News1 min ago
Wrong answer on Only Connect
On tonight's only connect wall the group was Lights(should have been Lites) Tripe ,Brawn and Chitterlings. The answer given was they are all offal. Except Tripe is part of the stomach and not offal and Brawn is made from pig's head meat and sometimes with ox cheek. A right awful answer.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by gollob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
The original english answer for Offal is the organs of the animal, i.e the heart, kidney, lungs(or lites), kidney, liver, etc. The Americans call offal sweetmeats which they embrace nearly every cut of the animal like heads,tails,feet, tongue which is pure rubbish . There is no such thing in the body called brawn so therefore it cannot be classified as offal. Brawn in manufactured in a food factory or kitchen and you can use any part of a pig to produce it as you can for sausages or porkburgers.. It is generally brined seasoned then cooked then put into individual pots or in a deli. sliced on a cooked meat machine. It is also known as a pork cheese in some parts of the country. It contains no offal whatsoever.
@methyl - I am sure that Vicky will be immeasurably reassured that, despite your dismissal of her intellect ("i find his daughter superficial"), and her skills as a poker player, despite winning the London EPT, you still find a her "a very sexy lady".
She has written columns I disagree with vehemently, and I am no fan of her brother, but anyone who, writing about the recent best-selling phenomenon, "50 shades of Gray", can comment that the author "puts the B in anal" is worthy of some respect ;)
She has written columns I disagree with vehemently, and I am no fan of her brother, but anyone who, writing about the recent best-selling phenomenon, "50 shades of Gray", can comment that the author "puts the B in anal" is worthy of some respect ;)
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.