Maybe if you had killed a few they may have forgot about the exam. Missed a trick there I feel.
I nearly killed about 10 people by leaving the gas on for 10 minutes then turning the gas cooker on.
Quote from: RPJK on February 11, 2013, 03:45:38 PM I nearly killed about 10 people by leaving the gas on for 10 minutes then turning the gas cooker on.Good ! People need a bit of salt in their lives.
I have to make chicken teryaki and prawn tempura.
Quote from: Naryar on February 12, 2013, 01:29:30 AMQuote from: RPJK on February 11, 2013, 03:45:38 PM I nearly killed about 10 people by leaving the gas on for 10 minutes then turning the gas cooker on.Good ! People need a bit of salt in their lives.not sure if cooking pun or not
So I did the exam and I thought it went better than I thought. I nearly killed about 10 people by leaving the gas on for 10 minutes then turning the gas cooker on.
Cooking exams as part of school is ridiculous, unless of course you have cooking as a main part of your curriculum. Sure, cooking is an useful skill IRL, but you don't need lessons to do it.I never had anything like formal cooking lessons in my life, and I live in France.What other ridiculous lessons do you follow ?
Quote from: Naryar on February 12, 2013, 03:27:10 AMCooking exams as part of school is ridiculous, unless of course you have cooking as a main part of your curriculum. Sure, cooking is an useful skill IRL, but you don't need lessons to do it.I never had anything like formal cooking lessons in my life, and I live in France.What other ridiculous lessons do you follow ?Really? Because I think it's a welcome change to have your pass/fail depend on skills that you'll actually use. Right now in college, I'm hitting up career fairs and employer events whilst juggling the economics essay for my capstone class. Guess which one has been more useful for a soon-to-be-graduate?