Re: Letting kids cook.
- From: Dave Smith <adavid.smith@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 31 May 2006 09:16:01 -0400
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
I had a similar reaction after spending a working weekend at their
cottage. The food was bland, mushy and overcooked. I found myself
stopping at the first store on way home and bought two chocolate bars
and ate them right away, and I never used to eat chocolate bars.
Your sister is such a bad cook that she drives you to eat that stuff?
I'm not understanding this scenario.
Isn't this the same family whose niece eats them out of house and home on
each visit? They must all be dysfunctional.
The big niece is their cousin. The big niece's mother has always been a a
good looking woman who watches what she eats, and big niece was given proper
food when she was young. Her brother, now in his early 40's has an excellent
physique, eats well, works out. One of three of the health food fanatic's
three kids has developed a weight problem, like his father, while the other
two are admirably fit and healthy.
.
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- Re: Letting kids cook.
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- Re: Letting kids cook.
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- Re: Letting kids cook.
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- Re: Letting kids cook.
- From: sf
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