#Sláinte
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lion's den | ao3
marc at the 100km race in 2026 | 3.4k
i have. compressed the timeline. for narrative reasons
----
Luca catches him just before they pile out of the house, towards the changing room and the bike shed. It’s not difficult for him: Marc has been hovering, peripheral, all morning. Pecco tried his best to pull him into a conversation, but Bezzecchi turned cold and Valentino appeared from the kitchen and that was that.
Marc fixes the unsure set of his face the second he realises he’s being observed instead of politely ignored. The smile is enough to convince most people—it usually is.
“You know…” Luca visibly picks through his words before he says them. “You don’t have to forgive him.”
Marc tries not to allow the smile to falter.
“If you are doing this for Pecco—that is kind of you. But you do not have to forgive him.”
“I think…” And Marc tilts his head, calculating what he can afford to reveal. Luca—he likes Luca, has always found him reasonable. “Too late for that, maybe.”
Luca’s eyes flicker for a heartbeat, too quick for him to catch even if the rest of his expression is perfectly controlled. Surprise. Marc had surprised him.
Marc clearly isn’t as fucking obvious as he thinks he is.
“Well, just …” Luca shrugs, looks him up and down. “It’s good you are here.”
“Good for Ducati?” Marc says, twisting Pecco’s words just enough that they sound mocking.
“Good for Ducati. Good for the cameras, of course.” Maybe Luca—he doesn’t have blinders on, perhaps, the way Bezzecchi does. Knows Valentino, knows what he does, and loves him anyway. “Come on.”
The moment they step outside, there’s a phone in Marc’s face, wielded by someone in a VR46 hat. Good for the cameras. Good for Valentino.
He huffs out a breath that coils in the air, hangs like smoke, before following Luca to the changing rooms with something sickening in his chest, in his stomach.
——
Pecco had suggested it first, after a particularly friendly debrief; he’d charged off into the Italian afternoon by three seconds, and Marc chased but decided the championship was close enough that twenty points was better than gravel. Things had stopped being fraught after Qatar—bizarrely, since Pecco had heard Marc behind him and locked the brakes, leaving Marc with nowhere to go but over his teammate’s sliding rear tyre. Gravel trap, Pecco helping him to his feet—and genuine shock when Marc accepted his apology without question. He’d watched Marc for an hour like he expected him to snap, before seemingly deciding he was safe.
So things had been fine. And Pecco had been fine. So when Pecco won in Misano, clawed some points back, and suggested Tavullia—Marc had laughed. Good joke.
“No, I think it would be good,” Pecco said, his smile half-confused and half-polite—but not joking. “Good for the team.”
“Do you?” Because—Jesus, Pecco had been there. He’d been young, yes, but he was there.
“Just—you don’t have to.”
“Sorry,” Marc said. “Not a good idea, I think.”
“Okay,” Pecco said, unconcerned, and that had been that.
——
Valentino snares him the moment he steps into the outbuilding, blinking at the same wooden walls he’d doomed himself in over a decade ago.
“Marc! Come here, come here, you need to sign.” And he’s being shepherded towards the table, towards the poster and the pens. Leaving his mark, he supposes.
Cameras. Marc smiles. “So I go right in the middle, no?”
Everyone laughs, indulgent, and Valentino even smiles in return before pointing out a spot for him. Marc does as he’s told; he’s walked himself into the lion’s den, so he may as well play before he’s torn to bloody ribbons.
“And the shirts, behind you.” Valentino is close, too close, a hot vein of lightning in the very centre of Marc’s awareness as they move together, entirely at his whim.
Marc swallows, wonders if he shouldn’t have come.
Valentino pulls the hem of the shirt, stretches it out taut, even though one of the hovering assistants had held her hand out to do the same thing—Valentino holds it carefully until Marc has finished, then does the same for the next one.
Then, “Allora,” and Marc is forgotten as Valentino turns to entertain, to hold court.
——
In the end, it was Valentino who had extended the second invitation, the one that Marc felt like he couldn’t refuse. It was magnanimous, the way Valentino reached for him when he won his ninth title, perfectly positioned for the cameras to capture. Summoned, to kneel and kiss the ring: Marc could play the PR game too, and he acquiesced.
And maybe—
He’d been hot and tired from the race; high on victory; dizzy from champagne and the way his palm had burned, even through gloves, when Valentino had locked their hands together so Marc couldn’t pull away.
But he’d known exactly what he was doing��what both of them were doing—when he said yes.
——
Pecco watches them both, not nervous but something like it, over the top of Bezzecchi’s head.
It’s cold, January-cold, a soft mist sitting over the track. Valentino has his hair tucked into a bright yellow hat, talking in a voice that’s clearly meant to be picked up by the ever-present phones. Marc listens, pretends to listen, smiles when he senses he should.
“Ah,” Enea says at his shoulder, “we will be fine.” Enea—relaxed, easy. Everything is easy for him, even standing in this crowd of strangers. Marc’s selfishly glad he’s here, and quietly grateful to Pecco for orchestrating them being together.
At the very least, Marc has something like a shield.
“Better when you get out and practice, yes?” Valentino says. “Get the, ah, get the feel.” He’s being so attentive it’s making Marc itch, caught under the laser-beam of his focus with no escape.
Marc swallows. Makes himself nod again. The eyes observing him narrow—and Valentino finally finally turns away.
When Marc looks back at Pecco, he’s still staring. So is Luca. Not concern. Anticipation, maybe.
“This was a bad idea,” he mutters to Enea, because Enea won’t care—and he doesn’t, letting out a loud laugh.
“Ah, I don’t know. Good for me. I might win this.”
“We might win this,” Marc retorts, reflex, and Enea laughs again.
Fuck Pecco. It’s helping.
——
Valentino—fuck him—is right. As soon as the flag drops and they roll out for their practice laps, something settles, even on this plain black bike with his number stenciled in red on the front. Unfamiliar beneath his thighs, and yet he settles into it straight away. It takes a couple of laps, that’s all, before he can throw it into a corner and grin when it bites, when the rear tyre slides how he wants it to. Valentino pulls in before he does, perches on his bike to watch Luca with folded arms, but turns his head when Marc trundles down the side chute to the bike shed.
“Feels good?” Enea says, hair a frizzy halo.
“Yeah, good.”
“You hear that, Pecco? He’s going to win!”
“He usually does,” Pecco shoots back, and grins ruefully. It almost sounds like he doesn’t mind.
——
The day moves quickly: cameraphones; qualifying; a Sky crew that Marc tries his best to steer clear of. He knows he’ll be in the background, though, so he sticks close to Enea and Pecco, ignoring Bezzecchi’s glare. Valentino would be annoyed if someone caught Marc on his own, excluded.
And then—
And they’re lining up on the track, Marc steadying the bike in his hands, not looking at Valentino two spots over who’ll be swapping in the same time he does. The flag drops. Enea sprints.
Away they go.
——
The bike feels good. Someone kind—Pecco, probably—had made some basic changes to the setup. It feels good, and it’s easy.
Enea passed the reins over to him from second position, and Bezzecchi slid on his way out of the switch line, so Marc gritted his teeth and just—went. No one in front. A few bikes close behind, so he could throw himself at the apex of every corner, could hit the inside, could let the rear tyre kick out a warning.
It’s heavy, all of a sudden, a thundercloud rolling in and pressing down—and plenty of people here have blue leathers with bright yellow, but Marc knows. Valentino is behind him. He pushes through the next turn a little harder.
Corner after corner after corner, Valentino’s bike a growling hum in his ear. Hornet buzzing inside his skull. Marc almost misses the bell to start the final lap; Enea is yelling something as he streaks past that doesn’t carry.
One lap to go. One lap. He’s going to win.
And Valentino is going to look at him like he’s holding a lemon under his tongue, and even the cameras won’t be enough to stop his eyes going cold again, and—
Marc puts his foot down, as if to catch a slide. The crowd noise pitches up. Valentino pushes through on his inside.
The flag waves.
——
Valentino won’t stop glaring at him.
You won, Marc wants to howl, you won, what else do you want? He doesn’t say anything though, accepts his necklace of sausages, and tries to think of the earliest possible opportunity to leave.
And Luca—Luca keeps glancing in his direction, eyebrows drawn together like he’s concerned, like he can sense his brother’s slow-burning anger beside him on the top step. Spark creeping down a fuse: it’s going to come to a head too soon for Marc to escape.
They let the fireworks off while Enea is pouring champagne down the back of his suit, and Marc yells, twists away, stupid fucking sausages thumping against his chest. When he opens his eyes, shivering, Valentino is still staring.
The fireworks crack. Marc blinks.
——
“This is nice,” Bezzecchi offers across the table. A harmless comment that’s like throwing a stone onto a thinly-frozen pond; the fragile peace shatters.
Everyone else is talking, laughing, eating, and it’s so loud, excruciating, against the tense bubble at the head of the table: Marc, pinned on a bench between Luca and Franky; Valentino, mouth pinched in that awful familiar way.
“Normally it is just a barbecue,” Pecco tells Marc, gallantly ignoring the heavy silence around them. “Vale is treating us well this year.”
“To celebrate a good race,” Valentino says, voice hard. “The spirit of—competition.”
Marc stares down at his plate.
“Was it—not a good race?” Luca says mildly. Marc wonders if kicking him is the way to go.
“I expect everyone to give their all on my track.”
“And you think I didn’t,” Marc says, too loud. Enea, further down the table, turns to look.
Valentino huffs through his nose. “Maybe I expected too much of you.”
“Okay.” Marc stabs his fork into a piece of salmon. “What did you expect, given that we have spoken, hm, once in the past five years?”
Pecco’s eyes widen, food abandoned as he glances between them.
And Valentino’s lips twitch, as if to say there you are. That’s what he’d been expecting, because no one can get under Marc’s skin, splinters in nails, the way he can. “I did not expect you to fuck up on the last lap.”
“It’s happened before.”
“It was a mistake, Vale,” Luca says quietly.
But Pecco—Pecco stares at Marc. Pecco knows Marc.
“A stupid mistake.”
Marc sets his jaw, something fluttering in his chest. Lion’s den. “I make mistakes all the time. I am dangerous, no?”
Valentino ignores that. “Too stupid for you.”
Marc holds his gaze, doesn’t let it slide to the wine glass balanced elegantly in his left hand, until Valentino blinks, takes a sip, rings glinting on long fingers. Pecco exhales, as if released from a spell, and picks up his fork again; it scrapes against the plate, high and piercing, and that’s enough to break whatever hold had Marc bound to his seat.
“Thank you,” he says, directly to Pecco. “This was nice. I think I will not be invited back.”
Pecco looks at him, then at Luca. “Marc—”
“See you at the team launch.” It’s a miracle Marc extricates himself from the bench without stumbling, feet numb from the cold. He should message Enea, apologise for leaving. Thank him for making it bearable.
A chair scrapes behind him as he pushes through the door, out into the frigid air. Footsteps in the dirt.
“Marc.” Valentino has been saying his name all day, and none of them have grated like this one does, this one with no one else around to hear it. “Marc!”
“I am leaving.” Marc keeps his gaze fixed on the house—he will have to ask Pecco to bring anything he forgets, will have to plead with him before the Ducati launch in ten days’ time. If he can just find the keys to his hire car—
“Why?” And even that’s sharp, like Marc failed a test.
He groans into the night sky, breath misting, before whipping around to glare. “Why? God, I cannot fucking win, Valentino. Maybe I am leaving too early, hm? Did you want to make a speech about what a disappointment I was?”
“No.” But that expression—lips pursed like there’s something sour behind his teeth.
“Oh, of course, I am sorry.” The laugh that escapes Marc’s throat is sharp, a barking sound. “Did you not get enough on video? To show how—what a sportsman you are. All is forgiven. How kind of you.”
“Jesus, Marc—”
“Whatever I do—” And it sticks on his tongue, stings with the threat of tears. How humiliating. “Whatever I do, you will—you will find something. I am not staying here.”
Valentino stays where he is, halfway between Marc and the outbuilding. “There are no flights until tomorrow.”
“I don’t care.”
“You threw the race.” It’s not—it’s different, this time, not probing, not sneering.
“I made a mistake. I finished second.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know why—”
“Yes.” A few steps, and Valentino is close enough that Marc can see the house lights glint in his eyes. “You do. It was not a mistake. You are just clever enough to make it look like one.”
Nausea almost sends him to his knees in the cold dirt, but Marc is well-practiced at ignoring his body’s cries. He folds his arms. “I don’t know what you mean.”
“If you were going to humiliate me by giving me the race,” Valentino says, closer again, “you should have made it more obvious.”
Marc closes his eyes, bites back the frustrated yell. “You are angry that you won?”
“I want to know why you think I need your help to beat you.”
“Fucking hell,” Marc breathes. “And what if I had won? Am I a dirty rider? What would fucking—what do you want? Because last time—” And he clamps his mouth shut, cursing his own slip.
No one can do that to him but Valentino.
Valentino, who pounces. “What about last time?”
“You were—angry. Last time I was here. And you would have been pissed off if I had said no, or if I had qualified last and fallen off. You would have—nothing is fucking good enough. So I will leave, and then at least I am just the sore loser you always thought, yes?” He should turn now, walk towards the house. He should.
“You threw the race,” Valentino says again, and now it’s as if he’s tasting the words, finding something new in them.
“And I should not have bothered. Because everything I do—” Marc swallows down the sting in his throat; after all this time, he still fucking cares. “You decided who I am a long time ago. I don’t know why I thought I could do anything about that.”
It’s silent, just puffs of breath between them, and Marc turns around. He can’t be pulled back in again: he won’t.
“Marc.”
Just—twenty steps, and he’ll be inside. Closer to safety.
“Marc.” Like a scolding teacher, an indulgent king.
“Don’t.”
Too late; a hand grasps his upper arm, stops him in his tracks—and then drops away like it had been scalded. “Fuck, sorry—I didn’t think—”
“My arm is fine,” Marc grinds out. “I’m going home.”
“Why did you come?”
“What?”
“You did not tell me—why did you say yes?”
Marc scoffs. “Wouldn’t want you to look bad now you are finally feeling forgiving.”
“Oh, so you are doing me this favour instead?” The words are hot, too close to Marc’s ear.
“Isn’t that what you wanted?”
“No.”
In, out. Breathe.
“You haven’t asked why I wanted you here.”
“Pecco wanted—”
“I don’t do anything I don’t want to, Marc.” He can—he knows how Valentino is standing, can feel it like a twist deep in his torso: knows how he’s leaning down, hands hovering inches from Marc’s jacket. “Ask me why.”
“I don’t care why.”
A laugh, ghosting against the back of his neck. Marc shivers. “So why did you come?”
“Good for Ducati.”
“Of course.” Lips, pressed against the base of his skull, the first tense knot of his spine.
Marc is so fucking tired. It would be so easy to pull away now, keep walking, never look back: even easier to close his eyes and sink back into him. He’s tired, so he says, “It should be easier for me to hate you.”
And Valentino must be tired, or drunk, because his hands find Marc’s waist and he whispers, “I don’t want it to be easier.”
“You never wanted anything to be easy,” Marc tells him, a little too aching.
Silence, silence that pulls in everything around them: the breeze in the trees behind the track; the faint sound of laughter; the distant rumble of a car’s engine. Valentino’s hands are brand-hot through his clothes, different and so familiar.
Silence, before Valentino moves, slips his way around so he’s in front of Marc, between him and the house now. His fingers slip under Marc’s hoodie, find the skin just above his hipbone, other hand on the back of his head. “I don’t. Which is why next time you will not give up the win.”
“Next time,” Marc echoes, absent, caught on the trail of fingernails across the back of his neck, through his hair.
“You need to keep Ducati happy, no?”
“Of course.” They’re too close now, Marc knows it, knows he’s staring into the jaws of death. He wishes he cared more, wishes he weren’t leaning into Valentino’s hold. Wishes it weren’t coiling tight in his stomach.
Ribbons of flesh: that’s all he’ll be when Valentino’s done with him this time. No need to carve new lines when the old scars still smart.
“You are very fucking frustrating,” Valentino mutters, and it hits Marc in the corner of his mouth. Too close. Focused in. There’ll be no escape.
“Always,” but he’s closing his eyes. Valentino was too close to do anything but lean forward, and he does, and Marc meets him with his mouth already open.
——
The bed shifting wakes him up, makes him roll over and squint, before throwing his left arm over his eyes. “Jesus fucking Christ.”
Valentino pauses, trousers halfway up his thighs, a loose hoodie already pulled on. “Well, I did not think it was that bad.”
Marc lets his arm fall away; Valentino is pouting, entirely unoffended. In a good mood, for now. “It was not bad.”
“Good.” And now there’s a vulpine grin being levelled at him. “You have not changed.”
Marc has, so he glowers and bites. “And you are old.”
Valentino just snorts. “I could set the fire alarm off. The meeting point is by the track. You could get to your car without anybody seeing you.”
Oh. Marc swallows, suddenly cold. “Is that—do you want me to?”
“Do you want to?”
“Not particularly.”
“When I go downstairs,” Valentino says, instead of answering that, “and make two coffees, there will be questions.”
“Do you really think so?”
“Don’t you?”
And Marc thinks of Pecco inviting him, Luca watching him, Franky pointedly offering him a seat at dinner near Valentino. He smirks. “No.”
“Ah. I see.” Valentino taps a long finger on his chin. “Luca was telling me it would be good for my image, Pecco was saying it was for the team—we have been—yes.”
“Yes,” Marc agrees, then, “Do you—mind?”
Valentino drags his gaze down the length of Marc’s body, then up again. “Hm. No.”
“Good.”
“You never asked, you know.”
“Asked what?” But Marc knows. Why?
“Coffee,” Valentino says, as if he’s just remembered, and leans down like he might drop a kiss on Marc’s head before he catches himself. “Into the lion’s den I go.”
Marc waits until the bedroom door closes behind him to bury his face in his hands. He sighs.
Despite himself, he smiles.
#i have been. SO unproductive here recently#but i was watching all the videos and was like hmmm#ranch fic#they got parent trapped. just a bit. it's fine.#sláinte#rosquez#marc marquez#valentino rossi#cara.fic#motogp rpf#motogp fic#lion’s den
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maidin mhaith ☘
this week is always very difficult for me after my da passed away a few years ago. thank you for being patient & caring during this rough time. sláinte 🥃
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Happy St Patrick's Day! I celebrated at a festival yesterday and of course had a Guinness today. I hope you had a lucky day and had fun if you celebrated!
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Happy St. Patrick’s Day! ☘️
I’m part Irish.
Let’s make out or whatever.
And raise a Guinness. 🍻
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Sláinte
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☘️ Happy Paddy’s Day to Domhnall and to everyone celebrating! Sláinte! 🇮🇪
☘️Lá fhéile Pádraig sona dhuit!☘️
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Sláinte by JRow
Established relationship. As much as John wants to shout about their relationship from the rooftops, this news isn’t his alone to share. So, John will just have to keep his mouth shut (and hands to himself) at the Yard's St. Patrick's Day party.
Johnlock Love Letters #2300
#jl3#johnlockloveletters#johnlock fic recs#johnlock#love letters#established relationship#<10k#st. patrick's day#saint patrick's day#st. patrick's day party#post s4#Johnlock Love Letters#200#Sláinte#JRow#slainte
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i haven’t been scrolling or posting all week bc i’ve been too busy getting me knees destroyed by the irish countryside
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hehe
#sláinte#it's not real guinness but it's good enough to pretend!#they put that little ball into the can so you get the proper foam crown and all#rayrambles
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Check out this awesome 'Sláinte on St Patricks Day' design on @TeePublic!
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Cheers to you on this Gentleman's Friday! We'll be drinking Gold Rushes. What are you imbibing? #cocktailsofinstagram #goldrushcocktail #sláinte #gentlemansfriday (at Davis, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpT5iRLLZ4a/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Slainte! The Best Beer Mugs to Celebrate Irish Heritage
Beer Mugs and Horseshoe Irish Shield Sláinte beautifully combine the rich culture of Irish heritage with the joy of enjoying a good brew. The term "Sláinte," meaning "health" in Irish, is a traditional toast that reflects the warmth and camaraderie found in Irish pubs, making it a fitting phrase for any beer lover’s gathering.
Buy now:19.95$
Beer mugs designed with the Horseshoe Irish Shield motif offer a unique touch, symbolizing luck and protection. The horseshoe, a well-known emblem of good fortune, resonates deeply within Irish tradition, while the shield design adds a touch of authenticity and pride. These mugs are not only functional but also serve as conversation starters, celebrating both Irish culture and the shared love of beer.
Whether hosting a St. Patrick's Day party or simply enjoying a casual evening with friends, these mugs enhance the experience. They are perfect for toasting to good health, friendship, and the rich flavors of various brews.
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Gift these unique beer mugs to friends or family who appreciate both beer and Irish heritage, or use them to elevate your own home bar. With their combination of cultural significance and practicality, Beer Mugs and Horseshoe Irish Shield Sláinte are perfect for any occasion, ensuring that every sip is filled with good cheer. Cheers to celebrating life’s moments!
Finding the perfect gifts for the IPA lover can be a delightful task, especially with the wide variety of options available. Start with a curated selection of craft IPAs from local breweries, allowing them to explore new and exciting flavors. A personalized beer glass or a stylish beer flight set enhances the tasting experience, making it even more enjoyable to sample different brews.
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For the adventurous brewer, consider an IPA brewing kit, complete with unique hops and ingredients to inspire their creativity. Additionally, a subscription to a craft beer club focused on IPAs can provide a monthly surprise of fresh selections.
Beer-themed accessories, such as coasters, T-shirts, or wall art featuring their favorite IPA brands, also make thoughtful gifts. For a truly immersive experience, consider a ticket to a local beer festival or brewery tour, where they can savor their favorite style while discovering new favorites.
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With these gifts, you’ll celebrate their passion for IPAs and create memorable experiences that any IPA enthusiast will cherish. Cheers to thoughtful gifting!
#Sláinte#IrishBeerMugs#CheersToTradition#HorseshoeLuck#IPALoverGifts#HoppyGiftIdeas#CraftBeerSurprises#BrewtifulPresents#View all AUTISM GIFTS products: https://zizzlez.com/trending-topics/hobbies/autism-spectrum-awareness-month/#All products of the store: https://zizzlez.com/
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Prosit! Salute! Sakut! Proost! Skal! Kippis!Sláinte! Ebiba! Saúde! Salud! Cheers!
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*reluctantly reblogging because I'm a Barry's drinker*
"Oh slender consonants don't matter" "oh there's no difference except s and t" oh yeah? Whats the difference between live and cow in spoken Irish 🔪🔪🔪🔪 You gonna say you'l herd life cuz you didn't think slender consonants matter?
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Sláinte! ☘️ www.jekyllhydeapparel.com . . #stpatricksday #jekyllhyde #Sláinte #greentshirt #fitness https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp6MQYNpzvO/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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American Pseudo-Irish Dinner! 🍻🍀🥔 I made a baked potato soup for the first time. It wasn't bad for just throwing stuff in a pot! Need to write it down while I remember it. Made some Reubens on marbled rye with sauerkraut, corned beef, Swiss cheese, and Thousand Island dressing. I recently read about how corned beef this style became associated with the Irish when Irish immigrants moved next to Jewish German immigrant delis. #HappyStPatricksDay #Sláinte #🍀 #🍻 #🥔 #PotatoSoup #BakedPotatoSoup #Reuben #ReubenSandwich The Sandwich: Ian: 10/10 Molly: 6/10 @bcarroll_13: 12/10 The Soup: Ian: 9/10 Molly: 9/10 ("Needed more bacon!") @bcarroll_13: 12/10 🤣 https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp6EFE_rUPj/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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