Useless Information
Did you know that crabs wee through their eyes? That maidenhair moss is so called because Anglo-saxons thought it looked like pubes? That Albanians have 17 different words for moustache? Astound us with your utterly useless and obscure knowledge.
( , Thu 17 Mar 2005, 14:48)
Did you know that crabs wee through their eyes? That maidenhair moss is so called because Anglo-saxons thought it looked like pubes? That Albanians have 17 different words for moustache? Astound us with your utterly useless and obscure knowledge.
( , Thu 17 Mar 2005, 14:48)
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easter eggs
The tradition of eating chocolate eggs at Easter dates from the Great Egg Shortage of 1527, the result of an epidemic of chicken blight that swept the English countryside. Mr John Cadbury, a cloth merchant from Shrewsbury, struck on the idea of replacing the eggs with chocolate (a recent import from the New World) fashioned into an egg-like shape. The idea caught on and soon every fashionable household in the land had its own collection of Mr Cadbury's Marvellous Chocolate Eggs. Some years later, Cadbury decided to fill the eggs with a delicious substance called 'creme' (a mixture of putty and syrup) and changed the name to something a bit more snappy: thus was born the Cadbury's Creme Egg that we know and love today.
( , Mon 21 Mar 2005, 16:21, Reply)
The tradition of eating chocolate eggs at Easter dates from the Great Egg Shortage of 1527, the result of an epidemic of chicken blight that swept the English countryside. Mr John Cadbury, a cloth merchant from Shrewsbury, struck on the idea of replacing the eggs with chocolate (a recent import from the New World) fashioned into an egg-like shape. The idea caught on and soon every fashionable household in the land had its own collection of Mr Cadbury's Marvellous Chocolate Eggs. Some years later, Cadbury decided to fill the eggs with a delicious substance called 'creme' (a mixture of putty and syrup) and changed the name to something a bit more snappy: thus was born the Cadbury's Creme Egg that we know and love today.
( , Mon 21 Mar 2005, 16:21, Reply)
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