Spyke
lemmy.zip

I have a feeling that this chart is complete bullshit

106
sh.itjust.works

I've never had any of these combinations, so I can't disprove their claims from prior experience

Looking at it, I think the easiest combo for me to acquire would be coconut and honey, so I'll have to give it a try and see if truly (DEAD)

65
Foreignerreply
lemmy.world

Lemon and milk would be the easiest for me. I'm sure I've had those together before, at least in some dessert.

46
shneancyreply
lemmy.world

yeah but chunky milk won't kill you, in fact it is an ingredient for some wonderful desserts

13

If you stir the milk while you add in the lemon juice slowly it will be less likely to have curdled chunks in it 👍

2
no bananareply
lemmy.world

Definitely a little false but mostly a bit more true probably.

2

Or coconut and honey. I’m sure that’s in some candy or cookie I’ve had at some point

8
brown567reply
sh.itjust.works

Didn't realize that one was on there! I've had a frosted lemonade at Chick-fil-A and did not (DEAD), so claim is bunk!

7

Also literally one of the ways to make a basic cheese (boil milk, add lemon, collect and strain curds from whey, add salt to taste). Can substitute vinegar for lemon.

1

You've never had surf & turf at a restaurant? And if you're vega(taria)?n, you've almost certainly had coconut & honey in some proceeded drink - honey is a common substitute sweetener for sugar, and processed sugar is considered bad in a subset of that community.

But what I wonder is where these things come from, and how common they are?

6

Surf & turf was me. And I am spectacularly ignorant of the vast variety of Indian cuisine, but I would be surprised if literal shells is a common staple. It doesn't say "calcium," it says "shells." And it shows a picture of what looks like a cluster of mussels, although it could be clams.

Nobody in the US eats shells like that, except for Blueshell crab almost exclusively in the mid-Atlantic region. There are some recipes where you cook crab whole until the shell dissolves into the soup, but in neither case is the point to eat the shells - they're just along for the ride to get to the meat. And if it's a source of the calcium that's sometimes added to some food, it'll say "calcium," it won't say where it came from.

So: you're claiming that it's common in India for people to, what... source and grind up shells and eat them? I suppose if folks are doing it to Rhino horns, that's not the weirdest thing I've heard. I think it's just more likely it's referring to shellfish.

2
monyet.cc

shell & beef = dead

I mean maybe eat the clam meat and not the shell and you wouldn't die?

35

ur gonna die now

(still at the age youd die normally, but now its because of the conocut and hoeny)

3
lemmy.world

That is a whole lot of combinations that I will not even come close to consuming together for the duration of my life

13
Sizzlerreply
slrpnk.net

I've just poured myself a coconut milk and honey to prove it's a load of bol

15

oh no, youre gonna die now (but its still gonna be at the age youd die normally, or maybe a little before if something kills you before the conocut and hoeny)

4

I have one of these on my fridge from Myanmar. (or Cambodia, I don't remember now.)

Point is, those ice lollys gonna getcha.

9

That milk and lemon is a shortcut if you run out of buttermilk and need a substitute. You curdle some milk with the lemon. It works in a pinch, isn't as good as buttermilk, but hey. I got it out of some cookbook.

7
OmegaMousereply
pawb.social

Oh that does look like it! I'll make sure to avoid eating ice lollies at the same time.

2

It's a decent replacement for buttermilk if you don't have any for a recipe. Don't ask how I'm able to tell you since I'm (dead).

3

I might need to rethink the parrot squash bisque I was planning this weekend.

4

I usually get Indian trumpet from canned fish so it's atleast thats accurate

3
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