hope for in an app. But I have a pretty low tolerance for that, maybe because I design user interfaces myself (and must have enraged a few people in my time).

I tried and didn't like it. But that was years ago so I don't really remember why and maybe they have improved.

I tried Stitcher for 10 minutes, before deleting it. What I want from a podcast app:
- a clean interface
- that let's me search and select the podcasts I want
- then downloads new episodes and keeps track of what I already listened to
- with an option to only download on WiFi
- presents those unlistened to episodes, but

I'm really digging Jesse Thorne's new project, The Turnaround, where he interviews other interviewers. I think Thorne is a pretty great interviewer himself and it's really interesting hearing him spar about the trade with his more famous colleagues. It can be a bit inside baseball and self referential, but it's great

I have to admit I enjoy The Adventure Zone more for the jokes and characters than for the pathos and plot. Somehow, I can't seem to really get into or even remember plotlines in pure audio form, which is why I only listen to non-fiction audio books.
Still, the story Griffin constructed is amazing. And when he took the

It's really amazing how seemingly effortless they (well, mostly Griffin) rolled from a pretty standard D&D quest into an overarching story, spanning several very original smaller arcs.
But even in the first, more by the book episodes, you can tell they care more about jokes and story than about D&D rules.
And so do I,

Hmmm. Interessant antwoord.