(Untitled)

Sep 28, 2007 21:05

[Outside the mess hall, just as the sun begins to set, there's a Nobody who has, it seemed, managed to find an old-fashioned ice cream churn. Every so often, he pauses to check the thickening pale blue cream inside, adding salt not only to the ice around the central container, but to the ice cream itself]

There. That should about do it.

Leave a comment

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 01:25:39 UTC
Making it by hand? I've heard it tastes better that way.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 01:35:51 UTC
Good evening, Mukuro.

Some flavours are difficult to obtain here unless one makes them from scratch.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 01:37:19 UTC
Good evening to you as well, Zexion.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 02:16:32 UTC
I hadn't expected so many would stop by to comment on it.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 02:18:18 UTC
It's quite the unnatural color.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 03:08:42 UTC
It's perfectly natural for the ingredients used.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 03:14:56 UTC
Blue is an unusual color for food, where I'm from.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 04:33:48 UTC
The colour comes from the salt, and also from the first shards used to help the mixture freeze -- blue hues are a natural product of ice magic.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 14:46:21 UTC
Ice magic? Interesting.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 21:16:05 UTC
More like elemental essences, in this case, but yes.

I take it your world is not one that offers much experience with such things.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 21:20:31 UTC
In a way, though I would suspect not at all like what you're familiar with.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 29 2007, 23:00:47 UTC
Likely not, no, though the underlying principles are no doubt the same.

Reply

eternalsamba September 29 2007, 23:02:55 UTC
Most likely. I can't say for certain, however.

Reply

cloakanddaikon September 30 2007, 03:44:23 UTC
It would be difficult to do so without broader experience. From what Kakimoto said, your world tends to view such things with far more of a technological angle.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up