2020年2月9日 星期日

spud, ambrosia, potato launcher, slice up

Scientists are working towards building a more robust potato. #ScienceMagArchives





National Potato Council Lobbies for Spuds31


In 2000, Mr. Chao was a divorced father of two young sons, Madison and Virgil, when he bought the property for $2 million.
Laure Joliet for The New York Times

A Cottage Collection, With Spud Launchers

Part family compound, part creative commune, Stephen Chao’s “Chao Pound” of 1920s Sears kit houses brings an urban connectivity to the sprawl of Southern California.

How to Make a Potato Launcher - YouTube

Candy Bar Inspired by Idaho Spuds a Seller


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: December 28, 2005
Filed at 4:32 a.m. ET


spud

Pronunciation: /spʌd/
Translate spud | into German | into Italian | into Spanish
Definition of spud

noun

  • 1 informal a potato.
  • 2a small, narrow spade for cutting the roots of plants, especially weeds.
  • 3 [often as modifier] a short length of pipe that is used to connect two components or that takes the form of a projection from a fitting to which a pipe may be screwed:a spud washer
  • 4a type of ice chisel.

verb (spudsspuddingspudded)

[with object]
  • 1dig up or cut (plants, especially weeds) with a small spade.
  • 2make the initial drilling for (an oil well).

Origin:

late Middle English (denoting a short knife): of unknown origin. The sense 'potato' (dating from the mid 19th century) was originally slang and dialect

SPUD ━━ n., vt. (-dd-) 短い鋤(すき)(で掘る,除く) ((up, out)); 〔俗〕 ジャガイモ.
  1. Slang. A potato.
  2. A sharp spadelike tool used for rooting or digging out weeds.
  3. A short section of pipe or a threaded fitting that completes a connection, as between a longer pipe and a nozzle, valve, or meter.
tr.v.spud·dedspud·dingspuds .
  1. To remove with a sharp spadelike tool.
  2. To begin drilling operations on: spud an oil well.
[Middle English spudde, short knife.]


BOISE, Idaho (AP) -- Even the maker of the Idaho Spud candy bar thinks it's a little weird. But the chocolate-covered, potato-shaped Spud sells at a rate of 3 million bars a year.
''It's amazing; I'm not sure who eats them all, or if they all get eaten for that matter,'' said David Wagers, president of Idaho Candy Co.
No, the Spud doesn't have potato in it, though it plays off the popularity of the state's signature crop. It has coconut, maple, vanilla, cocoa that gives it its grayish color, and agar, a seaweed harvested in Morocco and Japan that has been an ingredient from the beginning.
It's thought the Idaho Spud got its start around 1901, when Idaho Candy came into being. The company's records don't start until 1918, when Idaho Candy was making more than 50 different candy bars for the regional market.
Wagers' family bought the company 21 years ago. Now it makes about 30 items, such as butter toffee and a peanut-filled Old Faithful candy bar, in the original factory. There, at a leisurely pace, hair-netted workers run turn-of-the-century machines with plenty of time to hand out gumdrops to passing visitors.
The design of the label hasn't ever changed, which adds to the Spud's nostalgic appeal. But beyond that, Idahoans seem drawn to anything that evokes potatoes, once a staple of their economic diet.
''It's what we're known for,'' said Louis Aaron, a chef who has trademarked the Idaho Ice Cream Potato, a potato-shaped ice cream dessert that's shipped to restaurants around the West and, Aaron says, was once served to the first President Bush.
The Spud is perhaps the most widely known of Idaho Candy's creations, and it's certainly the most peculiar. It has a mild maple flavor and a vaguely disquieting texture that Wagers describes as ''a grained marshmallow.''
The Spud is made in a noisy, bus-length machine that uses molds made of corn starch to form full-size Spuds and a miniature version called Spud Bites. The Spuds come out of the machine pale and dusted in starch; they're later moved downstairs to be coated in chocolate.
Wagers' family sometimes make a Spud fondue, and he's put a few recipes for desserts such as Idaho Spud Mousse on the company's Web site. At Halloween, he and his wife, a dentist, hand out a Spud and a toothbrush to trick-or-treaters.
David Abrams, a Jackson, Wyo., native who is now stationed with the Army in Iraq, packed dozens of the Spuds into a cooler last year when his family moved from Wyoming to Georgia.
''It was a childhood ambrosia for me, and something I had to have,'' said Abrams, 42, who described the Spud as ''spongy.'' Now Abrams hasn't had a Spud in a year.



''I'm not able to go down

am·bro·sia ( ăm-brō'zhə, -zhē-əpronunciation━━n. 【ギリシア・ローマ神話】神の食物 ((cf. nectar)); 〔雅〕 非常に美味な[においのよい]物.
  am・bro・sialam・bro・sian ━━ a. 美味な; かぐわしい.
am・bro・sial・ly ad.
n.
  1. Greek & Roman Mythology. The food of the gods, thought to confer immortality.
  2. Something with an especially delicious flavor or fragrance.
  3. A dessert containing primarily oranges and flaked coconut.
[Latin, from Greek ambrosiā, from ambrotos, immortal, immortalizing.]
 to the corner market in Baghdad and pick one up,'' Abrams said. ''I've had to deal with the Snickers as best as I could.''

Beth Kimmerle, a New York City author who has written about Idaho Candy, said she was put off by the Spud's texture until she met a woman from Idaho who told her to freeze it and slice it up. Then she loved it.
slice up 薄く切る[切取る,削る] ((up; off));

''I feel like I've been brought into the inner circle,'' said Kimmerle.
Kimmerle estimated Idaho Candy is one of about 10 similar small, venerable candy companies still operating in the United States. The Spud is the only candy she knows that's named after a vegetable.
Idaho Candy sells the Spud in 10 Western states and by mail all over the country. Some specialty candy stores in other states also carry it. Wagers said sales are most brisk at airport gift shops.
''It's a fun, inexpensive way to say, `I was in Idaho,''' he said.

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