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Reply to "Can you bring Tupperware with pudding on plane in purse/carry on?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP's MIL lives in Hardscrabble Gorge, West Texas. There's a long and brutal history of wives being forced to bring or make pudding there. It's about time someone spoke out.[/quote] Yeah, still trying to figure out the logistics of this. Can't think of many places that would be a 2 hour flight, then a 5 hour drive. Maybe northern Wisconsin? Or the UP of Michigan? Those might be pudding happy places.[/quote] Many places east of Kansas are well within the pudding friendly zone. In fact, I'm thinking it is, in fact Kansas-bound pudding. Once you fly past the tree line, it's pie country all the way to Death Valley. [/quote] Agree with this. Any of the plains states, really. OP, please at least tell us what kind of pudding before we all collectively lose it. [/quote] She already said it was in Texas.. I want to know this pudding recipe now too! Puddings can actually be really good if done well. Th Brits know this. Not every pudding is plebeian, only the cheap jello style ones you buy at Giant![/quote] Someone said Texas as a joke. Pretty sure it was not the OP. Texas is totally pie country. And pudding in England refers to almost any dessert. It's usually cake with a sauce on it. [/quote]
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