Death Kava by Squirmelia
July 29th, 2012 1:48 PMWhy am I frightened of it, a harmless little bottle of almond flavouring, when I have no nut allergy? Well, before it sat at the back of my cupboard, it sat in my mother's cupboard, and before that, it sat in my grandmother's larder. I am not sure how long it was there. The price on the bottle says "1/1", which means 1 shilling and 1 pence, and therefore suggests the bottle may be quite old. I am worried that in that time it may have turned to poison.
I asked my mother if she could remember where it had come from, and she said she wondered if before my grandmother had owned this little bottle of almond flavouring, it had belonged to my grandmother's friend, who had run a shop called "The Pantry". When the shop closed, she stayed with my grandmother for a while, and perhaps some of her unsold shop items would have made it into my grandmother's larder. I'm not sure this is the case though, as the price label says "Redmans", which is probably the name of a shop.
The label on the bottle says it was made by Clayton & Jowett in Liverpool. Searching the web, I found an advert for essence of lemon made by Clayton & Jowett from 1948. I've also found a photo of a bottle of peppermint essence from 1920 by Clayton & Jowett, and the label of this almond flavouring at least looks more modern than that.
There is no sell by date on the bottle, and if there's no sell by date, then obviously it must never go off. I conclude that it is time to get over my fear and use the almond essence. I sniff the bottle and it does still smell very almondy and surprisingly quite pleasant.
I looked through Vegan Pie in the Sky and found a recipe for pear frangipane tart. I made a press-in almond crust, and then in the filling, where it called for almond extract, I used some of the ancient almond flavouring from the bottle. Disguising the almond flavouring in a tart seemed the best plan, I would hardly even notice it was there.
I cooked the pie and made a bit of a mess of it, but I have eaten some and I am still alive, and not transported back to whenever the almond flavouring was made. Maybe the effects take a while to set in though?
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Damn. That looks really good. E-mail me some of that tart, just straight up attach it to an e-mail and send it to me.
Bravo! I too have hand-me-down extracts that seem to have traveled through the decades untouched...
I have been trying to figure out how old this almond flavouring was, and it has been concluded that due to the price ("1/1") being before decimalisation (pre-1971), but the volume (1/2 fl oz or 14.2ml) being likely to be after metrication (post-1965), it is probably from between 1965 and 1971.
A friend has also mentioned that the address including "Liverpool 1" helps date it, as apparently those postal districts were introduced in 1932, but Liverpool would have got modern-style postcodes some time in the early 1970s.
So, I ate almond flavouring that was probably between about 41 and 47 years old!
I want this to become the name of the next era.
Truly it will be a time of heroes. All the tasks will have the phrase "... but almond flavoured" appended to all of them.
"Eat something that scares you... but almond flavoured."
"Leave clues... but almond flavoured."
"Rubin Starset, world traveler and that guy who hates it, has stolen a sample of Ian Kizu-Blair's hair. He claims that he will, "clone and sell the poor boy off to future SF0 collectors after the site finally goes offline because all the engineers have died of alcohol poisoning" at the hands of Bubblesort.
Your task is to retrieve Ian's hair — at any cost! — to prevent Rubin from creating this clone. He is taunting us all with clues posted to an event; these will be his undoing! But almond flavoured!"
The Italian word for 'almond' is 'mandorla', which I found out because I ate some mandorla ice-cream last week. If you look at the Wikipedia entry for Mandorla, you can find out more, such as:
"In the symbolism of Hildegarde von Bingen the mandorla refers to the Cosmos." and "In icons of the Eastern Orthodox Church, the mandorla is used to depict sacred moments which transcend time and space."
So, for the Eastern Orthodox Church, a trip to Tim Horton's is kind of akin to a pilgrimage.
You may be your character, but your character need not be you, but almond flavoured.
Create a working replica of a common or mundane object that is exactly a power of ten times the size of the original, but almond flavoured.
"You'll know what to do, but in a flavor which transcends time and space."
That is a delicious way of defeating a fear. I am impressed.