{"id":5547,"date":"2017-04-28T14:42:24","date_gmt":"2017-04-28T14:42:24","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2019-04-16T12:37:09","modified_gmt":"2019-04-16T12:37:09","slug":"guest-post-cauliflower-soup-with-cara-w-in-all-her-amazingness-html-d2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/laughfrodisiac.com\/2017\/04\/28\/guest-post-cauliflower-soup-with-cara-w-in-all-her-amazingness-html-d2\/","title":{"rendered":"Guest Post!! Cauliflower Soup with Cara W. in All Her Amazingness"},"content":{"rendered":"
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<\/u>I despise carrots. I have no idea why, but starting maybe 5 years ago, I started to think that carrots taste like people<\/em>. [ . . . <\/em>] I realize this makes little to no sense, and I’ve been laughed out of a number of cocktail party conversations by bringing this bizarre personal, uh, quirk to light, but hey, I swear to you: If people were a thing that people ate, I like, am 99.8907% certain the dish would be a little carrot-y tasting. I know it’s weird, but I tend to avoid carrots in all forms, and am particularly frightened of them in their cooked form, so uh, it’s weird that I decided to make this recipe, as there are cooked carrots. BONUS: you really can’t taste them.
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Call me Edward Cullen, but I actually hate garlic, too. I know, I know, you’re probably thinking, “Cara, how could you study abroad in Italy and hate garlic?” or the more common, “Cara, how can you possibly enjoy good food if you hate garlic?” but here’s my stock response: whatever you love about garlic, I guarantee I can create with a nice mix of sweet onions, shallots, and fresh spring onions. (Seriously guys, garlic is icky. It tastes like burnt. And it makes me breathe fire. Can’t we just move on from this? Call it a fad (of the past million centuries)? Bring on some more varieties of onions? Eh?) [BUT I LOVE FIREBREATHING<\/em>.]
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