BB

Bill

02/06/2011 2:08 AM

WW Discussion on how to make a peanut butter sandwich

(funny)

http://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/editors-blog/peanut-butter-jelly-and-woodworking-forums

Bill


This topic has 5 replies

Pp

Puckdropper

in reply to Bill on 02/06/2011 2:08 AM

03/06/2011 3:31 AM

"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

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to Bill on 02/06/2011 2:08 AM

02/06/2011 7:44 AM

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.

Hh

"HeyBub"

in reply to Bill on 02/06/2011 2:08 AM

02/06/2011 9:43 PM

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.

Sc

Sonny

in reply to Bill on 02/06/2011 2:08 AM

02/06/2011 1:01 PM

It's "pena burr" !

Peanut butter makes your tongue stick to the top of your mouth. With
your tongue against the top of your mouth, pronounce "peanut butter".

Sonny

Ee

"Eric"

in reply to Bill on 02/06/2011 2:08 AM

04/06/2011 9:28 AM

"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


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