Page talk:The History of the Valorous and Wity Knight-Errant, Don-Quixote of the Mancha.djvu/41

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Latest comment: 5 years ago by Eaterjolly
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So I ponder what nuance/irony Shelton and Cervantes attributed to various daily Hot Pots, so as to imagine what other food might possess the same meaning when abiding popular cosmopolitan ideologies like atheism or veganism. Clearly the lentils on Friday clearly possess an allusion to christianity (or as I like to call such, 'Dublessianity' [for their dubless/nameless god]). I imagine Galimawfry represents a humble dish which almost gives full nutrition and significant protein- as well as fat- based calories (in the cognition of the era: a dish a poor knight could live on). I can't at the moment imagine what pigeon on sundays meant. Eaterjolly (talk) 14:37, 5 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

I imagine collops could mean tofu nuggets to some. By the diverse oil content or the texture "eggs" suggest an avocado or other non-sweet fruit. So such for Saturdays.
I would hypothesize cows have more hormones by DNA than sheep or at least more stress hormone (cortisol). I may prefer that researched. If factual, then "beef" might suggest a stressful food such as pistachios or other hard-shell nuts as opposed to soft-shell nuts for "mutton". So such for every night.
Perhaps "lean Pigeon" might suggest what a hunter of thinking-beings might consume as a luxury on a thoughtful day. For a carer of thinking-beings, Tea might suit that nuance plus add variety to the thoughtful nature of the days. So such for Sundays.
I know not yet if the text has any Chekhovian Guns among these dietary nuances.
Eaterjolly (talk) 00:55, 12 April 2019 (UTC)Reply