Posted by brooklyn1 on December 5, 2009, 10:01 am
"sam coleridge" wrote:
>
>In the far east recently I saw tiny barbeques about ten inches square, the
>base being made from what i think was some kind of clay and had a stainless
>steel rack to sit on the top.
>They could easily be placed on a kitchen hob, so that you could have an
>indoor barbi.
>They were too heavy to bring one home. I'm wondering if anyone has seen
>them for sale in the u.k.?
>Or if anybody had adapted anything to make a miniature barbeque that one
>could use indoors?
Oh yes, make it an obligatory celebratory occasion by order of the
Queen that every UKer light their indoor charcoal burner at midnight
of New Years Eve and crawl into bed... get rid of all yoose stench
breathed rotted teeth brit bastards in one fell swoop! <G>
Ahahahahahahaha. . . .
Posted by Ophelia on December 5, 2009, 10:16 am
> "sam coleridge" wrote:
>>
>>In the far east recently I saw tiny barbeques about ten inches square, the
>>base being made from what i think was some kind of clay and had a
>>stainless
>>steel rack to sit on the top.
>>
>>They could easily be placed on a kitchen hob, so that you could have an
>>indoor barbi.
>>
>>They were too heavy to bring one home. I'm wondering if anyone has seen
>>them for sale in the u.k.?
>>
>>Or if anybody had adapted anything to make a miniature barbeque that one
>>could use indoors?
>>
>>
> Oh yes, make it an obligatory celebratory occasion by order of the
> Queen that every UKer light their indoor charcoal burner at midnight
> of New Years Eve and crawl into bed... get rid of all yoose stench
> breathed rotted teeth brit bastards in one fell swoop! <G>
> Ahahahahahahaha. . . .
Awwwwwwwww come on now SHELDUMB! You know you would miss me:))
Posted by ViLco on December 5, 2009, 4:28 pm
Ophelia wrote:
>> Oh yes, make it an obligatory celebratory occasion by order of
the
>> Queen that every UKer light their indoor charcoal burner at
midnight
>> of New Years Eve and crawl into bed... get rid of all yoose
stench
>> breathed rotted teeth brit bastards in one fell swoop! <G>
>> Ahahahahahahaha. . . .
> Awwwwwwwww come on now SHELDUMB! You know you would miss me:))
A redident troll is a resient troll, LOL, and Shelly's really good
at that
--
Vilco
Mai guardare Trailer park Boys senza
qualcosa da bere a portata di mano
Anche tu puoi diventare lesbica se lecchi il tappeto
Posted by Ophelia on December 5, 2009, 4:36 pm
ViLco wrote:
> Ophelia wrote:
>>> Oh yes, make it an obligatory celebratory occasion by order of
> the
>>> Queen that every UKer light their indoor charcoal burner at midnight
>>> of New Years Eve and crawl into bed... get rid of all yoose
> stench
>>> breathed rotted teeth brit bastards in one fell swoop! <G>
>>> Ahahahahahahaha. . . .
>> Awwwwwwwww come on now SHELDUMB! You know you would miss me:))
> A redident troll is a resient troll, LOL, and Shelly's really good
> at that
<g>
Posted by Lou on December 5, 2009, 10:43 am
> In the far east recently I saw tiny barbeques about ten inches square, the
> base being made from what i think was some kind of clay and had a
stainless
> steel rack to sit on the top.
> They could easily be placed on a kitchen hob, so that you could have an
> indoor barbi.
> They were too heavy to bring one home. I'm wondering if anyone has seen
> them for sale in the u.k.?
> Or if anybody had adapted anything to make a miniature barbeque that one
> could use indoors in the kitchen placed on the gas hob?
If by barbeque you mean something that burns charcoal, there's a couple of
things to beware of. First, charcoal fires produce carbon monoxide, which
can be deadly. Second, a charcoal fire consumes oxygen, and in an enclosed
room the oxygen can be depleted below the concentration necessary to sustain
human life. In the US, about 25 people are killed each year from burning
charcoal indoors. See for instance
http://www.hpa.org.uk/web/HPAweb&HPAwebStandard/HPAweb_C/1195733793495 or
http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/452.html
>In the far east recently I saw tiny barbeques about ten inches square, the
>base being made from what i think was some kind of clay and had a stainless
>steel rack to sit on the top.
>They could easily be placed on a kitchen hob, so that you could have an
>indoor barbi.
>They were too heavy to bring one home. I'm wondering if anyone has seen
>them for sale in the u.k.?
>Or if anybody had adapted anything to make a miniature barbeque that one
>could use indoors?