‘Have you got any cronuts?’
‘Any what?’ asked the young woman in the sexy (!) white
trilby.
‘Cronuts.’ The young woman coloured up as her eyes betrayed
both amusement and embarrassment.
‘I don’t know what they are,’ she said.
‘You don’t know what cronuts are? How dumb!’ (It seemed
appropriate in the circumstances to use the American vernacular.)
‘I’ve never ’eard of ’em either,’ affirmed her young male
colleague, slowly and with a downbeat countenance. He says everything slowly and with a downbeat countenance.
It's as though he’s only just discovered that the world is a terrible place and is
never going to get any better.
So then I put them at their ease by admitting that my
familiarity with the cronut was a mere twenty four hours old, and explained all
about croissants, doughnuts, New York
and taking the world by storm. They appeared interested, but not massively impressed.
Ashbourne isn’t the sort of place to be impressed by flighty new things from
far-flung shores, and it’s my guess that the cronut will remain an unknown
quantity for a few years yet. Bit like the potato, really.
2 comments:
When the cronut reaches England, the Columbian Exchange will finally be complete. This was Columbus's end game all along.
You mean Sir Walter's potatoes were just the opening gambit? Well, blow me.
It's amazing where a humble vegeburger on an English muffin can lead, isn't it?
To add a further complication, I'm drinking American Pale Ale at the moment (which is rather good.) The bottle says it's brewed in Rochester. Are bottles to be trusted?
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