Today I learned Australian

In American football, a blitz is a defense strategy. The opponent rushes to the quarterback in an attempt to get the ball. Blitz means flash in my native language, German/Austrian.

A Blitz during a thunderstorm or a Blitz on the camera, to take a picture in the dark. Blitzkrieg, a German word also used in English, is a war attack that happens fast and without any warning and doesn’t last long.

Today I read a recipe, shared by an Australian: Her favorite Oat-honey Biscuits (cookies).

I had no problems following the recipe, after all, it was in English, a language I even use in my dreams, until it stated that I had to blitz the flour in a food processor.

Now, before I continue, I have to explain something. I am an excellent cook and a lousy baker. Perhaps the word lousy is too strong, but I don’t find joy in baking, and that’s why I don’t do it too often. Baking doesn’t give me much room to improvise; it forces me to follow rules, and I am just not good at that.

Even after so many years of speaking, writing and dreaming in English, the language still manges to sometimes surprise me, and it seems to happen often when I attempt to bake something new. I remember when I wanted to make a quiche, and I was asked to blind-bake the crust. It puzzled me. What was I supposed to do? Close my eyes during baking? Was I not supposed to see the tragedy I had created?

Back then, without a cell phone or internet, I had to call my mother-in-law, who had given me the handwritten recipe I tried to follow. She laughed and explained to me what it meant. I shook my head. Blind-baking meant prebaking the crust with something on top of it, like dry beans, so the crust can’t rise.

I continued baking with open eyes.

Now back to the recipe: Blitz the flour.

Did the Australian lady ask us to take a picture of the flour with our camera?

Nope! When I read further, I noticed that I had to blitz a few more times, so I got it. Blitz = Mix

Of course, my mind started wandering off and made me wonder: If I mix with a mixer, do I blitz with a blitzer?

Could it be that a mixer, a food processor, is being called a blitzer in Australia?

Of course not, because this would be too logical. It’s still a mixer, but you don’t mix with a mixer, but blitz with a mixer.

Please, all you native English speakers downunder, or over there, or over here, don’t take it the wrong way, but don’t you think this is fudged up?

So the last thing I learned was blitzing. There you go, mate, this is my answer to today’s prompt.

Daily writing prompt
What is the last thing you learned?

15 Comments

  1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous said:

    Language can be so funny. Some different language basically have a word almost spelled and pronounced the same just with an accent. Then the next three letter word you learn has fifteen letters in the other language, none of the ones which were in the original word.And don’t get me started about the multiple uses in English of the same word. That’s a lot of different blitzes!

    March 22, 2026
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  2. Thanks for Kachin me a bit of Oz. “In American football, a blitz is a defense strategy” – so that’s where Trump got his idea from.

    March 8, 2026
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    • Trump doesn’t have ideas, he either reacts on impulse or to the ideas of others behind him who run the show.

      March 8, 2026
      Reply
  3. Blitz would be a great name for a dog. 🙂

    March 7, 2026
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  4. Unknown's avatar Eha Carr said:

    Coming from Down Under and probably having been the one reposting the recipe . . . I am laughing ’cause the word is used like this > ‘whizz it around’ – all the time and I would never have had a second thought about the, to me, ‘obvious’ meaning! Oh – we are all pretty ‘lazy’ speakers of Mother English – sorry 🙂 !

    March 7, 2026
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    • And the ‘whizz is around’ is done in a whizzer? 🙂

      March 7, 2026
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      • Unknown's avatar Eha Carr said:

        *grin* In a blender of any kind handy Ma’am ! You can always whizz around yourself of course at the same time if bored waiting !!!

        March 7, 2026
        Reply
  5. Oscar Wilde wrote: ‘We have really everything in common with America nowadays except, of course, language’. George Bernard Shaw said, ‘England and America are two countries separated by the same language’.

    March 7, 2026
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    • I love the quote of Oscar Wilde. It’s so true, that’s why it’s so funny.

      March 13, 2026
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  6. Here in Scotland, my Pickleball team got blitzed 1-8 in our match today. So console myself, I’m on my 5th can of beer and on my way to being totally blitzed. 😂🍺🥴

    March 7, 2026
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    • Goodness, the blitzing doesn’t stop and I am still lost. 🙂

      March 13, 2026
      Reply
  7. Unknown's avatar John said:

    Oh no, an Angry Bunny! I love our English language, there are so many great countries that speak our common language! 😎

    March 7, 2026
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