Guest guest Posted June 23, 2007 Report Share Posted June 23, 2007 Hello Deanna, luckily Denise answered part of the question for me! Thank you Denise! Hugs Generally potager is used to describe a kitchen garden that produces enough for the household but little surplus. The soup potage, is also derived from this meaning an 'anything from the garden' soup, normally pretty rustic with large chunks of vegetable. Sorry about the time difference, I am normally going to bed when everyone on the forums are waking up! JudyMac http://veganspirit.blogspot.com/ , " genny_y2k " <genny_y2k wrote: > Thanks for teaching me a new word. However you use the word potager > in a different way than the dictionary defines it. After checking > dictionary.com I discovered that the definition for 'potager' is a > porridge or soup. I am a poet and a lover of words so please explain > your " potager " . > Deanna in Colorado > > , " judymaccaellichyoung " > <judyandjohn.young@> wrote: > > and the other growing organic vegetables in my potager. They really > > do taste better > > JudyMac > > http://veganspirit.blogspot.com/ > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2007 Report Share Posted June 23, 2007 Hi Judy, I think there's 6.5 hours difference between the east coast of Canada (Newfoundland) and the west coast of North America (Hawaii). From the postings I've seen fly by, there seems to be members of this group from all over the world. What's another time zone between friends, eh? What part of France are you in? I have a brother in Bordeaux and a sister outside Toulon. Cheers! Denise G. ----- From : judymaccaellichyoung[judyandjohn.young] Sent : 6/23/2007 4:06:19 AM To : Cc : Subject : RE: Re: Hello, I'm another newbie! Potager and Potage Hello Deanna, luckily Denise answered part of the question for me! Thank you Denise! Hugs Generally potager is used to describe a kitchen garden that produces enough for the household but little surplus. The soup potage, is also derived from this meaning an 'anything from the garden' soup, normally pretty rustic with large chunks of vegetable. Sorry about the time difference, I am normally going to bed when everyone on the forums are waking up! JudyMac http://veganspirit.blogspot.com/ , " genny_y2k " <genny_y2k wrote: > Thanks for teaching me a new word. However you use the word potager > in a different way than the dictionary defines it. After checking > dictionary.com I discovered that the definition for 'potager' is a > porridge or soup. I am a poet and a lover of words so please explain > your " potager " . > Deanna in Colorado > > , " judymaccaellichyoung " > <judyandjohn.young@> wrote: > > and the other growing organic vegetables in my potager. They really > > do taste better > > JudyMac > > http://veganspirit.blogspot.com/ > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 23, 2007 Report Share Posted June 23, 2007 I'm in Bourgogne (Burgundy), but the mountainous region not the wine making one The nearest city is Autun, and calling it a city maybe a little excessive! It is so true about timezones, what's time to friends?! JudyMac , " dgontard " <dgontard wrote: > > Hi Judy, > > I think there's 6.5 hours difference between the east > coast of Canada (Newfoundland) and the west coast of > North America (Hawaii). From the postings I've seen > fly by, there seems to be members of this group from > all over the world. What's another time zone between > friends, eh? > > What part of France are you in? I have a brother in > Bordeaux and a sister outside Toulon. > > Cheers! > Denise G. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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