Cookie Perfection Machine

(YouTube link)

Ben Krasnow rigged a system for making cookie recipe experimentation easier. If each cookie is a slight variation, and each is well-documented, they can be compared in one sitting. This may be the geekiest thing you've seen today, but people who go to such lengths for the sake of research give the rest of us wonderful cookies to enjoy! -via Viral Viral Videos

We dish up more neat food posts at the Neatolicious blog

Comments (0)

Intriguing yet unconvincing. There is no clear break between "old English" and middle English in the historical record. There are Scandinavian influences, yes, but if you look closely to the geolinguistic map of England, most Scandinavian influences are regional and are centered on areas with historically Nordic settlements. Yes, the Norsemen may have influenced the development of English, but to say that modern English is just Norse with some old English is bit of a stretch.
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As a northern englishman, (Yorkshire), taking a job in Reykjavik, Iceland, in the early eighties, I was delighted to find that so many northern words, dismissed by my teachers as 'dialect' or 'slang', were in fact old norse, retained, unchanged, for a thousand years, never accepted as 'proper' english by southerners.

I don't agree with the premise that old english simply died out.
And if anybody wants a definitive tome on "Old English Deverbal Substantives, Derived by Means of a Zero Morpheme", just let me know.
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