Who needs Iron Man or The Dark Knight, when you can watch Snap, Crackle and Pop battle their evil counterparts?
[From
Life magazine for September 30 1940.]
You know what your problem is? Not enough yeast. I suggest increasing your beer intake.
[From
Life magazine for March 5 1956.]
"Dig this crazy mixed-up ice cream!" "Man, it's real cool!"
Yeah, because beatniks like
Maynard G. Krebs eat a lot of ice cream!
[From
Life magazine for September 30 1940.]
What kind of kids would a shellfish and a bottle have, and how would they go about reproducing?
Cascadian Farm sells frozen organic broccoli florets. That's not particularly unusual.
But
look closer. Can you see the tiny disembodied heads floating amidst the broccoli bits?
When
contacted about it, Cascadian Farms offered this reply:
The tradition of hiding names or faces on Cascadian Farm packaging began over a dozen years ago. It was unspoken tribute by the package design department to the friends & family of Cascadian Farm. The faces won’t be included on our redesigned packaging.
Continuing the "overpriced stuff" theme that I began in a
previous post, how much would you be willing to pay for this meal?
What you get -- Dinner at
Masa, a sushi restaurant in NY City. From
Wikipedia:
Reservations for the 26 available seats are taken three weeks in advance. Chef Masa prepares the menu himself, often including seasonal ingredients. He uses many exotic ingredients, such as truffles and Kobe beef; Most of the fish are flown in from Japan. Chef Masa can be seen working behind the bar and will sometimes serve the food as well.
There's no menu to order from. You get whatever you're served.
The cost: It's a fixed price of $400 per person, to which a 20% tip is automatically added. Then there's tax. So you're looking at a minimum of $513 per person. If you want anything to drink, be prepared to pay extra.
Via J-Walk, the receipt of a recent Masa diner, posted on
Flickr. Seriously, if you're going to splurge by going there, why ruin the meal by getting a Diet Coke? Just ask for water.
This appears to be an ad for a brand of French chewing gum. I'm not sure if the notion of a pair of used panties from the Statue of Liberty is adequate enticement to chew the company's product.
A few unusual chocolates:
• Artist Cosimo Cavallaro sparked controversy with his anatomically correct
Chocolate Jesus.
• More recently, a Swiss chocolatier has created a
chocolate bar to commemmorate the 500th anniversary of Protestant reformer Jean Calvin:
"The first layer is based on a classic smooth and runny praline mix. 'But we have 'reformed' it,' says the Vevey chocolatier, by using crunchy caramelised hazelnuts, and using salt from the Swiss Alps to make the praline slightly savoury. The second layer uses a 'chocolate Grand Cru from Bolivia', made from 68 percent cocoa paste, to represent Calvin's theology of the glory and perfection of God."
• In 2006 the chocolatier Martucci Angiano discovered that
chocolate drippings in one of its vats looked kinda/sorta like the Virgin Mary.
• Chocolatier Fassbender & Rausch has a chocolate model of the Titanic displayed in the window of their Berlin store.
• And on the subject of things that are sinking, chocolatiers are doing their best to take advantage of the current financial crisis. Some of the crisis-themed chocolates include
Credit Crunch chocolate and
Financial Crunch.
Updates:
•
Chocolate Ammo. "Real chocolate bullets in a real mini ammo can!"
•
Lenny, the life-size Chocolate Moose. On display in
Len Libby Candies, near Portland, Maine.
• A 1lb solid chocolate foot, available from
Toe-Food Chocolates.
Thanks to Andy and Mark for their contributions to the list.
I recently met a woman who could tie a knot in the stem of a maraschino cherry with her tongue. I thought that was pretty impressive. But what this Romanian chewing gum sculptor can do is even more impressive.