The Best Cyprus Community

Skip to content


HELLIM – A PRODUCT OF TRNC

How can we solve it? (keep it civilized)

Postby kurupetos » Sat Sep 11, 2010 10:47 pm

TC666 wrote:
denizaksulu wrote:
TC666 wrote:
denizaksulu wrote:
TC666 wrote:
denizaksulu wrote:
shahmaran wrote::lol: :lol:

Eww it is!



When we were young were not young flirty/flighty girls also called 'kısrak'?

yes but it was used for girls who were on the naughty side of life.



Yes; flirty and flighty. :lol:

yes they would say gel be kisrak buraya. strange that upper class english use the same phrase philli for their totti.


:lol: :lol:

i guess we just can't help being upper ass after all we ruled the greeks of cyprus for 400 years. its breeding cant be helped


Corrected and agreed. :wink:
User avatar
kurupetos
Leading Contributor
Leading Contributor
 
Posts: 18855
Joined: Tue Jul 31, 2007 7:46 pm
Location: Cyprus

Postby kurupetos » Sat Sep 11, 2010 11:00 pm

insan wrote:
kurupetos wrote:
insan wrote:
kurupetos wrote:
insan wrote:
B25 wrote:
shahmaran wrote:
Get Real! wrote:No surprise to hear that Ottoman remnants are incompatible with Cypriot produce...


How are we "incompatible" if we can make it better? :roll:


Fakes and copies are never as good as the genuine.

Haloumi is recognised the world wide.

Hellim sounds like a ballon filled with gas!


The fact is that even so many GCs buy their Hellims from North... not only because it's nearly the half price of the GC ones but also tastes far better than the GC ones...




Do you believe the bollocks you post? :roll:


I witnessed hundreds of times... R u aware that anything in favour of TCs irritates you like it irritates some of the GC priests? :lol:


Halloumis of different brands have won several international awards. For example, here is one Keses Halloumi won in 2002:

Image


Can you show us any international awards your pseudo-halloumi "Hellim" have won? 8)

Until then bugger off! :lol:
:lol:

"Whit"? or with?

Who are those idiots that supposedly award such ridiculous papers? :lol:

Poor gurubutdi! :lol: Now bugger off and google another one! :lol:


You idiot! A minor spelling mistake doesn't lower the credibility of "Monde Selection" http://www.monde-selection.com/en/1.0_A ... ission.asp
User avatar
kurupetos
Leading Contributor
Leading Contributor
 
Posts: 18855
Joined: Tue Jul 31, 2007 7:46 pm
Location: Cyprus

Postby insan » Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:01 am

kurupetos wrote:
insan wrote:
kurupetos wrote:
insan wrote:
kurupetos wrote:
insan wrote:
B25 wrote:
shahmaran wrote:
Get Real! wrote:No surprise to hear that Ottoman remnants are incompatible with Cypriot produce...


How are we "incompatible" if we can make it better? :roll:


Fakes and copies are never as good as the genuine.

Haloumi is recognised the world wide.

Hellim sounds like a ballon filled with gas!


The fact is that even so many GCs buy their Hellims from North... not only because it's nearly the half price of the GC ones but also tastes far better than the GC ones...




Do you believe the bollocks you post? :roll:


I witnessed hundreds of times... R u aware that anything in favour of TCs irritates you like it irritates some of the GC priests? :lol:


Halloumis of different brands have won several international awards. For example, here is one Keses Halloumi won in 2002:

Image


Can you show us any international awards your pseudo-halloumi "Hellim" have won? 8)

Until then bugger off! :lol:
:lol:

"Whit"? or with?

Who are those idiots that supposedly award such ridiculous papers? :lol:

Poor gurubutdi! :lol: Now bugger off and google another one! :lol:


You idiot! A minor spelling mistake doesn't lower the credibility of "Monde Selection" http://www.monde-selection.com/en/1.0_A ... ission.asp


You retard! A little spelling mistake eh? With another "minor spelling error" the halloumi could become hellim! :lol: and a guy like you could become gay... :lol:

Oddly enough; the award wining Halloumi company still is not aware of the mistypo on that paper and proudly publishes it on their official website! :lol:

http://www.halloumicheese.com/pix/Diploma3.jpg

Since 2002, it's been 8 years! :lol:

The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:
User avatar
insan
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 9044
Joined: Mon Jun 30, 2003 11:33 pm
Location: Somewhere in ur network. ;]

Postby Get Real! » Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:26 am

insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?
User avatar
Get Real!
Forum Addict
Forum Addict
 
Posts: 48333
Joined: Mon Feb 26, 2007 12:25 am
Location: Nicosia

Postby insan » Sun Sep 12, 2010 12:55 am

Get Real! wrote:
insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?


Sidqui Effendi advised in his nineteenth-century Turkish cookbook: “Put a portion of cheese in silver paper. Wrap it up and put it over a fire. When the paper starts to glow the cheese is ready to eat and deliciously creamy…This is good food that enhances sex for married men.” And I quote.


http://www.honestweight.coop/CoopScoop/ ... ticle.html

Most probably both GCs and TCs learned to make it from Maronites but the fact is that the ones made by some TC villagers and TC hellim companies are tastier than the ones made by some GC halloumi companies(at least for me and for most of the TCs)... though i haven't tried all GC brands and never tried the home made GC halloumi...

Hear what Sıtgı Ehendi tells about Hellim... Has there ever been a GC eating Hellim with full enjoyment while thinking about doing a good sex? On top of it in 19th century! :lol:

It is very clear that TCs embraced Hellim and treated it as their own invention... :wink:
User avatar
insan
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 9044
Joined: Mon Jun 30, 2003 11:33 pm
Location: Somewhere in ur network. ;]

Postby Get Real! » Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:03 am

insan wrote:
Get Real! wrote:
insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?


Sidqui Effendi advised in his nineteenth-century Turkish cookbook: “Put a portion of cheese in silver paper. Wrap it up and put it over a fire. When the paper starts to glow the cheese is ready to eat and deliciously creamy…This is good food that enhances sex for married men.” And I quote.


http://www.honestweight.coop/CoopScoop/ ... ticle.html

Most probably both GCs and TCs learned to make it from Maronites but the fact is that the ones made by some TC villagers and TC hellim companies are tastier than the ones made by some GC halloumi companies(at least for me and for most of the TCs)... though i haven't tried all GC brands and never tried the home made GC halloumi...

Hear what Sıtgı Ehendi tells about Hellim... Has there ever been a GC eating Hellim with full enjoyment while thinking about doing a good sex? On top of it in 19th century! :lol:

It is very clear that TCs embraced Hellim and treated it as their own invention... :wink:

But Insan… the indigenous Cypriots were making Halloumi for centuries before Ottomans arrived! :lol:

Is it possible that the Ottoman soldiers ignored the local cheese and insisted on inventing their own? And how did they manage to "invent" something that is almost identical to the Cypriot one? :lol:
User avatar
Get Real!
Forum Addict
Forum Addict
 
Posts: 48333
Joined: Mon Feb 26, 2007 12:25 am
Location: Nicosia

Postby shahmaran » Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:28 pm

Get Real! wrote:
insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?


They had already conquered everywhere else around here by then, so it is possible that things get carried around, like the so called "Greek coffee" which actually comes from Yemen and somehow exists in all ex-Ottoman lands.

The Ottomans are known to "shift" people around, in order to minimize uprisings :lol:
User avatar
shahmaran
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 5461
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 3:58 pm
Location: In conflict

Postby denizaksulu » Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:36 pm

shahmaran wrote:
Get Real! wrote:
insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?


They had already conquered everywhere else around here by then, so it is possible that things get carried around, like the so called "Greek coffee" which actually comes from Yemen and somehow exists in all ex-Ottoman lands.

The Ottomans are known to "shift" people around, in order to minimize uprisings :lol:


I wished they had moved these pesky Cypriots around too, but they favoured them and gave them almost complete selfrule under their GO Church. The bloody Otto's behaved rather thoughtlessly IMO.

'Yüz ver eşeğe çıkar sıçar döşeğe' = To-days homework for Kurupetos :lol:
User avatar
denizaksulu
Forum Addict
Forum Addict
 
Posts: 36077
Joined: Thu May 10, 2007 11:04 am

Postby shahmaran » Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:51 pm

denizaksulu wrote:
shahmaran wrote:
Get Real! wrote:
insan wrote:The ones who cannot notice that "minor" mistypo, how could notice any "minor" unhealtful things in their halloumi? :lol:

Time we examined your minor brain cells Insan...

Given that the Ottomans arrived on Cyprus in 1570 and those who settled here were soldiers, do you believe that they also knew how to look after goats, milk them, and invent an Ottoman cheese that today you call “Hellim”?


They had already conquered everywhere else around here by then, so it is possible that things get carried around, like the so called "Greek coffee" which actually comes from Yemen and somehow exists in all ex-Ottoman lands.

The Ottomans are known to "shift" people around, in order to minimize uprisings :lol:


I wished they had moved these pesky Cypriots around too, but they favoured them and gave them almost complete selfrule under their GO Church. The bloody Otto's behaved rather thoughtlessly IMO.

'Yüz ver eşeğe çıkar sıçar döşeğe' = To-days homework for Kurupetos :lol:


That is very true Deniz.

Yet they have the audacity to call us "invaders", I mean how many times do we have to save their sorry asses? :lol: :lol:
User avatar
shahmaran
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 5461
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 3:58 pm
Location: In conflict

Postby Oracle » Sun Sep 12, 2010 1:55 pm

shahmaran wrote:The Ottomans are known to "shift" people around, in order to minimize uprisings :lol:


They've done a good job of "shifting" you TCs off the scene! :lol:
User avatar
Oracle
Leading Contributor
Leading Contributor
 
Posts: 23507
Joined: Mon Feb 11, 2008 11:13 am
Location: Anywhere but...

PreviousNext

Return to Cyprus Problem

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests