Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
Honestly? I would say none of the above. Courbet was a Realist; he painted what his eyes actually saw. Now, in a sense, I guess his work might have seemed somewhat cynical since what he saw clashed so much with what should be seen. If you look at his other works such as The Artists Studio, he also portrays a rather unflattering view of reality. Ultimately though, I don't think he was intentionally trying to be provocative and the provocative reaction to his work was simply a consequence of the growing discontent of society as a whole with the ugly bits of society.
Being a Realist doesn't mean painting everything you see, however. The subjects were deliberate and provocative and I don't think entirely unflattering. I think revealing on canvas this untempered, unfiltered view of femininity is a challenge to accept it as it is.
Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
I just know it as black tea, but there is probably a more precise term.
Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
I think basic Lipton tea is pretty good for iced tea.
Alternatively, cold barley tea is great in the summer.
Honestly? I would say none of the above. Courbet was a Realist; he painted what his eyes actually saw. Now, in a sense, I guess his work might have seemed somewhat cynical since what he saw clashed so much with what should be seen. If you look at his other works such as The Artists Studio, he also portrays a rather unflattering view of reality. Ultimately though, I don't think he was intentionally trying to be provocative and the provocative reaction to his work was simply a consequence of the growing discontent of society as a whole with the ugly bits of society.
Being a Realist doesn't mean painting everything you see, however. The subjects were deliberate and provocative and I don't think entirely unflattering. I think revealing on canvas this untempered, unfiltered view of femininity is a challenge to accept it as it is.
True, but Courbet prided himself on being pretty much independent of anything, including society. I honestly think it out of character for him to make any sort of dialogue intentionally with the very thing he tried to distance himself from all his life. I think what Courbet ultimately was was brutally honest. And while he wasn't intentionally trying to start the discussion, I think this brutal honesty demonstrated to the people who were still part of society the things that needed to be discussed.
EDIT: Of course, my personal theory with regards to artistic interpretation is that the concept of deliberately putting meaning into one's art work is a rather new concept and that most classic artists did not intentionally put meaning into their work, but simply wrote/painted/whatever from what they knew, which often reflected issues of the time.
Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
It's usually Ceylon or Darjeeling but you can also find some more exotic varies as well as some of the herbal teas.
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KageraImitating the worst people. Since 2004Registered Userregular
Yeah, I grew up in a place where temperatures peaked at around 108F/43C in the summer.
And where I grew up, if the temperatures consistently hit that we'd have people dieing from a heat wave.
It was pretty common in my hometown for a few elderly people to die from heatstroke every July.
We'd be talking outside the elderly. The risk levels to children would be pretty high. Northern cities aren't built well for heat waves, generally lacking central air.
Grew up with iced tea. I love it and hot tea. But why the hell would I drink hot tea in the summer when ice cools me off and refreshes me in ways that hot tea can't. Plus they both have pretty different flavors.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
It's usually Ceylon or Darjeeling but you can also find some more exotic varies as well as some of the herbal teas.
Aah, see that makes more sense.
For years I've always thought it was horrid black tea. I wasn't even aware there were other teas that tasted just fine without milk until not so long ago.
I may have to try this thing called Iced E with a ceylon when the heat hits here.
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It's pretty good, actually. Royal Milk Tea *drool*
Although the milk tea flavored melon bread I had yesterday was a little offputting. Still liked it in the end.
not really? (ps tell me what it means)
Is it something other than "1 billion"?
I have a friend, a big tea drinker, who decided he wanted to try the whole milk and tea thing.
He was telling me it was horrible, tasted like shit and made the texture all weird.
Turned out he forgot to forgo his usual squirt of lemon into the tea.
Racist asshole.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2010/05/29/maher_obama_not_acting_like_a_real_black_president.html
:x
:x
:x
You are wrong.
Also Gary Coleman even as a child was taller than Yoda. Your av/sig is in error.
Oh god. >.<
...
I'm kinda curious now.
Are you suppsed to use specific teas for iced tea?
I mean I can imagine with Ceylon or something like that it would be bearable but made with the genric blends we get here well I don't imagine it to taste all that great
Where Madness and the Fantasical Come to Play
Somewhere, Patrick Stewart is face palming. Tsk tsk.
Mr. Gasmic do I have to send you to time out?
Don't talk to me.
It was pretty common in my hometown for a few elderly people to die from heatstroke every July.
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
Being a Realist doesn't mean painting everything you see, however. The subjects were deliberate and provocative and I don't think entirely unflattering. I think revealing on canvas this untempered, unfiltered view of femininity is a challenge to accept it as it is.
I just know it as black tea, but there is probably a more precise term.
On the black screen
I think basic Lipton tea is pretty good for iced tea.
Alternatively, cold barley tea is great in the summer.
Boy I oughta backhand you. But then I would be arrested because I guess they look down on assault around here.
A billion apparently! I thought it was something like how french writes first as 1er...
Everyone here deserves <3s though. All of you.
Yes even you!
True, but Courbet prided himself on being pretty much independent of anything, including society. I honestly think it out of character for him to make any sort of dialogue intentionally with the very thing he tried to distance himself from all his life. I think what Courbet ultimately was was brutally honest. And while he wasn't intentionally trying to start the discussion, I think this brutal honesty demonstrated to the people who were still part of society the things that needed to be discussed.
EDIT: Of course, my personal theory with regards to artistic interpretation is that the concept of deliberately putting meaning into one's art work is a rather new concept and that most classic artists did not intentionally put meaning into their work, but simply wrote/painted/whatever from what they knew, which often reflected issues of the time.
It's usually Ceylon or Darjeeling but you can also find some more exotic varies as well as some of the herbal teas.
That's okay you could just sell off the debt as junk and sell it to other investors as A+ ratings.
We'd be talking outside the elderly. The risk levels to children would be pretty high. Northern cities aren't built well for heat waves, generally lacking central air.
You are a monster. You also sold them those christian side-hug bonds too didn't you?
I don't taste much of a difference.
what she said etc
I'm really glad my parents decided to go to sleep just before I got that cutscene. >_>
Pfft
I'll just print more <3s
Like Zimbabwe!
Aah, see that makes more sense.
For years I've always thought it was horrid black tea. I wasn't even aware there were other teas that tasted just fine without milk until not so long ago.
I may have to try this thing called Iced E with a ceylon when the heat hits here.
Where Madness and the Fantasical Come to Play
You don't want to devalue your <3s. I mean, soon, it will get to the point where a means no more than a casual glance in your direction.