Official BBO Hijacked Thread Thread No, it's not about that
#1721
Posted 2010-July-01, 07:44
#1722
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:16
George Carlin
#1723
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:22
I like A&W.
I also really like cream soda.
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#1724
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:37
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#1725
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:37
#1726
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:46
George Carlin
#1727
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:57
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#1728
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:57
it is fabulous with ice cream+whipped cream+cherry.
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#1729
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:01
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#1730
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:31
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 03:01 PM, said:
Yeah - I have a couple of British born, now American aunts that married USAF men. A while back they were over here for a visit and I took them to see my sister - we took them to a pub for lunch - I asked how much to uproot this place and put it back down brick for brick somewhere in America - "you'd make a killing boy" was their general response.
#1731
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:35
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 03:01 PM, said:
In fact, if you're serious, I have a son, trained chef - similar sort of age group to you I think - plays reasonable bridge too (possibly not quite to your standard) - and somehow you know how to get hold of some start up capital. Dunno - the idea just came into my head - dunno what he would say. Anyway - there's an idea...
#1732
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:37
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#1734
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:43
NickRW, on Jul 1 2010, 09:35 AM, said:
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 03:01 PM, said:
In fact, if you're serious, I have a son, trained chef - similar sort of age group to you I think - plays reasonable bridge too (possibly not quite to your standard) - and somehow you know how to get hold of some start up capital. Dunno - the idea just came into my head - dunno what he would say. Anyway - there's an idea...
I am serious, but I believe something like that is a few years down the road for me. I still have more school to attend and I don't think I'm ready to commit to living in this city for long enough to grow a dining establishment.
I can say, though, that a microbrewery with a wide selection of homebrews and good food would be an interesting contrast to all the dime-a-dozen, generic, traditional bars popular in Dallas. I think it could be successful.
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#1735
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:56
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 03:43 PM, said:
OK - you're possibly a wee bit younger than my son then - he just turned 21.
Quote
I'm sure of it. Pub hours are not that compatible with playing much Bridge is the only downside!
#1736
Posted 2010-July-01, 10:00
NickRW, on Jul 1 2010, 09:56 AM, said:
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 03:43 PM, said:
OK - you're possibly a wee bit younger than my son then - he just turned 21.
Quote
I'm sure of it. Pub hours are not that compatible with playing much Bridge is the only downside!
I'm 23. I got a degree in business but still plan to get a Masters.
Hopefully the education will put me in a better position to manage a restaurant
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#1737
Posted 2010-July-01, 10:06
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 04:00 PM, said:
OK. I see. A question of language... "School" here usually means up to 18.
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Certainly make you more employable by a reputable chain - they like paper qualifications - and you'd get some useful experience while doing it - which is no bad thing. But I'm old enough and wise enough to see past paper - you seem to have the purpose - you can't train that - and it is a lot more important.
On the beers thing - if you really want a British theme to your pub - with the likes of fish and chips, and roast beef and potatoes with yorkshire pud and gravy on the menu - guess you'd really need a British theme to the beers you serve too - given the difference I've tasted between American imported beers and the typical beers served here, I think you'd need to come over here and taste some of the stuff we produce - many of them are a lot more bitter than what I think is typical in America. In other words you'd need to do your market research properly... Don't want to either import half a truck load of stuff and your customers don't like it - or brew up something locally that is similar tasting with similar results. But not all British beers are bitter anyway....
Nick
#1738
Posted 2010-July-01, 10:27
Quote
Someone hasn't read Rich Father, Poor Father...
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#1739
Posted 2010-July-01, 10:42
Hanoi5, on Jul 1 2010, 10:27 AM, said:
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Someone hasn't read Rich Father, Poor Father...
It's on my bookshelf. I was researching duplexes instead.
The Art of the Deal is also in my queue.
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#1740
Posted 2010-July-01, 10:44
jjbrr, on Jul 1 2010, 07:00 PM, said:
Hopefully the education will put me in a better position to manage a restaurant
90% of all restuarants fail in the first year.
Of the ones that survive, about two thirds fail in the next three years.
My gut says that practical experience in the business is MUCH MUCH MUCH more important than an MBA. You need to understand
How a kitchen really works
Where diswasher's come from
All the myriad ways your suppliers can screw you over
How to handle legions of overstressed, underpaid speed freaks with knives
Abby used to work serious food service and opened a few restuarants.
Her stories are terrifying