Well okay.
I must admit in the case of burgers and pizza and such I tend to go on quality rather than anything.
If I have Burgers, I like them to well, contain meat, so I only tend to buy the very good quality ones.
That being said though, a couple on my george forman can be extremely nice.
Same with pizza. I know lots of generic places, but I've got a local pizza place who are fantastic, not too greasy, and not stingy with the toppings
Actually I had one of those last night to celibrate finishing the second chapter of my thesis.
I'm also a big fan of chilly, provided it has at least some kick (my friend works for a company who make herbal extracts, and that makes a fantastic chilly), and I quite like a good pie, ---- though once again, it has to contain meat.
I do also like a good roas dinner sinse I'm one of these odd people who dislikes salad intensively, but really quite enjoy cooked vegitables, including the things other people don't like such as brockaly and brustles sprouts, even though they're rather out of fashion at the moment.
the two things I tend to rather specialize in, are coffee and chocolate.
Just to clarrify, I'm talking about propper, high coco content dark, none sweet at least 75 percent chocolate that actually contains coco, not the generic, rubbish, sugar and gelatine filled goop which most companies call chocolate these days.
It's also hugely healthy, sinse coco itself is actually very good good for you, it's just all the other rubbish thats stuck in so called chocolate that isn't.
then, I do coffee. Ground myself, by hand, stuck in a cafateir, and black as sin with nothing in it, ---- though occasionally for a treat I don't mind a good tot of dark rum by the side though this is something I don't tend to do too often.
Youch, now your making me hungry! ;D.
With our dreaming and singing, Ceaseless and sorrowless we! The glory about us clinging Of the glorious futures we see,
Our souls with high music ringing; O men! It must ever be
That we dwell in our dreaming and singing, A little apart from ye. (Arthur O'Shaughnessy 1873.)