puddingcat: (Default)
puddingcat ([personal profile] puddingcat) wrote2006-02-22 02:16 pm
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Nice Things

The "5 Simple Pleasures" meme of a few weeks ago has resurfaced, having inflated to 7 things. These were my original 5 (and still stand). The others (darned interest charges) are:

6. Making things. I don't always want them once they're finished, but I get a lovely feeling of achievement out of the process of creation, whether it's knitting, drawing or work.

7. Mutual flirtation, where nothing's happened yet, and neither side quite admits to anything, but the subtext is thicker than your average McDonald's worker.

[identity profile] puddingcat.livejournal.com 2006-02-23 10:19 am (UTC)(link)
Asking to be supersized after going for the diet version a few years ago would just be daft ;)

Baps are vastly improved by sauce of some kind; they're far too dry without some kind of lubrication.

(If you're feeling dull, surely you just need a bit of a polish? *spits on hanky & advances, reasy to buff you up to a nice shine*)

[identity profile] dr-wez.livejournal.com 2006-03-02 05:09 pm (UTC)(link)
The important thing about diet versions is that they not be too sickly sweet.

It's true there's nothing quite like a lovely moist pair of baps to slap your sausage into, but you have to take care not to overdo the sauce, or you get a nasty, sticky, smelly mess.

Ah, the lovely [livejournal.com profile] puddingcat mid-buff. Mental-image-tastic. ;)

[identity profile] puddingcat.livejournal.com 2006-03-02 08:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Oooh, no. Soggy baps are horrid. They stay wrinkly even after they've been dried out. Ick.

No; they should be nice & springy, and possibly lightly seeded.

There's nothing quite like a good, hard buffing session. I try to avoid overindulging, however; I don't want an overdeveloped right arm.

[identity profile] dr-wez.livejournal.com 2006-03-07 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I like my baps with icing. Fun to lick off.

But not crusty baps. Don't like having to pick bits out from between by teeth afterwards.

Hard buffing good, excessive buffing bad - it's one thing to raise a nice healthy shine, quite another to go so far as to need a re-spray.