RE: Americans and Canadians

spewing your Bile here now?wow

RE: Anyplace in Europe - A-Z

Aarburg,Aargau,Switzerland.

RE: Prince Andrew may be bailed out by the Queen

well,you might want to look it up,before you are doing this foot in mouth and this foot in mouth and this foot in mouth comfort

RE: Prince Andrew may be bailed out by the Queen

Bovine Excrement!rolling on the floor laughing

RE: Prince Andrew may be bailed out by the Queen

uh oh laugh

RE: Will you meet anyone the forums?

I still have some Friends on FB that are former Members of CS!
The wrong Crowd got purged back then if you ask me!mumbling

RE: Prince Andrew may be bailed out by the Queen

Could always make him Royal Governor of the Bahamas!laugh

RE: Will you meet anyone the forums?

ran quite regularly into some Members here in Zurich,and met up with a Member from a neighboring Town once!

RE: 3D-printed steaks are now being served in restaurants

no telling what those IdleMindPoliticions come up with when they want to screw with the People!laugh

RE: "The Greatest Depression"

rolling on the floor laughing rolling on the floor laughing comfort

RE: Boris Johnson apologises for party during lock down

Boris Badinov!laugh

RE: 3D-printed steaks are now being served in restaurants

you can bet they will outlaw that!laugh

RE: 3D-printed steaks are now being served in restaurants

Tastes like the Crap it is!

RE: Alcohol is becoming scarce in the USA due to supply chain problems

Rum-Raisin Icecream or Cream de Menthe Sherbet?laugh

RE: Alcohol is becoming scarce in the USA due to supply chain problems

heck,they are just making HandSanitizer!laugh

RE: For people who ....

laugh cheers grin

RE: Pope Says:

Doctor Faustus!

RE: Pope Says:

The Unholy Father is a Fool!

RE: Crucified

yep,Islam definitely is following His Guidance!rolling on the floor laughing uh oh

RE: Crucified

There was enough Genocide to go around!

RE: Crucified

you mean,you guys have hijacked Him?confused

RE: Crucified

Beautiful piece of Music!

RE: Crucified

wow rolling on the floor laughing

RE: Money v Time

laugh dancing yay

RE: Money v Time

laugh grin

RE: ego vs self-respect

how can you respect yourself if you have no Self(EGO,latin for Self)?confused

RE: To Sir With Love

RIP Sir Sidney.
sad flower

RE: Covid vaccine set to activate January 2, 2022.

Chief-Justice can't be relied on any longer to base his decisions based on the Constitution!mumbling

RE: Kim Jong Il invented the Burrito

Embedded image from another site
laugh
Shart-Material!

RE: Kim Jong Il invented the Burrito

Kim might be a few years late!laugh

Before the development of the modern burrito, the Maya civilization of Mexico used corn tortillas as early as 1500 B.C. to wrap foods, with fillings of chili peppers, tomatoes, mushrooms, squash, and avocados. Historically, the Pueblo peoples of the Southwestern US also made tortillas filled with beans and meat sauce and prepared much like the modern burrito. But these preparations could also be said to be the origin of the simpler taco, rather than the modern burrito.

The precise origin of the modern burrito is not known. In the 1895 Diccionario de Mejicanismos by Feliz Ramos i Duarte, the burrito or taco was identified as a regional item from the Mexican state of Guanajuato and defined as "Tortilla arrollada, con carne u otra cosa dentro, que en Yucatán llaman coçito, y en Cuernavaca y en Mexico, taco" (A rolled tortilla with meat or other ingredients inside, called 'coçito' in Yucatán and 'taco' in the city of Cuernavaca and in Mexico City). Some have speculated that it may have originated with vaqueros, the cowboys of northern Mexico in the 19th century.

An often repeated piece of folk history is the story of a man named Juan Méndez who sold tacos at a street stand in the Bella Vista neighborhood of Ciudad Juárez during the Mexican Revolution period (1910–1921), while using a donkey as a transport for himself and his food. To keep the food warm, Méndez wrapped it in large homemade flour tortillas underneath a small tablecloth. As the "food of the burrito" (i.e., "food of the little donkey") grew in popularity, "burrito" was eventually adopted as the name for these large tacos.

Another creation story tells of Ciudad Juárez in the 1940s, where a street food vendor created the tortilla-wrapped food to sell to poor children at a state-run middle school. The vendor would call the children his "burritos", because burro is a colloquial term for a dunce or dullard. Eventually, the somewhat derogatory, but endearing, term for the children was transferred to the food that they ate.

In 1923, Alejandro Borquez opened the Sonora Cafe in Los Angeles that later changed its name to El Cholo Spanish Cafe. Burritos first appeared on American restaurant menus at the El Cholo Spanish Cafe in Los Angeles during the 1930s. Burritos were mentioned in the U.S. media for the first time in 1934, appearing in the Mexican Cookbook, a collection of regional recipes from New Mexico that was written by historian Erna Fergusson. In 1956, a frozen burrito was developed in Southern California.:?192?

This is a list of forum posts created by Conrad73.

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