Oh I see how this is going to go down. You guys are going to spend the whole time burning swiss cheese.
Well, it makes more sense than setting it under a light bulb....
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Oh I see how this is going to go down. You guys are going to spend the whole time burning swiss cheese.
Well, it makes more sense than setting it under a light bulb....
What Sean said, Aimee.
Good luck, Aimée!
You know, having someone else buy all the Swiss cheese in the world actually works for me. Makes room for all the cheese that doesn't taste like ass.
Wrod. Of all the cheeses in the world, swiss is the worst (that I've tasted, anyway).
From the people who brought you the comic strip Unshelved, featuring hte adventures of male librarian Dewey, we have
Library Raid gear! Yes, you can have a jacket or hat just like the feds wear, with the word LIBRARY in big yellow letters! I might need one of those.
Oh I see how this is going to go down. You guys are going to spend the whole time burning swiss cheese.
Well, they could just melt it and make fondue instead.
Mmmmm, fondue.
Well, they could just melt it and make fondue instead.
You know what would work great for that. An electric fondue pot.
Yes, you can have a jacket or hat just like the feds wear, with the word LIBRARY in big yellow letters! I might need one of those.
Heh. I have a friend going for a degree in Library Sciences that may need one of those.
Burning cheese is no joke:
If there’s corn, there must be butter: In May of 1991, a fire broke out in a refrigerated warehouse storing 50 million pounds of food products, including butter, lard and cheese. This warehouse was near a creek that flowed into Lake Monona, a large urban lake in Madison. Heat from the fire caused the food products to melt, which contributed to the intensity and duration of the fire. The warehouse buildings were destroyed, and water from suppressing fires activities mixed with the melted foods and flowed toward the creek and nearby storm sewers – all leading to the lake. The fire department realized quickly that this spill was a potential environmental disaster and reported the release to the DNR. The department acted to prevent the mixture from reaching the water, and the total environmental cleanup costs to the warehouse company were over $1 million. It took eight days to put out the fire.
I was living in Madison when this happened. Firefighters were trying to walk in two-feet deep rivers of melted butter and cheese. The stuff proved to be impossible to clean off their uniforms and fire hoses.
You know what would work great for that. An electric fondue pot.
"We need your fondue sets."
Burning cheese is no joke:
Still nothing compared to the great 1919 molasses flood in the North End in Boston. Nope, not kidding. People got killed: [link]