From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Food and drink, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of food and drink articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the discussion. |
Start |
This article has been rated as Start-class on the quality scale. |
Low |
This article has been rated as low-importance on the importance scale.
|
Food and drink task list: |
|
|
|
Here are some tasks you can do for WikiProject Food and drink:
- Help bring these Top Importance articles currently B Status or below up to GA status: Food, Bread, Beef, Curry, Drink, Soy sauce, Sushi, Yoghurt, Agaricus bisporus (i.e. mushroom)
- Bring these Top Importance articles currently at GA status up to FA status: , Italian cuisine, Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies, Coffee, Milk, Pasta, French cuisine, Chocolate
- Bring these High Importance articles currently at GA status up to FA status: Burger King
- Participate in project-related deletion discussions.
- Get rid of Trivia sections in articles you are working on.
- Add the {{WikiProject Food and drink}} banner to food and drink related articles to help bring them to members attention. It could encourage new members to the project too.
- Provide photographs and images for Category:Wikipedia requested photographs of food
- Review articles currently up for GA status: Burger King legal issues, Chocolate
- Review articles currently up for FA status: Butter
|
|
|
[edit] Why is this listed inn the Conspiracy theorists category?
Should I add that the band "Five Iron Frenzy" has made a song about Rhubarb Pie called "Rhubarb Pie"? There's those sort of things in other wiki pages? - Logan
- Go for it. I'll support. Morton devonshire 19:00, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Rhubarb vs. strawberry-rhubarb
I don't think we should take it as a given that str.-rh. has "generally" surplanted the pure rh. Are there any authoritative sources for this? If so, please cite them. If not, this sentence can be rewritten along the lines of: "A popular variation is blah blah...." Hayford Peirce 03:46, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Savory
Any reason it's called a 'savory type of pie'? In the UK at least, savoury means the opposite of sweet - so a meat pie would be savoury, but not a rhubarb one. Claret 18:37, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Editing
I've removed a lots of stuff that has never been backed up by citations or any precise references. If you'll back it up with some specific info, then please do so and we'll put it back in the article. Hayford Peirce 04:56, 6 November 2006 (UTC)