1. Cookies N’ Cream Cake recipe.
2. Mike Krahulik's positive comments about playing The Old Republic for a month.
3. Signalnoise logo desktop and iPhone wallpapers.
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Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Link roundup
1. Incredibly cute guinea pig. Via.
2. How to make a cheap Frappuccino. Also, how to make a frappuccino on a stick. Via.
3. FYI, Tenacious Toys has in stock for $40 my favorite vinyl toy. (I liked it so much, I made my own miniature version before buying the real thing.)
2. How to make a cheap Frappuccino. Also, how to make a frappuccino on a stick. Via.
3. FYI, Tenacious Toys has in stock for $40 my favorite vinyl toy. (I liked it so much, I made my own miniature version before buying the real thing.)
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Link roundup
1. Read this if you want to feel better about not eating vegetables.
3. Tenacious Toys has Doktor A's Humphrey Mooncalf figure in stock.
3. You can now claim your free games, movie rental, etc from Sony. It's not a smooth process and if your download doesn't start, go into account management>transaction management>services list>SCEA Promotions to download the games (I had to do this). Via.
3. Tenacious Toys has Doktor A's Humphrey Mooncalf figure in stock.
3. You can now claim your free games, movie rental, etc from Sony. It's not a smooth process and if your download doesn't start, go into account management>transaction management>services list>SCEA Promotions to download the games (I had to do this). Via.
Friday, June 3, 2011
Link roundup
1. Great article at Wired. Here's the start:
3. Negative review of the new Games Workshop resin finecast miniatures.
James Scott encountered that scent for the first time a decade ago in a town called Lakeshore, Ontario. Just across the river from Detroit, Lakeshore is where barrels of Canadian Club whiskey age in blocky, windowless warehouses. Scott, who had recently completed his PhD in mycology at the University of Toronto, had launched a business called Sporometrics. Run out of his apartment, it was a sort of consulting detective agency for companies that needed help dealing with weird fungal infestations. The first call he got after putting up his website was from a director of research at Hiram Walker Distillery named David Doyle.2. Broccoli Gratin recipe.
Doyle had a problem. In the neighborhood surrounding his Lakeshore warehouses, homeowners were complaining about a mysterious black mold coating their houses. And the residents, following their noses, blamed the whiskey. Doyle wanted to know what the mold was and whether it was the company’s fault. Scott headed up to Lakeshore to take a look.
When he arrived at the warehouse, the first thing he noticed (after “the beautiful, sweet, mellow smell of aging Canadian whiskey,” he says) was the black stuff. It was everywhere—on the walls of buildings, on chain-link fences, on metal street signs, as if a battalion of Dickensian chimney sweeps had careened through town. “In the back of the property, there was an old stainless steel fermenter tank,” Scott says. “It was lying on its side, and it had this fungus growing all over it. Stainless steel!” The whole point of stainless steel is that things don’t grow on it.
3. Negative review of the new Games Workshop resin finecast miniatures.
Sunday, May 29, 2011
Link roundup
1. Sky on fire. Via.
2. Fast Company has a great article about Cargill's creation and marketing of the sweetener Truvia:
2. Fast Company has a great article about Cargill's creation and marketing of the sweetener Truvia:
TRUVIA HAS ITS OWN tribute message, an ode to the comfort Cargill wants to provide. "Have you ever cured bad news with hot choc-olate? Ever snuck downstairs to eat a cookie before breast-feeding the baby at 3 a.m.?" If the answer is yes, you are part of Cargill's new demographic, the Yoga Momma, the company's name for the typically harried but well-intentioned working woman.3. Goofy mystery awaits Detective Rex Starbuck in House of Mystery #251.
On a recent day, McFerson and Truvia's marketing director, Ann Tucker, explain the tao of Yoga Momma-ism. "The Yoga Momma wears yoga pants but may never make it to class," Tucker says. "It's more about a mind-set," McFerson adds. Both readily admit this sounds like them. "I've never been to class, but I have the pants," McFerson deadpans.
The brand homage was conceived by mothers at Ogilvy & Mather in Chicago. "What is cool about Cargill is it's a pretty female-based group," says Donna Charlton-Perrin, one of the campaign's architects. "There is a line in there about how women have a complicated relationship with sweetness. Everyone just had this autobiographical understanding of how that goes." Not surprisingly, Yoga Mommas tend to be prime spenders on health-related supermarket goodies. To reach them, McFerson spent lavishly to secure a name (which sounds like true plus stevia, and was devised by Lexicon Branding); a logo (light green type with a tiny stevia leaf, by Pentagram); and clever print and TV ads designed by Ogilvy.
Labels:
advertising,
comic books,
food,
full scan,
nature,
science
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
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