Your ViewsKeep your e-mails pouring in, it's good to know that there are lots of you out there with views and opinions. To help you work out what is what, are now little icons to help you see biscuit related themes. And now you can see at a glance which are the most contested subjects via this graph (requires Flash 6.0 plugin). Please keep your mails coming in to nicey@nicecupofteaandasitdown.com | If you like, you can use this search thingy to find stuff that matches with any of the icons you pick, or use the fantastic free text search, Yay! | Your e-Mails |
Richard Sefton
 KitKat Review |
I will agree that the Kit Kat is more than just a choccy bar, they are great for dunking, that gives them a good biscuit grounding if you ask me. The Chunky is the choccy bar version of the biccy.
As for the Bisc& abominations, thay do have a biscuit base, with only a hint of choccy bar, but they really arn't one or the other, and so therfore, they are neither. |
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Becky Taggart |
I am a teacher at a primary school in east London. Next week is science week and Year 5 will be testing the dunkability of biscuits. Do you have any ideas what we could do with our results?
I hope you can help |
Nicey replies: Publish them in either Nature, The Lancet or Scientific American. It might be a good plan to record the temperature of the tea vs time to breakage. |
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Sarah Derryman |
Dear Nicey and The Wife and the Younger Members of Staff,
Now that everyone seems to be jumping on the "sop" bandwagon, are you going to have to come up with a "sop" icon? Personally I find the idea of sop in all it's guises a rather loathsome one (particularly the latest regarding fried breakfasts - yuk), but I am sure there may be some people out there who want to search for sop-related stories using your excellent icon search facility - maybe to get ideas for new sopping experiences, the poor misguided fools... If you ask me they're all just abusing a perfectly decent cup of tea and I'm sure even Mrs Doyle wouldn't approve (oh g'wan, y'will...)
Yours very not-soggily,
Sarah Derryman
P.S. Love the new dunking icon - it still wouldn't make me want to put soggy things in my tea though... |
Nicey replies: I think we'll leave 'Sop' to the equally excellent but no so pretty text based search. Anyhow lets all have a rousing post Friday lunchtime 'Hoorah!' for the new Dunking icon, how did we get by without for so long?
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Tricia Dearborn |
Dear Nicey,
One day while I was having a nice cup of tea the person I was talking to (who was not having one) asked if I minded if she dunked her biscuit into my tea.
I found (a little to my surprise, because I'm not that finicky where food is concerned) that I did mind, and politely declined her request. It was the thought of someone else's soggy crumbs at the bottom of my cup that did it.
What is the etiquette of inter-personal dunking? Does it depend on the relationship between the person with the biscuit and the person with the cup of tea? (The person who asked me was an acquaintance.) Are there people out there who don't mind and are prepared to put up with a bit of sog at the bottom of their cups for the sake of biscuit-loving, non-tea-drinking dunkers?
Tricia |
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Keith O'Kane |
Dear Nicey and the wife,
After reading the descriptions of sop and other arcane and inappropriate uses for tea on you site, I feel compelled to let you know about my sister's dunking habits as a child.
Having mastered the complexities of the rich tea and digestive, she moved on to other less appropriate dunking items, the worst of these being sausages. Not only did the grease from the sausage float across the surface of the tea after dunking but the salt which had been liberally sprinkled on the sausages prior to dunking was dissolved in the hot liquid transforming the tea into something quite horrid and undrinkable.
I would like to apologise to all those people who find the thought of this nauseating, but I thought it would give you a chance to use your new dunking icon.
Keith O'Kane |
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