Where in the World is Bob Saget?

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PUSH

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Lol. That's okay; I can legally drink at home. My parents let me if they are also drinking, which is rare. For now, I got my ice.
rainbowshaveice.png

Got this stuff in Wisconsin? ;)

Is that just a snow cone? If so, yes we do. I actually got some of that at the Japan pavilion on my trip.

EDIT: They aren't exotic flavors, and it's normally at just special events, but we have them.
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
Is that just a snow cone? If so, yes we do. I actually got some of that at the Japan pavilion on my trip.

EDIT: They aren't exotic flavors, and it's normally at just special events, but we have them.
Shave ice. Back home we have snow balls. I've gotten it at Japan, but it's so much better here.
 

MOXOMUMD

Well-Known Member
I own a snow cone machine and make them quite often during the summer but they never look as delicious as that! We use the Hawaiian Punch brand flavorings.
 

MOXOMUMD

Well-Known Member
Too much work and messy as heck:

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I had something similar to this when I was little. I actually have a small restaurant one. My town built a new high school/stadium a few years ago with all new concession stands.The booster clubs auctioned off all the old equipment so I bought the old snow cone machine for $20.
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
@PUSH Snow cones and shave ice are not the same thing. Direct from Wikipedia:

Shave ice or Hawaiian shave ice is an ice-based dessert made by shaving a block of ice. While the product can resemble a snow cone, snow cones are made with crushed, rather than shaved, ice. Even though it is made with shaved ice, it is called "shave ice", not "shaved ice" by Hawaiians.

History:
Shave ice traces its history to Japan, where it is known as kakigōri and dates back to the Heian Period.[3]"Shave ice enjoyed world-wide popularity after Japanese plantation workers immigrated to the Hawaiian islands and took their traditional dessert with them, creating shave ice from large blocks of ice and using Japanese swords which were family heirlooms.
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
But in reality, it's the same thing. Ice and flavoring. They taste the same. :p

Only until you come to Hawaii, go home and have what they have there, and then you realize how you didn't appreciate what they had in Hawaii. Also from Wikipedia:
Although the traditional American flavors are common, shave ice in Hawai'i is often flavored with local ingredients such as guava, pineapple, coconutcream, passion fruit, li hing mui, lychee, kiwi fruit and mango.

Mango watermelon liliko'i is my favorite:D
 

StarWarsGirl

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
Nothin' like fourth of July fireworks on the beach:)

Anyway, tomorrow is my last day here. I'm so ready to go home. Sick of taking so much benadryl! I'll be posting my Disneyland trip report soon. As for Aulani, the trip report would go like this:

Laid by the pool, sat on the beach, ate lunch, grabbed shave ice, repeat. The only variations would be what flavor of shave ice I happened to get. That, and the one day I bothered to leave here.
 

Darth Tater

Well-Known Member
Well we still have a day left, so maybe wait a bit? We want to make this quest look realistic.
Good call, comrade.

WE'VE FINALLY MADE IT TO THE CALIFORNIA BORDER!! We're getting close to @StarWarsGirl95 now! We just have to trek across the hills of Yosemite, wade across the Pacific...and then quest accomplished! We should be there by the morn of Sunday. What could possibly go wrong?
 
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