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You can have too much of a good thing; You can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make it drink; You can never/never can tell; You cannot always get what you want; You cannot burn a candle at both ends. You cannot have your cake and eat it too; You cannot get blood out of a stone; You cannot make a silk purse from a sow's ear
Image credits: Kitcat1987 #9. Reheating pizza in a frying pan SOOOOOOOO much better than the microwave Edit: some instructions (may vary depending on the type of pizza crust)
A husband complains so much about his wife that she suggests that he stay home and do her work. He agrees. He starts to churn butter, but decides to get ale. He hears the pig upstairs, runs to stop it, but does not arrive in time to keep it from overturning the churn, and forgets the ale, which runs all over the cellar.
His wife expects it; he wants to be a good husband. Stealing is bad and he is not a criminal; he has tried to do everything he can without breaking the law, you cannot blame him. Law-and-order His wife will benefit, but he should also take the prescribed punishment for the crime as well as paying the druggist what he is owed.
Listen, we love a big breakfast featuring all the usual suspects—fluffy scrambled eggs, crispy hash browns, a plate of breakfast sausage, and a pile of sautéed spinach for good measure.
Ina Garten's highly anticipated memoir, Be Ready When the Luck Happens, comes out in just two weeks, but an excerpt has already captured the internet's attention—because it deals with the moment ...
The Butter Twist is the perfect all-in-one tool. You can both spread and cut butter without using a knife or measure it at one tablespoon increments so you can follow recipes to the letter.
Butter may be measured by either weight (1 ⁄ 4 lb) or volume (3 tbsp) or a combination of weight and volume (1 ⁄ 4 lb plus 3 tbsp); it is sold by weight but in packages marked to facilitate common divisions by eye. (As a sub-packaged unit, a stick of butter, at 1 ⁄ 4 lb [113 g], is a de facto measure in the US.)