origami_itto wrote:Gram, like the mass measurement, or the cracker.
They taste kind of like a digestive biscuit but there's no digestive stuff, just cinnamon and honey. You toast marshmallows and stick them between a couple with some chocolate to make S'mores
Steve James wrote:In my part of Merica, you'd be Gram. Nobody I know would say Grey ham, though.
GrahamB wrote:Strangely, people in the UK with a deep, deep Midlands accent (Birmingham) say it as "Gram".
GrahamB wrote:Strangely, people in the UK with a deep, deep Black Country/Midlands accent (Birmingham) say it as "Gram".
Graham Crackers
©Library of Congress, Wikimedia Commons
Reverend Sylvester Graham thought that a preoccupation with sensual pleasure was a result of a terrible diet. After all, his own diet was quite rigid and bland. Graham was a vegetarian who'd turned his back on spices, tobacco, sugar, and caffeine—or in other words—flavor.
origami_itto wrote:GrahamB wrote:Strangely, people in the UK with a deep, deep Midlands accent (Birmingham) say it as "Gram".
Oddly enough, people from Birmingham (Alabama) here would be more likely to pronounce "gram" as "gray-um"
everything wrote:origami_itto wrote:GrahamB wrote:Strangely, people in the UK with a deep, deep Midlands accent (Birmingham) say it as "Gram".
Oddly enough, people from Birmingham (Alabama) here would be more likely to pronounce "gram" as "gray-um"
this is a strange irony
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