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The Bamboo Online wrote:Was passing through “Little Guyana” in Schenectady NY So I stopped at a West Indian supermarket I happen to be driving past I just went in to get one thing but then I saw Malta Carib in the fridge so I grab one. Take it home stick it in the freezer. Later that day I say it must be beastly cold by now. I peel the cap off and not much fizz and it not tasting like I remember it should.
Didn’t think much about it until I was about to dump the bottle into the recycling trash can and saw it expired Feb 2023.
Guyanese trying to kill trini folks ?
maj. tom wrote:lol boy report that to the County health department. https://schenectadycountyny.gov/envi-health/food-services
It eh not joke thing up there in places with food regulation. Dem wanna keil peepul.
zoom rader wrote:I tried all the steaks i could get from various restaurants, top notch. I must say i was very impressed with Brazil. I sayed just out side of Sau Paulo, San Jose de campos . Very quiet city.triniterribletim wrote:zoom rader wrote:Not really leaving Trinidad for good, but I decided to spend a week in Brazil, Sau Paulo.
Seems fairly OK for me, very friendly people. Language a lil problem some understand Spanish so I am able to get by.
From a Tourist point of view looks good and great food. 5 -10us gets you good steaks with rice, fries & Salda. Fruits are super cheap.
Non afro Women a lil apprehensive to deal with ninjas like myself, guess I am in the wrong part of the country. Some parts look like laventille on the hills. Crime, there are some characters like the youths. Women dress fine and u can see the class of women in them. Brazil reminds of a water down version of Argentina.
Would I consider living here if I was younger, hell yeah, its a lil bit like trinidad but better manner people.
If you had sent me a message I could have organized a lime for you. Where did you stay in São Paulo, on Avenida Paulista? Did you get a chance to try the all you can eat steak?
I will plan for next year
Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
alfa wrote:Would you say Brazil grass fed steaks is better than American corn fed?
I had the restaurant beef and was the bomb. I even tried those fast food mall type outlets. They serve the steaks with fries, egg, rice ,vegs.triniterribletim wrote:alfa wrote:Would you say Brazil grass fed steaks is better than American corn fed?
Depends on getting in contact with a good butcher, or sticking to Wagyu from Swift. Regular grocery meat is better than Trini though, and restaurants will serve you meat that is around choice grade.
triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
Grass fed only son.MaxPower wrote:Zoom,
You only eating a set of red meat…look after your health my boy.
Remember to throw in a little exercise, drink water, eat clean.
Chimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
How is life treating you in Brazil?
triniterribletim wrote:AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
How is life treating you in Brazil?
Life is good. Easygoing and slow. No complaints except for the smoke whenever there is a wildfire. None particularly close to where I live though. Winter is over in a few days and spring is on the way.
AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
How is life treating you in Brazil?
Life is good. Easygoing and slow. No complaints except for the smoke whenever there is a wildfire. None particularly close to where I live though. Winter is over in a few days and spring is on the way.
How is the crime over there?
What about the language barrier?
ceja wrote:Leaving Trinidad can be tough, especially with limited job options. If you’ve lived abroad, you might face culture shock and loneliness, but there are also new opportunities.
triniterribletim wrote:AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
How is life treating you in Brazil?
Life is good. Easygoing and slow. No complaints except for the smoke whenever there is a wildfire. None particularly close to where I live though. Winter is over in a few days and spring is on the way.
wtf wrote:triniterribletim wrote:AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:pugboy wrote:angostura used to make it, not sure if they still do it is just a simple white rum
used for caipirinha which is common like a rum and cokesChimera wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Chimera wrote:Anytime we in the zone we taking some drinks tim?
All you can drink beer and cachaça on me.
i googled cachaca hoping it was slang for something else.
but okay we wud work with that
It's more like the French rums, because they make it from sugarcane juice itself, not just the molasses. Apparently they sell the cheap cachaça you can buy for 19 TTD a bottle in any grocery for 288 TTD a bottle in Solera.
download.png
How is life treating you in Brazil?
Life is good. Easygoing and slow. No complaints except for the smoke whenever there is a wildfire. None particularly close to where I live though. Winter is over in a few days and spring is on the way.
What about prostitution...heard it's out of control over there
triniterribletim wrote:Another plus about Brazil, private healthcare is extremely affordable. I've never gotten sick here, but my father in law needed a dermatologist because of a psoriasis flare up. I had signed him up for a health plan where he pays 29 BRL (36 TTD) a month for him and my mother in law. I had to schedule the appointment for him in the application, because he isn't the best with technology. The visit was 35 BRL (43 TTD). Same day appointment for 4:30 pm, we got to the private hospital at 4 pm, nice new building, fully air-conditioned with comfortable padded seating. Reception saw us at 4:07 pm and directed us to where the Dermatology department was. When we got in at 4:46 pm the Dr. said he needed some growths cauterized and a corticosteroid injection. It cost 180 BRL (223 TTD) and everything was resolved and got the prescription for what he needed. Just had to buy him a tub of Cetaphil for 95 BRL (118 TTD) that Superpharm has on their website for 221 TTD, and the rest of the medicine, he got at the neighborhood dispensary. Yes, they have public dispensaries for every part of the city where you get free generic medication. I remember that my grandfather used to have to go by Dr. Basanta in St. Augustine and every time was at least 1000 TTD had to shell out, and that was back in the day. You could never get that level of service for anywhere near that price in Trinidad and Tobago.
AlphaMan wrote:triniterribletim wrote:Another plus about Brazil, private healthcare is extremely affordable. I've never gotten sick here, but my father in law needed a dermatologist because of a psoriasis flare up. I had signed him up for a health plan where he pays 29 BRL (36 TTD) a month for him and my mother in law. I had to schedule the appointment for him in the application, because he isn't the best with technology. The visit was 35 BRL (43 TTD). Same day appointment for 4:30 pm, we got to the private hospital at 4 pm, nice new building, fully air-conditioned with comfortable padded seating. Reception saw us at 4:07 pm and directed us to where the Dermatology department was. When we got in at 4:46 pm the Dr. said he needed some growths cauterized and a corticosteroid injection. It cost 180 BRL (223 TTD) and everything was resolved and got the prescription for what he needed. Just had to buy him a tub of Cetaphil for 95 BRL (118 TTD) that Superpharm has on their website for 221 TTD, and the rest of the medicine, he got at the neighborhood dispensary. Yes, they have public dispensaries for every part of the city where you get free generic medication. I remember that my grandfather used to have to go by Dr. Basanta in St. Augustine and every time was at least 1000 TTD had to shell out, and that was back in the day. You could never get that level of service for anywhere near that price in Trinidad and Tobago.
Does your wife speak English?
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