This is my Tumblr for following others and reblogging their cool stuff. I like the Beatles and Star Wars and food. Sometimes I post stuff I find, or make (food or art). I'm an illustrator, but I usually don't post my own work here.
My portfolio site (and real blog): http://kathleenmanderfield.com
Gourmet popcorn was named one of the top five trends to watch at the specialty food trade show this winter. There’s popcorn covered in chocolate, infused with bourbon, seasoned with curry. Flavor of the month at Popcornopolis in Los Angeles? Strawberries and cream.
And if you want to make your own fancy popcorn, there are seasonings: chili, lime, dill pickle. Kernels come in ruby red or indigo blue. And don’t be surprised by the popcorn buffet at the next wedding you attend.
While popcorn may be trendy, it’s hardly new. Archaeologists found ears of popcorn in New Mexico that may be 5,000 years old. Most Native Americans made popcorn long before the Europeans landed. The first settlers took to it right away, and some Colonial families ate popcorn with sugar and cream for breakfast.
Portable popcorn machines appeared at fairs and carnivals in the late 1800s. Then, the vendors flocked to streets where nickelodeons showed movies all day. But when fancy movie palaces opened, the owners resented the tacky popcorn tracked on the plush carpets of their grand staircases.
The Great Depression was popcorn’s big break. Cash-strapped movie theaters lowered their standards, brought concessions inside, and a star was born.
World War II sugar rations sent popcorn sales into the stratosphere. Without candy, Americans ate three times as much popcorn as usual. Then television lured people away from the movies. By the 1950s, people were popping corn in their kitchens.
This is something I’d like to try.
(via lickystickypickywe)
my dreeeeeeeeeam...time I come home we are GOING
Chicago style. 2 things of it!
Eu queria ter um desses no meu quarto.
NIGHTNIGHT by DEDDY