You know me too well. Cereal crunching and all!@Kapmcrunk - I concede, you do like it more. Like all forum-owning children's cereal crunching totally deluded wackos, you have an unnatural affection for plants.
Well you like Hawaiian Kava, which according to the people of Fiji is undrinkable, and is hardly true kava. The only truly traditional and legitimate kava comes from Vanuatu. Heathen.Hello. I like kava.
(There, that shouldn't be too controversial.)
Don't give me that "common sense" crap. You don't know what you're talking about.I do not I fact believe you are in love with kava, but that you mearly enjoy it.
I like "Your Nuts" too. I would describe them as more salty than spicy.I like "My Nuts". Do they have BBQ flavor or "Hot and Spicy"? Yeah, I like "My Nuts" hot and spicy.
Stop,..you had me at Awa. I dont want anyones fingers kneading you but my own.It was love at first shell! And we make beautiful music together (well you can call ear ringing music in this case!)
I thought you were kidding. But not so:I take 'my nuts' everywhere I go. My favorite place to go is a Chinese restaurant in Old Town Portland OR called 'Hung Far Low'
As it happens, Hung Far Low translates as "almond blossom fragrance" in the Chinese dialect of Taisan, which once ruled the streets of Chinatowns in midcentury America but has now been supplanted by Mandarin (and English)
Delivery?Dear Kava,
I bought a wonderful digorno pizza just for us tonight. All I knead/need is you.
Cant wait to see you later tonight !
Sincerely yours,
John.
Almond blossom fragrance exactly describes 'my nuts' !!!I thought you were kidding. But not so:
http://chatterbox.typepad.com/portlandarchitecture/2010/09/return-of-the-hung-far-low-sign.html
I am always inconsistent.Almond blossom fragrance exactly describes 'my nuts' !!!
(p.s. I'm always sarcastic but everything I say is 'always' the truth)
I lived in Portland OR for 4 or 5 years and used to go there often. I guess it's closed now but was one of my favorites.I thought you were kidding. But not so:
http://chatterbox.typepad.com/portlandarchitecture/2010/09/return-of-the-hung-far-low-sign.html