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Reginald P. Smithers III Reginald P. Smithers III is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,557
Default Kitchen Carpentry 101

animal05 wrote:
Tim wrote:

On Jun 15, 11:33 am, basskisser wrote:

On Jun 15, 8:05 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III"

wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:

On Fri, 15 Jun 2007 11:31:36 -0000, Tim wrote:

prove you didn't....

Ask him about concrete. :)

Even better, ask him about Schnapps.

"Schnapps is a type of distilled beverage. The word schnapps is
derived from the German word Schnaps.

There are two different types of schnapps. The first one is the
traditional German kind. In Germany itself, as well as in Austria and
the German-speaking part of Switzerland, the spelling schnapps is
virtually unknown and schnaps, as a purely colloquial term, can refer
to any kind of unsweetened distilled beverage"

Yes, it is a cut and paste. But, I am correct.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schnapps


Kevin suffers from faulty logic.

His claim that schnapps is whiskey based on his own posted definition
prove sonce again he is wrong.

While under his definition, which no doubt he spent much time seatching
the web to find and erroneously believe that it supports his position,
it proves the opposite.

Under the definition, all whiskey could be considered schapps,
however not all schnapps can be whiskey, (the requirement for whiskey
being aged in oak barrels) therefore schnapps is not whiskey.

Just as the definition would define tequila as schnapps, schanpps does
not equal tequila.

Once again, kevin displays why he is the King of the NG idiots.


Since the Wikipedia defintition quoted stated: True schnapps has no
sugar or flavoring added. Traditional German schnapps
is similar in flavor and consistency to vodka, with light fruit flavors,
depending on the base material. " Whiskey would not qualify as a
schnapps because the charred oak barrell is definitely adding a flavor.