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screaden posted:I finished it for the first time a couple of days ago, it's taking a lot of my willpower to try reading something else instead of starting again straight away. It took me a bit over a year to read the full series. I loved every second of it, it rekindled my love of reading. I can highly recommend the audiobooks if you do that kind of thing. It's a whole different experience.
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# ? Jan 12, 2024 17:05 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:41 |
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A Proper Uppercut posted:I can highly recommend the audiobooks if you do that kind of thing. It's a whole different experience. Get the audiobooks read by Patrick Tull, not Simon Vance (imho)
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# ? Jan 12, 2024 19:01 |
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TIL Lord Cochrane held the first patent for an airlock, and was an early fan of steamships. (IIRC Jack viewed the steam launch he encountered with some small amount of scorn, though I'd imagine he could be persuaded of their utility around a dreaded lee shore.)
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# ? Jan 12, 2024 22:24 |
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Smacks of innovation!
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 01:15 |
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This summer I made the raspberry shrub from “Lobscouse and Spotted Dog” and promptly forgot about it until my six month reminder came through tonight and the memories of squeezing juice through cheesecloth came rushing stickily back. Taste is a bit sickly but not disagreeable when iced. think I might add some lemon juice or something in future. Anyway it beats three-water grog. Very sedative.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 01:26 |
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Lobscouse & Spotted Dog is a fun reading little cookbook. It’s worth picking up just for Patrick O'Brian’s forward where he kind of veers away from talking about the book to lamenting the lack of pudding in america.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 02:29 |
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Drunkboxer posted:Lobscouse & Spotted Dog is a fun reading little cookbook. It’s worth picking up just for Patrick O'Brian’s forward where he kind of veers away from talking about the book to lamenting the lack of pudding in america. Husband made a christmas pudding this year. Candied oranges, suet, the whole shebang. They use so...much...brandy. Like, we kept running out.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 03:40 |
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I think you cracked the secret as to why people would eat those things! i've looked up a few recipes from things mentioned in the books and they are routinely incredibly unappetizing, but I could absolutely go for some toasted cheese and coffee, so it's not all bad about 21, a few posts ago - I read the first few pages to see if one particular scene I wanted to exist did. It did. Then I stopped and don't feel like I missed out on anything. I probably wouldn't mind finishing 21 someday, so what I'm really saying is there's no wrong answer.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 08:46 |
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Traditional English puddings are delicious. Christmas pudding especially. It’s a shame nobody in my family ever wants to eat them.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 12:33 |
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thekeeshman posted:Get the audiobooks read by Patrick Tull, not Simon Vance (imho) Agreed, those are the ones I listened to.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 14:07 |
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Psion posted:I think you cracked the secret as to why people would eat those things! They're really good! I made a couple of the puddings a year or two back -- I posted a trip report in this thread if you ? me -- and it makes a really nice dessert or breakfast. It tastes kind of like a moist, dense pancake with fruit inside. I think it'd be too thick without the cream sauce or maybe some syrup, though. It's too hard to find beef suet here or I'd make em more often, but I had to order it from a UK foods place online. But yeah, a lot of the stuff in the recipe book comes directly from the books, and a lot of it isn't really practical to do. There are some puddings and pies and drinks that might be fun to make, but most of the others are either intricate dishes from some culture they were visiting that I certainly don't have all the ingredients for, or simple recipes made at sea or by people in poverty that I'm not gonna eat since I have better alternatives.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 17:47 |
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Everlasting syllabub is an easy recommend, and is really, really good. I don't know why it's not still popular.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 22:27 |
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Raskolnikov2089 posted:Everlasting syllabub is an easy recommend, and is really, really good. I made this last summer and yeah it's amazing. I still have some white port so I need to make another batch sometime.
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# ? Jan 14, 2024 21:11 |
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I'm rereading The Far Side of the World and O'Brian really goes of out of his way to crap on Buenos Aires specifically and Argentina more generally. Does anyone know if that's true to the time period or more reflective of British sentiment around the time of the Falklands War when the book was being written?
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# ? Jan 15, 2024 04:23 |
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I've been making everlasting syllabub with sparkling juice in place of the wine and it is a big hit at potlucks and what not.
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 18:55 |
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What's sparkling juice? Like light cider?
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 21:10 |
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ovenboy posted:What's sparkling juice? Like light cider? carbonated fruit juice presumably
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# ? Jan 24, 2024 05:11 |
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I’m reading The Yellow Admiral right now and I wish Stephen would just challenge Mrs Williams to a duel and get it over with. I’m sick of all that vile lickpenny shrew’s scheming.
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 17:02 |
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Drunkboxer posted:I’m reading The Yellow Admiral right now and I wish Stephen would just challenge Mrs Williams to a duel and get it over with. I’m sick of all that vile lickpenny shrew’s scheming. I found her annoying in Post Captain, but I didn't expect her to become my most hated villain of the series.
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# ? Feb 23, 2024 05:38 |
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She's a doting grandmother, at least
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# ? Feb 23, 2024 20:39 |
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I know in my soul she did something reckless and stupid in the carriage ride that caused the accident; or, failing that, said something so awful that Diana chose murder-suicide.
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# ? Feb 24, 2024 02:05 |
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The way I always imagined it was she running her mouth and nagging and pissed Diana off so she drove recklessly, which Diana has done in the past when nagged.
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# ? Feb 24, 2024 02:59 |
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So my dad and I do a two person book club, and my most recent pick was Master and Commander. I am 40 pages and I’m going to have to read this entire series, aren’t I? It is already an absolute delight to read. Also when Dr Maturin first wakes up after dining with Aubrey and thinks to himself “Christ, another day.” I have never related to a fictional character so hard in my life.
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# ? Mar 8, 2024 22:15 |
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Yeah, if you enjoy the first book then the series is really going to be a treat for you. O'Brian really hits his stride a couple books in.
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# ? Mar 9, 2024 20:57 |
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A Real Horse posted:So my dad and I do a two person book club, and my most recent pick was Master and Commander. I am 40 pages and I’m going to have to read this entire series, aren’t I? It is already an absolute delight to read. Yes you will. If you get bogged down in the second book, keep at it; the remaining 18 will be more to your liking.
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# ? Mar 9, 2024 22:12 |
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A Real Horse posted:So my dad and I do a two person book club, and my most recent pick was Master and Commander. I am 40 pages and I’m going to have to read this entire series, aren’t I? It is already an absolute delight to read. Maybe one of my favorite parts of M&C. I sometimes go back and just read the first couple of chapters just for that part.
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# ? Mar 10, 2024 07:40 |
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A Real Horse posted:Also when Dr Maturin first wakes up after dining with Aubrey and thinks to himself “Christ, another day.” I have never related to a fictional character so hard in my life. Oh god, I just got a flash of Roast Beef and Ray as Stephen and Jack
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# ? Mar 12, 2024 03:43 |
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https://twitter.com/StephenKing/status/1768291733249327389 Well, this is kinda cool. They named a newly-discovered giant turtle after the god-turtle Maturin in the Stephen King novels, who in turn was named after Stephen Maturin from the Aubrey-Maturin novels. So in a way, Stephen Maturin ends up with his own little bit of immortality just like Jack does, in-universe, with testudo aubreii.
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# ? Mar 18, 2024 17:32 |
Phenotype posted:https://twitter.com/StephenKing/status/1768291733249327389 I'm literally tearing up this is so nice
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# ? Mar 18, 2024 18:07 |
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PlushCow posted:This gets linked here every so often and is a nice thing to read after finishing the series https://www.tor.com/2011/02/28/forever-bailing-patrick-obrians-last-unfinished-novel-and-the-end-of-the-aubrey-matrurin-series/ So I went looking for this, and it seems like Tor nuked the entire post chain. Backups are available at https://michaelcross.me.uk/jowalton/, and look for Patrick O'Brian in the authors tabs.
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# ? Mar 18, 2024 22:13 |
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I finished the whole series on audiobook some years ago and recently restarted it. I had forgotten how much ground gets covered in Post Captain and keep getting surprised by even major plot points (the vile Polychrest, the duel[!], how nasty Diana could be, how far Jack actually went with her, etc.). It's as close as I could reasonably come to the ideal Eternal Sunshine mind-wipe and it's wonderful
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# ? Mar 27, 2024 17:44 |
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Raskolnikov2089 posted:Husband made a christmas pudding this year. Candied oranges, suet, the whole shebang. They use so...much...brandy. Like, we kept running out. This is also why fruitcake in general and Christmas cake in specific (fancy iced and marzipan'd fruitcake) is popular in the UK, but fruitcake is a joke in the US. It works because it is soaked in rum/brandy/whisky for, like, weeks. Prohibition ruined you lot. Same reason (hard) cider basically died out until recently in America too.
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# ? Mar 27, 2024 18:25 |
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A traditional British Christmas pudding is one of the greatest things on earth (I view the Christmas cake as the half assed version) but being in Australia I can never convince my family to serve it, because it’s ’too hot’.
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# ? Mar 27, 2024 18:59 |
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Last night I dreamed I was watching an Aubrey-Maturin tv series (if only, sigh) and my partner walked in asking "wait, are they on the Moon?" And I'm like "yeah the third season got weird."
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 01:41 |
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The Lord Bude posted:A traditional British Christmas pudding is one of the greatest things on earth (I view the Christmas cake as the half assed version) but being in Australia I can never convince my family to serve it, because it’s ’too hot’. My dad used to make them, he always insisted on turning out the lights and serving it set on fire with heated brandy.
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 02:23 |
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yaffle posted:My dad used to make them, he always insisted on turning out the lights and serving it set on fire with heated brandy. This is correct
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 02:28 |
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sebmojo posted:This is correct
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 14:22 |
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jazzyjay posted:Last night I dreamed I was watching an Aubrey-Maturin tv series (if only, sigh) and my partner walked in asking "wait, are they on the Moon?" And I'm like "yeah the third season got weird." Stephen tried his hand at navigating
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# ? Apr 21, 2024 14:29 |
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‘Jack, give me joy. I have landed the ship!’ ‘What of it?’ said Jack, who had felt the bone-jarring impact and already regretted letting Stephen demonstrate his supposed new navigational skills. ‘I have landed us upon the moon!’ ‘What moon?’ ‘Why Jack; the Earth's Moon, which gazes upon us every evening. I am sure you have had cause to notice it before.’ ‘Stephen are you telling me in defiance of all naval tradition, you have landed my ship upon the moon?’ ‘Just so.’ ‘I did not recall giving you permission to do such a thing’ ‘I told you of the paper, the Art of Soaring Through Aether, in the Philosophical Transactions, and you commended my desire to walk upon the surface of the moon. You said it would be a better way of restocking on cheese for our late-night meals.’ ‘I remember it perfectly. But I had believed you to be describing an idle fancy, no more.’ ‘I certainly mentioned my intention to make good the attempt at some length; but you did not attend. You were playing cricket at the time: you were watching out, and I came and stood by you.’
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 03:17 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:41 |
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Perfect in every way.
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 04:20 |