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The Monday Morning Memo

Apples and
Peanut Butter

Forget chips and dip. Take a walk on the wild side. This All-American recipe is illegal in 7 states and under investigation in 12 more. Do it correctly and you’ll howl at the moon. You’ll throw rocks at policemen. You’ll dance like Fred Astaire. You’ll write a letter to Jimi Hendrix. He’ll read it.

Step One: The Purchase
Go to the store known for great produce. Approach the fruits with reverence.

Step Two: The Discipline
Ignore the fact that Fuji apples are oddly misshapen and strangely colored. This is a clever disguise to redirect unworthy apple shoppers to the mushy, pretty apples we see in coloring books and on after-school TV specials starring Jodie Foster when she was nine.

Step Three: The Selection
Mutter under your breath continuously,
“There are no apples but Fuji apples.
  There are no apples but Fuji apples.
  There are no apples but Fuji apples.
  And Honey Crisp when you can get them.”
Repeat until the Fujis are purchased and you’re safely back in your car.

Step Four: The Cut
Use a Dalla Piazza apple slicer to create perfect apple wedges. For best results, stand your Fuji on its head and slice from the bottom. You’ll understand after you’ve done it.

Step Five: The Dip
Throw 2 dollops of Peanut Butter onto a plate with the wedges.

Republicans: Use Jif peanut butter
Democrats: Use Peter Pan peanut butter
Independents: Use organic peanut butter and prepare to be dissatisfied. (You’ll feel like you did the right thing, it just didn’t work out.)

Step Six: The Bite
Make sure a trusted friend has sufficient bail money. Write his or her telephone number inside your forearm. Move away from all hard objects with sharp corners. Dip the wedge into the peanut butter. Follow your instincts.

      Aroo.

   Roy H. Williams 

 

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Download the PDF "Dictionary of the Cognoscenti of Wizard Academy"

Random Quote:

“

Sometimes the same word ends up with contradictory meanings. This kind of word is called a contronym. Sanction, for instance can either signify permission to do something or a measure forbidding it to be done. Cleave can mean something cut in half or stuck together. A sanguine person is either hotheaded and bloodthirsty or calm and cheerful. Something that is fast is either stuck firmly or moving quickly. A door that is bolted is secure, but a horse that has bolted has taken off. If you wind up a meeting you finish it; if you wind up a watch, you start it. To ravish means to rape or to enrapture. Quinquennial describes something that lasts for five years or happens only once in five years. Trying one’s best is a good thing, but trying one’s patience is a bad thing. A blunt instrument is dull, but a blunt remark is pointed. Occasionally when this happens the dictionary makers give us different spellings to differentiate the two meanings as with flour and flower, discreet and discrete, but such orthological thoughtfulness is rare.

“

- Bill Bryson, The Mother Tongue, p. 70

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