Originally posted by: tweakmm
maybe, probably cat eyes though.Originally posted by: RabidMongoose
monkey eyes
Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
Originally posted by: simms
Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
Damn fusking straight. I live about 5 minutes from Spadina and Dundas... 😉
Longan is phonetically correct. It's Cantonese, not Mandarin.Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
Originally posted by: AndyHui
Longan is phonetically correct. It's Cantonese, not Mandarin.Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
Originally posted by: AndyHui
Longan is phonetically correct. It's Cantonese, not Mandarin.Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
Originally posted by: Shelly21
Originally posted by: AndyHui
Longan is phonetically correct. It's Cantonese, not Mandarin.Originally posted by: Amorphus
Longan = bad phonetic translation.
In Mandarin, one would say "long yan", literally, "eye of the dragon". I heard it caused nosebleeds if caused in excess. I had a lot when I went to Toronto. they're better than Lychee, methinks - easier to manage. speaking of which, Toronto's Chinatown rules. all should go.
I had "long yan" and "lychee" when I was in Taiwan. And yes it seems to be true that 'long yan" caused nosebleeds because it's got too much "fire" chi.
Lychee is bigger and have more meat, but "long yan" is sweeter.
Originally posted by: wjones
If you go to Malaysia, you must try Manggis. (Seasonal fruit so you might not find it)
Originally posted by: wjones
It tasted sweet and a bit unique. People said that Durian and Longan have "fire/hot" chi that caused nosebleed if you eat too much and this Manggis got the "cool" chi.
Originally posted by: Aquaman
Originally posted by: wjones
If you go to Malaysia, you must try Manggis. (Seasonal fruit so you might not find it)
What does it taste like?
Cheers,
Aquaman
Originally posted by: pillage2001
Originally posted by: wjones
It tasted sweet and a bit unique. People said that Durian and Longan have "fire/hot" chi that caused nosebleed if you eat too much and this Manggis got the "cool" chi.
It's true. Bro had his nose bleed for days after consuming too much durian.
Originally posted by: YAX
Originally posted by: pillage2001
Originally posted by: wjones
It tasted sweet and a bit unique. People said that Durian and Longan have "fire/hot" chi that caused nosebleed if you eat too much and this Manggis got the "cool" chi.
It's true. Bro had his nose bleed for days after consuming too much durian.
I can't eat Durian, that stuff smells like f@rt.
Originally posted by: pillage2001
Originally posted by: Aquaman
Originally posted by: wjones
If you go to Malaysia, you must try Manggis. (Seasonal fruit so you might not find it)
What does it taste like?
Cheers,
Aquaman
It's soft.....and sweet. Very very sweet. 😀
Seems like there are alot of malaysians on AT. 😀