champagne
has been listed 27 times with 5 comments
chateau
has been listed 4 times with 0 comments
emulsion
has been listed 13 times with 0 comments
souffle
has been listed 5 times with 0 comments
tarragon
has been listed 20 times with 0 comments
thyme
has been listed 25 times with 2 comments
sorrel
has been listed 26 times with 1 comment
iridescent
has been listed 61 times with 1 comment
rubberneck
has been listed 2 times with 2 comments
sorbet
has been listed 13 times with 15 comments
granita
has been listed 3 times with 0 comments
symphony
has been listed 11 times with 0 comments
herald
has been listed 14 times with 1 comment
sacrosanct
has been listed 48 times with 0 comments
maven
has been listed 40 times with 4 comments
messiah
has been listed 8 times with 0 comments
foie gras
has been listed 11 times with 0 comments
truffle
has been listed 22 times with 2 comments
aroma
has been listed 10 times with 0 comments
delirium
has been listed 18 times with 1 comment
bouquet
has been listed 12 times with 0 comments
gourmand
has been listed 35 times with 0 comments
oenophile
has been listed 23 times with 0 comments
oenology
has been listed 4 times with 0 comments
gastronome
has been listed 7 times with 0 comments
chimes
has been listed 7 times with 0 comments
chervil
has been listed 10 times with 1 comment
foodie
has been listed 16 times with 0 comments
lingerie
has been listed 10 times with 5 comments
pinot noir
has been listed 2 times with 0 comments
terroir
has been listed 10 times with 3 comments
melee
has been listed 35 times with 13 comments
Well, okay, meleeman, but pronouncing something correctly doesn't necessarily make one high-falutin. It does make one correct, though. ;)
With classical music playing softly in the background. ;-)
I like how 'melee' and 'messiah' are nestled in with all the food words. I'm imagining a food fight at an upscale Last Supper :-)
my friend and I used to argue over the pronunciation of the word "melee" for years. He thought it was more proper as "MAY-lay" whereas I said, "meh-LAY" was more appropriate. I realized we were both right. Practically speaking, I use his pronounciation now because if not I sound too high-falutin.
mostly food oriented