Topic: Did I miss a biology lesson?
no photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:17 AM
Good afternoon everyone waving


I stopped at the supermarket on the way home from work. I used the self check out, but was right next to a "manned" cashier and over heard the following conversation between two store employees.


Employee 1: I like pineapple soda. It's my favorite

Employee 2: I like pineapple too, but mango flavor is my favorite. I like anything mango flavored except mangoes, because I don't like the bone.

I was a history major, so I do not claim expertise in biology, but....


rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl


PATSFAN's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:18 AM
laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh

ljcc1964's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:18 AM
mmmmm....mangos

JUPITER69's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:20 AM
laugh laugh laugh

jtip1977's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:20 AM
Hmmm - no bone here....


Derekkye's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:21 AM
Edited by Derekkye on Fri 01/16/09 11:21 AM

Derekkye's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:22 AM

Hmmm - no bone here....




laugh

Mr_Music's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:23 AM
Does that mean there's no bones in ice cream, either?? shocked

Those bastards LIED to me!
:angry:

Woni's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:25 AM
What you have never gotten choked on a mango bone? That was so funny I am going to use that as my new saying for the day. Well that so "choke me on a mango bone".

no photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:26 AM
Like most fruits, mangoes originally had bones to support their outer structures.

Scientists and food researchers have, in just the last hundred years or so, developed methods of producing what we now know as "boneless fruits" across virtually the entire fruit spectrum.

This results in a better and more convenient source of nutrition for all of us.

Boneless fruit contains more actual "fruit content" and is therefore healthier, not to mention easier, than eating the bone would have been.

These scientists and food researchers are the unsung heroes of today's fruit industry.

These same technologies, expanded into other areas, have given us many other useful items, such as the bagless vacuum cleaner and the cordless phone.



no photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:26 AM

Does that mean there's no bones in ice cream, either?? shocked

Those bastards LIED to me!
:angry:



I believe there are bones in Porterhouse steak ice cream. laugh

no photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:28 AM
DO PINEAPPLES GROW ON PINE TREES????????

Mr_Music's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:28 AM


Does that mean there's no bones in ice cream, either?? shocked

Those bastards LIED to me!
:angry:



I believe there are bones in Porterhouse steak ice cream. laugh


Oh, well, okay then. That's different.

Woni's photo
Fri 01/16/09 11:30 AM

DO PINEAPPLES GROW ON PINE TREES????????


You place a pine tree and an apple tree in the same hole and then you get ....

no photo
Fri 01/16/09 01:40 PM
Aww man! And all these years, I've been calling the crust..."pizza bones"...

MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 01/16/09 01:42 PM

Good afternoon everyone waving


I stopped at the supermarket on the way home from work. I used the self check out, but was right next to a "manned" cashier and over heard the following conversation between two store employees.


Employee 1: I like pineapple soda. It's my favorite

Employee 2: I like pineapple too, but mango flavor is my favorite. I like anything mango flavored except mangoes, because I don't like the bone.

I was a history major, so I do not claim expertise in biology, but....


rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl


happy I dont like lizard headshappy

sensualsweet's photo
Fri 01/16/09 01:51 PM
I had a mango tree in my yard. The fruit tastes like a cross between a peach and an orange (to me). And there is a huge "seed" pod inside the fruit that the pulp sticks to (much like the peach pulp sticks to the peach pit).

I was so amazed by the size and texture, etc. of the seed that I let it dry on the window sill and I saved it. It's kind of football shaped and dries to a texture much like a bone (like a wishbone).

Anyway, that may be where they got that expression referencing the bone.

Although I love all the awesome responses and jokes about it, I thought I'd let you in on the facts. I still have the dried seed (or bone) somewhere around here -- I was that intrigued by it.

Now, if I could just figure out one burning question, "where did my Mango?" laugh