My wife won’t eat anything to which she’s been introduced beforehand. It’s why she can’t pick a lobster from a tank. Coincidentally, it’s similar to how Sir Paul became a veggie. Seems mutton on the hoof walked into the house just as Linda was putting lamb down onto the dinner table. They were lost after that.
My wife won’t eat anything to which she’s been introduced beforehand. It’s why she can’t pick a lobster from a tank. Coincidentally, it’s similar to how Sir Paul became a veggie. Seems mutton on the hoof walked into the house just as Linda was putting lamb down onto the dinner table. They were lost after that.
gzitver about 7 years ago
First the chicken, now the fish? Grandma certainly has a, um, practical attitude toward Agnes’s pets.
Dani Rice about 7 years ago
The same goes for farm animals.
David Huie Green PrepareBeforeOrRegretLater about 7 years ago
We made that mistake with Tar Baby, our first calf. (Black Angus sire. Hard to eat a former pet.)
The next one we named Hamburger so we wouldn’t forget his destiny and get too attached.
RWill about 7 years ago
I had a niece who, at 10 or 11 or so, named a lobster and had no problem eating it.
K M about 7 years ago
My wife won’t eat anything to which she’s been introduced beforehand. It’s why she can’t pick a lobster from a tank. Coincidentally, it’s similar to how Sir Paul became a veggie. Seems mutton on the hoof walked into the house just as Linda was putting lamb down onto the dinner table. They were lost after that.
K M about 7 years ago
My wife won’t eat anything to which she’s been introduced beforehand. It’s why she can’t pick a lobster from a tank. Coincidentally, it’s similar to how Sir Paul became a veggie. Seems mutton on the hoof walked into the house just as Linda was putting lamb down onto the dinner table. They were lost after that.