You should try a good dutch one. We standardly put it on our frites. Yes, I know how that sounds if you think of american mayo.
Thats how I feel about Japanese mayo. I won't refuse the regular stuff but at home I always have kewpie mayo Sweeter and creamier than the American version. Mayo is huge in Japanese cuisine. Its on everything from pancakes to chicken to noodles
Interesting! Japanese mayo is completely new for me. I definitely would not put the mayo I know on a pancake or combine with noodles or other pasta like food It goes really well with fried potatoes and most meat. Should try to find some Japanese mayo, am very curious how it might differ!
this is absolutely correct. and has been confirmed by actual peer reviewed science. what is, really the only observable thing, apparently unique to us, from among species on our world, or at least in the sense of being an order of magnitude more prevalent, is our interest in and compulsion to, express creatively in some material terms, what occurs to our individual imaginations. it is by this means alone, that we have so completely surrounded ourselves with our artifacts, that we are thereby enabled to imagine ourselves a some how different and separate sort of thing. which of course, in not other observable way, are we anything of the sort. as for unobservable ways, i won't dismiss the possibility, but feel no compelling reason to assume, any aspect of our existence, not shared to some degree by other life forms. and we have thus far, only had opportunity to observe life forms on our own planet, as being the most likely places to find life forms other then on our own world, are those in other solar systems, which in time, some decendents of ours may, develop practical means of visiting, but which for the current time, distances defeat. and none of that says anything about the possible existence or non-existence of self aware beings who are neither physical nor imaginary. (which invariably some fanatic who hates logic is going to go off about)
I would take food by force, if I was starving, despite knowing it is wrong. Just plain steal it, whatever. It’s wrong to kill, but I would eat meat, and if necessary slaughter and butcher that creature to provide sustenance. Some, particularly smaller species of dogs, will eat until sick. Then consume that again. Even if well fed and cared for, if in a pack situation. A dog conditioned to our way of thinking would probably leave the tasty morsel. a small child would eat the same morsel. And deny it, despite having a chocolate covered mush! So.....do we inherit or are we conditioned? The child knows it is wrong otherwise it would not deny the action, but did so anyway. I agree worrying about the consequence and the action are two different things, as are day and night. That’s fairly straightforward. Does either fall within the boundary of conscience? ——————————————————