Re:”Love Grows”
Apparently her name is Robin Mary Paris (I don’t consider any of the sources I found that information at reliable).
One thing is for sure, however, she is definitely in her 60’s now, and quite possibly her 70’s.
Running it back you’ll find it was made for the U.S. Army in 1970.
The device she has her foot on in the inset is a recording device. Press the pedal to start recording. Press it again to stop. Then press another pedal to replay. It’s a pretty common device used now for solo musicians to provide their own backup.
From: ”The Fannie Farmer Cookbook” (Twelfth Edition)
Revised by: Marion Cunningham with Jeri Laber
Illustrated by: Lauren Jarret
Published by: Bantam Books
ISBN 0-553-23488-9
Indian Pudding
Quoting: Spicy, coarse, and dark brown, an old-fashioned dessert that celebrates the Indians’ gift of corn.
(SERVES EIGHT TO TEN)
4 cups milk (whole milk 3.25% milk fat)
1/2 cup yellow cornmeal
1/3 cup dark-brown sugar
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup molasses
1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons butter
1/2 teaspoon powdered ginger
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Preheat oven to 275°F. Heat 2 cups of the milk until very
hot and pour it slowly over the cornmeal, stirring constantly. Cook
in a double boiler over simmering water for 10-15 minutes, until the
cornmeal mixture is creamy. Add the remaining ingredients and mix
well. Spoon into a buttered 1 1/2-quart baking dish, pour the remaining
2 cups of milk on top, set into a pan of hot water, and bake for 2 1/2 – 3
hours or until set. The pudding will become firmer as it cools. Serve
with heavy cream or vanilla ice cream.
Notes from me:
Whipping cream is typically 35% milk fat; heavy cream is a cream with a concentration higher than that.
Whipping cream will work for this recipe too.
The higher your altitude, and the warmer (or stormier) the day, the longer this will take to set.
Fortunately, at 275°F you can’t really over-cook it.
I’d leave it for the 3 hours, regardless, and then check, remember “or until set”.
.
Over and over again? I’m starting to feel sorry for the poor coyote.
…
This is how Wile E. got hit by that particular train.
Look at the names in the animation credits.
You’ll see one again.
Re:”Love Grows”
Apparently her name is Robin Mary Paris (I don’t consider any of the sources I found that information at reliable).
One thing is for sure, however, she is definitely in her 60’s now, and quite possibly her 70’s.
Running it back you’ll find it was made for the U.S. Army in 1970.
Does anyone here read Freefall?
http://freefall.purrsia.com/default.htm
No, that’s new to me.
.
Thats the one. 🙂
Different coloration and that is QT zooming. 😀
Just learned from “The Rollye James Show” ± 23:20 hrs. Chicago time November 12, 2021
This is the original recording.
Here I am, Puzzle Pals….
Tonight we get another look (in stereo!) at Cleo’s new nemesis… A mobile cannon or maybe a giant bazooka, larger than any in her arsenal.
Where are you?
I’m a little bit late, so I thought there might be gnashing of teeth over hidden differences… But all is serene.
Maybe the robot cannon car pointed right at us scared everybody away….
But it’s ok, you guys… it only fires cartoon ammo!
….
Happy³, Alexi… I don’t mean I don’t see you… I meant nobody has mentioned the puzzle…
But for those as has done did it… Lookee right here…
Am’ if ya ain’t done did it… You’d better not peek.
Remember there’s a robot car lurking, with a cannon and an itchy trigger finger.
Check: I had to do my usual errands first.
OK; got nine. – Will check now.
Yes; got the same – even the sneaky ones. 🙂
sneaky ones?—-best compliment you can give me. Danke !
You’re welcome.
I lucked out and got the same nine.
I only got 8 today. The one I missed was a pesky sneaky one.
But it was great to see the ‘new’ cartoon hosting the differences.
Nine two weeks in a row! Whee-Hoo!
I got eight. Danged sneaky ones!
Nighthawks is pulling a fast one on us. There are no differences. Very sneaky.
Well, as a geezer, of course I will click on a dancing girl in a mini skirt. But what does “dancing troll” mean?
Popcorn – how did the percussion continue after she set up the beat? There is more to her instrument than meets the eye.
And Claude, put it in reverse when this happens.
I’m a geezer, you’re a geezer, wouldn’t you like to be a geezer too…
be a geezer,yeah be a geezer……
(to the tune of ‘drink Dr. Pepper’)
from 1978, with who appears to be David Naughton who became a werewolf in
‘An American Werewolf in London’
Yes, that’s him. This… …LINK… …doesn’t exactly show him in his best light.
The device she has her foot on in the inset is a recording device. Press the pedal to start recording. Press it again to stop. Then press another pedal to replay. It’s a pretty common device used now for solo musicians to provide their own backup.
Is that like looping ?
One odd thing: the Robocar has no doors, unless you count the hatchback.
No doors but two licence plates!
It’s from New England in the 18th century.
From: ”The Fannie Farmer Cookbook” (Twelfth Edition)
Revised by: Marion Cunningham with Jeri Laber
Illustrated by: Lauren Jarret
Published by: Bantam Books
ISBN 0-553-23488-9
Indian Pudding
Quoting:
Spicy, coarse, and dark brown, an old-fashioned dessert that
celebrates the Indians’ gift of corn.
(SERVES EIGHT TO TEN)
4 cups milk (whole milk 3.25% milk fat)
1/2 cup yellow cornmeal
1/3 cup dark-brown sugar
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup molasses
1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons butter
1/2 teaspoon powdered ginger
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Preheat oven to 275°F. Heat 2 cups of the milk until very
hot and pour it slowly over the cornmeal, stirring constantly. Cook
in a double boiler over simmering water for 10-15 minutes, until the
cornmeal mixture is creamy. Add the remaining ingredients and mix
well. Spoon into a buttered 1 1/2-quart baking dish, pour the remaining
2 cups of milk on top, set into a pan of hot water, and bake for 2 1/2 – 3
hours or until set. The pudding will become firmer as it cools. Serve
with heavy cream or vanilla ice cream.
Notes from me:
Whipping cream is typically 35% milk fat; heavy cream is a cream with a concentration higher than that.
Whipping cream will work for this recipe too.
The higher your altitude, and the warmer (or stormier) the day, the longer this will take to set.
Fortunately, at 275°F you can’t really over-cook it.
I’d leave it for the 3 hours, regardless, and then check, remember “or until set”.
What’s the diff Saturday!!
Good morning Puzzlers! Waiting on the “big chill” to show up on this 37F morning.
.
Get those letters in kids!
.
Be kind to your web-footed friends. For a duck could be somebody’s mother…
(((((HuGz!)))))
Be kind to your friends in the swamp, where the weather is very, very daamp…
..
OMG If you told me that was from MAD magazine I would believe it.
Pretty close.
Me too!
Nennifer didn’t have a glue.
Boo! 😀
Icccckkk!
Poor ponies!
But only the fat and the hooves. yumm!
(…gag…)
No.
This time you’re correct.
People, people, people…
I know we’re used to believing quite astounding things, here in Cleveland…
It took a while to realise that basset hounds were actually the first ones to make many of the movies we’ve known and loved….
And that a certain basset hound often carries a bazooka or drives a tank.
…
While those things are certainly true….
We must not abandon critical thinking.
I know it comes as a shock… But not everything you see on the internet is real or true.
…
This ad is a parody, done by artist Cris Shapan…. It’s based on an old ad for margarine.
He does lots of parodies… Not just food, but record album covers, book covers, and cars…
Some of which have mistakenly been reported as real.
He is also an art director, and works on television shows.
https://dangerousminds.net/comments/everything_on_the_internet_is_a_lie_except_for_this
And really… what real little girl would look so pleased, being told she’s eating a pony!
Except for maybe, I dunno… . Wednesday Addams… I think she’d be running away screaming.
But Susan, isn’t everything posted by Nighthawks true?
He did a good job! XD
And I believed him!!!!!
The original ad this parody was taken from.
One of the errors is that it reads “colts & foals.” Colts are male foals. Fillies are female. It technically should have read “colts & fillies.”
Have to admit that Dickman Rendering & Creaming, Inc. sounds like an ideal Ballard St business though.
The pony looks like a llama.
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