this post was submitted on 11 Mar 2025
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C'est l'heure du goûter!
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Partagez votre goûter.
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Produits industriels autorisés uniquement après visionnage de notre seigneur et sauveur Jean-Pierre Coffe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qNaErH_8haQ.
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Share your goûter (wikipedia).
Drink, homemade (recipe?) or bought pastries, and others.
Industrial snacks are allowed only after watching our lord and savior, food critic Jean-Pierre Coffe, trashing industrial food live on TV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qNaErH_8haQ.
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As a kid I grew up eating them with what we called schmutz (Pennsylvania German for dirt, or dirty). It is fruit cooked with sugar and then thickened with corn starch. When I make it now I use only a small amount of sugar, just enough to make it palatable without going over the top sweet.
Funny, I always thought schmutz was Yiddish!
Two germanic languages. They could share a word or have each a very close version.
Shmuts is Yiddish, while schmutz and smutzen are German. My grandmother was Pennsylvania German and did not lean English until near adulthood.