by SUMFURRYTHING June 16, 2016

by cheesefri July 11, 2016

1. A delicious mix of cookies and french fries. The original Caribbean recipe calls for the cookies to be chocolate flavoured and in their full and unmodified form. However, many Americanized recipes allow for different flavours of cookies to be used and for the cookies to be crumbled to allow for a better mixture of the ingredients.
by Skywalkers July 5, 2009

by King Saladbar February 28, 2014

A sad attempt to "stick it to the french" because they refused to support an unjust and illegal war on Iraq.
by Anonymous April 18, 2003

Nationalism at it's worst.
Dick:Hey Dubbya, let's go get some pretzels
George: No DICK, you know I'm too dumb to eat a pretzel... how about some FREEDOM FRIES
George: No DICK, you know I'm too dumb to eat a pretzel... how about some FREEDOM FRIES
by davey havok May 16, 2003

Newest Fair Food: Deep-Fried Coca-Cola
DALLAS -- There are fried Twinkies and even fried candy bars.
Now, vendor Abel Gonzales Jr. has come up with a new artery-clogging concoction for the State Fair of Texas. It's fried Coke.
Gonzales deep-fries Coca-Cola-flavored batter. He then drizzles Coke fountain syrup on it. The fried Coke is topped with whipped cream, cinnamon sugar and a cherry. Gonzales said the fried Coke came about just from thinking aloud.
This is the same state fair that brought about the corn dog. The Web site said Neil and Carl Fletcher conjured up a sweetened corn-battered wiener on-a-stick and sold it for 15 cents during the 1942 State Fair of Texas.
DALLAS -- There are fried Twinkies and even fried candy bars.
Now, vendor Abel Gonzales Jr. has come up with a new artery-clogging concoction for the State Fair of Texas. It's fried Coke.
Gonzales deep-fries Coca-Cola-flavored batter. He then drizzles Coke fountain syrup on it. The fried Coke is topped with whipped cream, cinnamon sugar and a cherry. Gonzales said the fried Coke came about just from thinking aloud.
This is the same state fair that brought about the corn dog. The Web site said Neil and Carl Fletcher conjured up a sweetened corn-battered wiener on-a-stick and sold it for 15 cents during the 1942 State Fair of Texas.
The Dallas fair may have brought us the tastiness of corndogs, but I'll be damned if I'm going to eat fried Coke.
by naha8 September 19, 2006
