Fancy a door pudding?
Flicking through a catalogue the other day, I spotted these door puddings! Okay, they’re draft stoppers, but the description says “boudin de porte” which translates to “door pudding”.
In France, draft stoppers are indeed called door puddings. If only the captions on the door puddings were as great as the name. Instead, the captions are merely functional. There’s “Reduce air currents” and “Permit to fill big spaces” in French, and an English one too, which says “Most Important Room”. What? Who looks at a draft stopper for that information? There’s also some dog paw prints, which might work better if these were called sausage dogs, but they’re not.
No, these are door sausages. I’ve come up with some catchier alternatives. What about:
- Boudin de boudoir (room pudding)
- C’est meilleur chaude (it’s better hot)
- Chipolata faite maison (home-made sausage)
- Winter warmer (the token English phrase replacement)
In just ten minutes, I think I’ve come up with better captions than the ones printed, and I’m sure there are far funnier ones out there, just waiting to be printed on a boudin de porte. Do you have one?
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A Boudin is also a sausage.. 🙂
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boudin
Not the kind most foreigners would eat though…
BTW, in Dutch they are also sometimes called a “draft cat”
Still glad I’m a vegetarian! Aww, a draft cat! Do they come decorated with little cat faces? 🙂
Crotte de Porte?
I made ours mainly because I hate things ( draught excluders through to sweatshirts and dressing gowns) with writing on.
As most stuff is from China/Pakistan it’s amazing what Those I/C think we want our goods to say.
Boggart, thet’s very appropriate given my previous entry about andouillette sausages (aka “poo sausages”).
Lesley, I wish I was as crafty as you: the best I’ve done is use a paper cup as a tiny lamp shade in a tiny place!
After straining paint and making little nets to get leaves out of the fish pond, stuffing sausage draught excluders is the only other thing to use up old pairs of tights.
I use them to tie my tomato plants to the supports, but that’s as DIY as I get with them!