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Peaches and cream is made by pouring a little cream over sliced peaches. It can also be made adding a spoonful of whipped cream on top of the sliced peaches. [1] [2] It is usually served as a dessert, but can also be served for breakfast. It is popular in the USA (especially in the South) and in other countries. [3]
"Peaches and Cream", a comedy duet in Bowery tough dialect by Ada Jones and Len Spencer, wax cylinder 1906 "Peaches and Cream", a fox trot composition by John Philip Sousa 1924 "Peaches & Cream" (112 song)
Junonia coenia, known as the common buckeye or buckeye, is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae.Its range covers much of North America and some of Central America, including most of the eastern half of the US, the lower to middle Midwest, the Southwest (including most of California), southern Canada, and Mexico.
Colias eurytheme, the orange sulphur, also known as the alfalfa butterfly and in its larval stage as the alfalfa caterpillar, is a butterfly of the family Pieridae, where it belongs to the lowland group of "clouded yellows and sulphurs" subfamily Coliadinae. It is found throughout North America from southern Canada to Mexico.
"I Feel Cream" is a song by Canadian recording artist Peaches from her fifth studio album, I Feel Cream (2009). Written by Peaches, Simian Mobile Disco and Drums of Death , and produced by Peaches, Drums of Death and Shapemod, the house and disco track incorporates elements of techno.
Limenitis arthemis, the red-spotted purple or white admiral, is a North American butterfly species in the cosmopolitan genus Limenitis.It has been studied for its evolution of mimicry, and for the several stable hybrid wing patterns within this nominal species; it is one of the most dramatic examples of hybridization between non-mimetic and mimetic populations.
Anthocharis cardamines, the orange tip, is a butterfly in the family Pieridae, which contains about 1,100 species. A. cardamines is mainly found throughout Europe and temperate Asia [3] The males feature wings with a signature orange pigmentation, which is the origin of A. cardamines' common name.
The Kamehameha butterfly (Vanessa tameamea) is one of the two species of butterfly endemic to Hawaii, the other is Udara blackburni. [1] The Hawaiian name is pulelehua.This is today a catch-all native term for all butterflies; its origin seems to be pulelo "to float" or "to undulate in the air" + lehua, "reddish", or "rainbow colored", probably due to the predominant color of the Metrosideros ...