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Random Thoughts.....What are you thinking?
By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 15:06:01
Like this?
[Mod Edit: Old man in women's underwear. Wtf? -AnnaMolly] Those look brand new.
I mean gitch that's been worn for 50 some years, and are mostly tatters.
By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 15:07:29
And he looks a lot more like this guy:
Valefor.Sehachan
サーバ: Valefor
Game: FFXI
Posts: 24219
By Valefor.Sehachan 2016-09-16 15:08:35
And he looks a lot more like this guy:
Pretty elegant for a guy without pants.
By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 15:09:30
He's fabulous.
Like a really old version of Franky.
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Bismarck.Zuidar
サーバ: Bismarck
Game: FFXI
Posts: 1273
By Bismarck.Zuidar 2016-09-16 16:08:20
have some cheese!
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サーバ: Sylph
Game: FFXI
Posts: 2623
By Sylph.Jeanpaul 2016-09-16 17:08:54
yeah, Vyre's back in the game! Now to convince the rest of you retired doodlers
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Valefor.Sehachan
サーバ: Valefor
Game: FFXI
Posts: 24219
By Valefor.Sehachan 2016-09-16 17:13:37
My cor is ready to tackle "new" content whenever D gives the signal!
Feels strange to dw swords and no daggers. Also still deciding if I wanna keep Fettering visible or change it to a Colichemarde look.
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Forum Moderator
サーバ: Sylph
Game: FFXI
Posts: 6115
By Sylph.Shadowlina 2016-09-16 17:27:05
yeah, Vyre's back in the game! Now to convince the rest of you retired doodlers go help him get some armorrrrrr
By Wordspoken 2016-09-16 17:37:03
Valefor.Prothescar said: »i am have sheep
Best part of monster rearing is naming them.
By Kalila 2016-09-16 17:43:03
サーバ: Sylph
Game: FFXI
Posts: 2623
By Sylph.Jeanpaul 2016-09-16 17:50:21
Feels strange to dw swords and no daggers. Also still deciding if I wanna keep Fettering visible or change it to a Colichemarde look. Colichemarde is easily one of the best looking swords. Fettering looks silly and a lot of people show it off.
My mule's lockstyle uses Colichemarde with this:
Mirth Masquette, Baalmuian Robe, Orvail hands and legs, Chelona feet
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By Kalila 2016-09-16 18:00:00
Root Beer
Most food historians think it likely that the first versions of root beer started out as “small beer,” a beverage brewed from herbs, bark, and berries. Small beer was popular in medieval Europe, where rampant water pollution had a tendency to make people sick. Brewed drinks like tea and beer were considered the healthier option. The same was true in early Colonial America before safer water facilities could be developed. Small beer contained alcohol—usually between 2% and 12%. The beverage was so commonplace that it turns up in a variety of classical literature, including several of William Shakespeare’s plays and Vanity Fair by William Thackery.
Fast forward a few centuries to find pharmacists attempting to create a “miracle drug” or “cure-all” for people’s ailments in the late 19th century. (Many of the popular carbonated beverages today have their roots in such an attempt.) Historians generally believe that root beer was created on accident by a pharmacist experimenting with a variety of roots, herbs, bark, and berries used in small beer recipes in order to make a brew to cure every sickness. The original “root beer” was sold as a syrup for consumers to water down into a type of cordial. It was both sweet and bitter, probably not unlike cough syrup today, and obviously didn’t take off as a beverage you’d buy for anything other than potentially curing sickness.
It should be noted that it’s unknown whether or not the original pharmacist commonly credited as the creator of root beer was actually Charles Hires. Obviously, types of root beer had been around for centuries, so he cannot accurately be described as the “inventor.” He was, however, the first one to come up with a recipe that was widely marketable, hence why he is given credit. According to his biography, Hires ran across a delicious tea recipe while he was on his honeymoon, which he decided to replicate and sell as a cure-all. However, the honeymoon story has little evidence to back it up, and it’s likely that Hires was simply experimenting with various ingredients until he came up with a recipe that worked.
He began selling dry packages of the tea mixture in his drug store, and later developed a liquid concentrate which people could mix with water. Initially, the mixture was called “Hires Root Tea” as it was brewed like tea from the dry packages. The packets cost twenty-five cents and supposedly could make up to five gallons of root tea.
The “root” in the name of Hires’ concoction came from its main ingredient, the sassafras root. Hires changed the name of his product from “tea” to “beer” sometime before the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876. It’s likely that he changed the name to make the beverage more appealing to the working class. In the midst of the second wave of the Temperance Movement, the name caused outrage amongst the movement’s leaders. Hires, on the other hand, advertised root beer as the “temperance drink,” arguing that it had no alcohol and was a great alternative to alcoholic beverages. Thus, “root tea” became “root beer.” (Note: It isn’t entirely accurate to say root beer doesn’t contain alcohol as carbonated beverages like root beer, Pepsi, Coke, Dr. Pepper, etc. do have trace amounts of alcohol, as do many other things, like yogurt, just not any significant amount.)
The name change turned into a great marketing scheme. At the Philadelphia exposition, Hires handed out free cups of his brew, gaining new customers. It’s likely that marketing the product as “beer” was the key to its success, and Hires soon was bottling root beer and selling concentrated syrups to soda fountains. He even made “root beer kits” available for individuals to make their own root beer at home.
Root beer continued to be marketed as a “health beverage” with the slogan, “Join Health and Cheer, Drink Hires Root Beer!” Funny enough, in 1960 the United States Food and Drug Administration banned the main ingredient—oil from the sassafras root—because of research proving it was a carcinogen and also contained safrol, which damages the liver- not exactly healthy. Because of this, today root beer typically contains an artificial sassafras flavour rather than the real thing. So at this point the whole name is a lie.
By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 18:38:38
Root Beer
Most food historians think it likely that the first versions of root beer started out as “small beer,” a beverage brewed from herbs, bark, and berries. Small beer was popular in medieval Europe, where rampant water pollution had a tendency to make people sick. Brewed drinks like tea and beer were considered the healthier option. The same was true in early Colonial America before safer water facilities could be developed. Small beer contained alcohol—usually between 2% and 12%. The beverage was so commonplace that it turns up in a variety of classical literature, including several of William Shakespeare’s plays and Vanity Fair by William Thackery.
Fast forward a few centuries to find pharmacists attempting to create a “miracle drug” or “cure-all” for people’s ailments in the late 19th century. (Many of the popular carbonated beverages today have their roots in such an attempt.) Historians generally believe that root beer was created on accident by a pharmacist experimenting with a variety of roots, herbs, bark, and berries used in small beer recipes in order to make a brew to cure every sickness. The original “root beer” was sold as a syrup for consumers to water down into a type of cordial. It was both sweet and bitter, probably not unlike cough syrup today, and obviously didn’t take off as a beverage you’d buy for anything other than potentially curing sickness.
It should be noted that it’s unknown whether or not the original pharmacist commonly credited as the creator of root beer was actually Charles Hires. Obviously, types of root beer had been around for centuries, so he cannot accurately be described as the “inventor.” He was, however, the first one to come up with a recipe that was widely marketable, hence why he is given credit. According to his biography, Hires ran across a delicious tea recipe while he was on his honeymoon, which he decided to replicate and sell as a cure-all. However, the honeymoon story has little evidence to back it up, and it’s likely that Hires was simply experimenting with various ingredients until he came up with a recipe that worked.
He began selling dry packages of the tea mixture in his drug store, and later developed a liquid concentrate which people could mix with water. Initially, the mixture was called “Hires Root Tea” as it was brewed like tea from the dry packages. The packets cost twenty-five cents and supposedly could make up to five gallons of root tea.
The “root” in the name of Hires’ concoction came from its main ingredient, the sassafras root. Hires changed the name of his product from “tea” to “beer” sometime before the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876. It’s likely that he changed the name to make the beverage more appealing to the working class. In the midst of the second wave of the Temperance Movement, the name caused outrage amongst the movement’s leaders. Hires, on the other hand, advertised root beer as the “temperance drink,” arguing that it had no alcohol and was a great alternative to alcoholic beverages. Thus, “root tea” became “root beer.” (Note: It isn’t entirely accurate to say root beer doesn’t contain alcohol as carbonated beverages like root beer, Pepsi, Coke, Dr. Pepper, etc. do have trace amounts of alcohol, as do many other things, like yogurt, just not any significant amount.)
The name change turned into a great marketing scheme. At the Philadelphia exposition, Hires handed out free cups of his brew, gaining new customers. It’s likely that marketing the product as “beer” was the key to its success, and Hires soon was bottling root beer and selling concentrated syrups to soda fountains. He even made “root beer kits” available for individuals to make their own root beer at home.
Root beer continued to be marketed as a “health beverage” with the slogan, “Join Health and Cheer, Drink Hires Root Beer!” Funny enough, in 1960 the United States Food and Drug Administration banned the main ingredient—oil from the sassafras root—because of research proving it was a carcinogen and also contained safrol, which damages the liver- not exactly healthy. Because of this, today root beer typically contains an artificial sassafras flavour rather than the real thing. So at this point the whole name is a lie. This is my "Cure a sad day" prescription
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サーバ: Bahamut
Game: FFXI
Posts: 3620
By Bahamut.Rulerofdarkness 2016-09-16 18:45:52
Root Beer is nasty.
Cream soda on the other hand... mhhhmmmmm.
By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 18:47:24
I used to like cream soda... but somewhere along the way, I discovered orange cream soda, and it's so much better!
サーバ: Excalibur
Game: FFXIV
Posts: 6427
By Grumpy Cat 2016-09-16 18:50:26
First time playing one of these LEGO vidya games, pretty damn fun.
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Ragnarok.Hevans
サーバ: Ragnarok
Game: FFXI
Posts: 15273
By Ragnarok.Hevans 2016-09-16 18:53:05
I got root beer tea in a tea of the month thing. Smelled exactly like root beer, but tasted awful. Super disappointing.
サーバ: Ultros
Game: FFXIV
Posts: 2735
By Chu Chu 2016-09-16 18:56:00
Ragnarok.Hevans
サーバ: Ragnarok
Game: FFXI
Posts: 15273
By Ragnarok.Hevans 2016-09-16 18:57:12
How did you get a hold of my biography?!
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By Bloodrose 2016-09-16 18:59:12
Not just his bio, but his graduation picture as well.
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By Kalila 2016-09-16 19:08:51
I love me some good root beer, but if I had to choose between a really good root beer, or a really good cream soda...
I'd pick cream soda every time. Even if I could pick both, I'd rather have the cream soda.
A good cream soda just can't be beat. Love flavored cream soda's too!
Forum Moderator
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By Anna Ruthven 2016-09-16 19:09:56
I prefer root beer to cream soda.
Ever drink any of those Jones' sodas?
By Skjalfeirdotter 2016-09-16 19:12:30
I prefer root beer to cream soda.
Ever drink any of those Jones' sodas?
Is that like Jonestown kool-aid?
Forum Moderator
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By Anna Ruthven 2016-09-16 19:14:03
I prefer root beer to cream soda.
Ever drink any of those Jones' sodas?
Is that like Jonestown kool-aid? No.
Blue Bubblegum #bestflavor
サーバ: Ultros
Game: FFXIV
Posts: 2735
By Chu Chu 2016-09-16 19:16:14
This is the root beer my bf always buys
Hes crazy for it, and the cashier always ends up thinking its regular beer and asks for his id D:
サーバ: Ultros
Game: FFXIV
Posts: 2735
By Chu Chu 2016-09-16 19:37:57
This is a thread that I found on another website I post at. It can be really really interesting. I thought it deserved a place here.
Post your random thoughts for the day here, or anything else that intrigues you.
For starters, is it possible to give constructive critism to someone who doesn't have a neck? I totally just walked by a girl who didn't. Someone isn't getting a necklace for Valentines day!
And who decided black and white can't be colors? I want to say a racist. I really do.
Inb4thisthreadgetsreallywtf
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