"HeyBub" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> Bill wrote:
>> (funny)
>>
>> http://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/editors-blog/peanu
>> t-butter-jelly-and-woodworking-forums
>>
>
> Here's my tip: If you're making a peanut butter and jelly sandwich,
> put peanut butter on both slices of bread before adding the jelly.
>
> So doing "jelly-proofs" the bread so it doesn't get all soggy by
> lunchtime.
>
>
>
Well, on my sample earlier today I didn't experience any soggy bread.
Since the sandwich was made just before lunchtime, I doubt there was time
for sandwich to be soggy.
Since we sometimes share recipies here, here's mine:
Bread (anything'll do)
Peanut butter (smooth is great, but crunchy works as well)
Jelly, Jam, or preserves, whatever you have (any flavor)
Suspend jelly and peanut butter in anti-gravity field so it spreads out
in an even layer. Place a slice of bread directly under and over the
peanut butter and jelly combination and turn off anti-gravity field.
Catch sandwich with plate before it hits the counter and falls on the
floor. Enjoy!
Obligatory Woodworking content: I made the sandwich shortly after the
final jointing of pieces I got from a pallet. Most of it was just ok,
but one piece looks spectacular and might be worth the effort of
disassembling the pallet.
Puckdropper
On Thu, 02 Jun 2011 02:08:41 -0400, Bill <[email protected]> wrote:
>(funny)
>
>http://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/editors-blog/peanut-butter-jelly-and-woodworking-forums
They obviously read the Wreck, don't they?
--
Remember, in an emergency, dial 1911.
Bill wrote:
> (funny)
>
> http://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/editors-blog/peanut-butter-jelly-and-woodworking-forums
>
Here's my tip: If you're making a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, put
peanut butter on both slices of bread before adding the jelly.
So doing "jelly-proofs" the bread so it doesn't get all soggy by lunchtime.
"Puckdropper" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
"HeyBub" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> Bill wrote:
>> (funny)
>>
>> http://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/editors-blog/peanu
>> t-butter-jelly-and-woodworking-forums
>>
>
> Here's my tip: If you're making a peanut butter and jelly sandwich,
> put peanut butter on both slices of bread before adding the jelly.
>
> So doing "jelly-proofs" the bread so it doesn't get all soggy by
> lunchtime.
>
>
>
Well, on my sample earlier today I didn't experience any soggy bread.
Since the sandwich was made just before lunchtime, I doubt there was time
for sandwich to be soggy.
Since we sometimes share recipies here, here's mine:
Bread (anything'll do)
Peanut butter (smooth is great, but crunchy works as well)
Jelly, Jam, or preserves, whatever you have (any flavor)
Suspend jelly and peanut butter in anti-gravity field so it spreads out
in an even layer. Place a slice of bread directly under and over the
peanut butter and jelly combination and turn off anti-gravity field.
Catch sandwich with plate before it hits the counter and falls on the
floor. Enjoy!
Obligatory Woodworking content: I made the sandwich shortly after the
final jointing of pieces I got from a pallet. Most of it was just ok,
but one piece looks spectacular and might be worth the effort of
disassembling the pallet.
Puckdropper
============================
Can you cite any references for that or did you just imagine all that?
--
Eric