Mildly interesting
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During the Depression, onions were a common and easily grown and stored vegetable. So, they were readily available and, most importantly, free.
Meanwhile, peanut butter was also inexpensive. So, the Bureau of Home Economics devised the recipe for peanut butter-stuffed onions as an easy way for American homemakers to feed their families.
The recipe for this curious dish was published in many 1930s newspapers and magazines. It eventually found its way onto American dining tables as a healthy, tasty, simple, and low-cost meal that could be served any time of the day.
The mishmash consisted of baked onions with peanut butter filling mixed with stale bread crumbs. These ingredients came together and created a distasteful and disliked dish that people only ate to fill their hungry stomachs.
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Thanks Mik…I’ll never eat another egg again…
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@George-K said in Mildly interesting:
You know, Rick Barry was insanely good. He wslas one of the greatest to ever play. His name should be up there with Kareem Abdul Jabar and such. Yet all anyone can rem bee about him is his free throws…
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Some of you zoomed in to pick up on the grave behind the one we posted about yesterday, and spotted what’s probably the most well known headstone in the old Goldfield, Nevada cemetery. The story behind what lies beneath that stone is a lot more sad than the message on it that often conjure up a bit of macabre humor. That story goes about how a drifter came to town and he was hungry when he arrived. Penniless, the man sought out the dumpsters of the Nevada gold mining town, and there he found a jar of library paste. Now, it’s important to note that the paste once used to bind the pages of a book was a mix of flour and water, so it really wasn’t all that much different than say something like raw pancake mix. The trick was that this stuff also contained a large amount of alum, and enough of it to poison this poor old boy who was just looking to fill his belly after wandering about Nevada and drifting into town.
His name now lost to time, all that was found to potentially identify him was a letter in his pocket addressed to someone named Ross. We have no idea where that life started, nor what he did along the way, all we know of him is that he died from eating library paste, and his story now lives for all time..
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Musical knives... These were used in the 16th century, mainly in Europe. These knives were engraved with musical scores along the blade and were used during banquets and parties. Each knife had a part of the engraved music corresponding to a specific vocal range (such as soprano, countertenor, tenor, bass), allowing guests to sing together before or after meals. These knives are a fascinating example of the intersection between art, music, and cuisine in European history.
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A 10,000-year-old skeleton - the oldest known Briton - was found inside a cave in Cheddar, England, and was nicknamed "Cheddar Man". His DNA was tested and it was concluded that a living relative was teaching history about half a mile away, tracing back nearly 300 generations. What is more, they seem to share facial features too!
Full story: https://bit.ly/4cTqvQH