Oh dear, I think I just misinformed an Australian couple in a café :(
They wanted "flat whites". In England (particularly in branches of Pieminister, which do marvellous pies, but really only serve coffee as a sideline) we do not understand this term.
There was some confusion. Having (I thought) had the term explained to me by
quantumboo last year, I suggested they wanted filter-coffee-with-milk. Sadly, I fear Quantumboo may have told me what a flat black was, and I extrapolated.
A flat white was, said the Australian lady, like a cappucino without the froth. Aha, said the English-not-first-language serving-person, a latte. No, said the Australian lady, nothing like a latte.
I think they got filter coffees in the end. But now Wikipedia suggests I'm wrong, and they're going to have got something not nearly milky enough. Wikipedia is also rather vague about the difference between a flat white and a latte.
Does anyone understand this posh foreign coffee stuff ? What would you understand by the term flat white ?
They wanted "flat whites". In England (particularly in branches of Pieminister, which do marvellous pies, but really only serve coffee as a sideline) we do not understand this term.
There was some confusion. Having (I thought) had the term explained to me by
A flat white was, said the Australian lady, like a cappucino without the froth. Aha, said the English-not-first-language serving-person, a latte. No, said the Australian lady, nothing like a latte.
I think they got filter coffees in the end. But now Wikipedia suggests I'm wrong, and they're going to have got something not nearly milky enough. Wikipedia is also rather vague about the difference between a flat white and a latte.
Does anyone understand this posh foreign coffee stuff ? What would you understand by the term flat white ?
no subject
Date: 2008-09-26 10:41 am (UTC)Over easy = cooked on both sides with the yolk runny in the middle.
(Over medium / over hard = the above, but for longer.)
Fried = cooked on one side with the yolk broken, all hard.
Turns out Wikipedia has a kick ass page on fried eggs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fried_egg), although the reference to UK eggs being 'sunny side up' is wrong. (I might fix it.)
no subject
Date: 2008-09-26 10:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-27 07:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-27 10:24 am (UTC)