No.
A Scottish serving dish or platter could be a traditional Scottish stoneware platter called a "trencher." These durable platters were historically made from earthy materials like clay or wood and used for serving food, especially during communal meals or gatherings. They often have traditional Scottish designs or motifs carved into them, adding to their cultural significance.
Yes, you bring food and the gift to the in home wedding. You could do up a nice fruit platter; buy frozen finger foods from your market and make the platter look nice with slices of 'Star Fruit' cut into thin slices along with thinly sliced strawberries to play on top of the Star Fruit. Slices of lime or lemons (or both) if it's a seafood platter.
Generally, the crackers. The cheeses go in the middle. This could vary depending upon the type of platter in question.
Jack Sprat could eat no fat, his wife could eat no lean. So between the two of them, they licked the platter clean.
Fish online is a good online guide to start with. You could also look at seafood watch. The David Suzuki foundation also has a guide on sustainable seafood.
The Hink-Pink would be "Least Feast". The Hinky-Pinky would be "Little Vittles".
Jack Spratt could not eat fat, while his wife could not eat lean. They both could eat the portions the other left, so they licked the platter clean.
An answer could be "The title of this picture is 'Man and a Train.'"
if we could sell it for $ 15 trillion... then we could defeat the dept by paying the amount
Jack Sprat could eat no fat, his wife could eat no lean, and so between the both of them, they licked the platter clean.
Jack Sprat could eat no fat, his wife could eat no lean, and so between the both of them, they licked the platter clean.
any Chinese cuisine / restaurants that serve seafood dishes