Hehe! I asked the cashier and she told me it was a Canadian company and then Wiki confirmed it ๐
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Yes, I think they have expanded to many regions, and it's strange that they serve burgers here in the UK and not in Canada.
The Honey cruller is like nothing I had before, and I was happy with my choice.
I bet Canadians still feel proud of the chain:)))
Tim Hortons has its own lingo too but I'm not sure if it would apply in Europe and other countries.
If you order a "regular coffee" you get coffee with 1 cream and 1 sugar. "Double double" you get 2 cream and 2 sugar." A triple triple is obviously 3 and 3 of those things but only kids and weirdos order that. It's not even coffee at that point. Lol
๐ It gets more interesting, but I don't think it would catch on here ๐
Exactly ๐
Yeah, probably not. Do you do cream in coffee in the UK?
Yes, the Brits tend to do cream... BUT! In homes, it's mainly Instant Coffee... so if you go to someone's house and they say "Would you like coffee or tea?" Always say tea.
I've not had this much tea in ages as I've had for the last 2 weeks. My mum-in-law says I'm not fully British yet, cos I don't drink enough tea. ๐ณ
Haha thats funny ๐
Tea isn't the same as coffee for me
No, it's not the same. Traditional English drink a cup of tea first thing in the morning, and then she says 11:00 is coffee time ๐... and throughout the day she asks if I would like a cup of tea... it's probably done me some good to have milk in my diet.
When she makes tea, she sips it slowly even when it goes cold. I cannot think of a worse punishment ๐
My cup of tea is half empty? or half full? when she takes her first sip... and I'm done by her third sip ๐คฃ
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