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Philipp Zuercher wrote: > I don't really know if I get the point but I think it must be a sunday > morning phenomenon to start talking about eggs and tomatoes because they > will be part of one of these highly appreciated high-fat-low-fiber meals >we > tend to call Irish breakfast over here in Switzerland. > > Anyway...the only method to tell the difference between a boiled and a >soft > egg I know of is the following: > > Lay down the egg at the center of a big table, so it can't fall down to >the > floor - still better: put it on the floor, unless it turns out to be too > sticky for the experiment. Now grab it between two fingers and the thumb >and > spin it right round. > > The boiled egg will keep on spinning and the soft one will stop spinning > after one or two turns. It really works but I don't know if you would >call > the method a scientific one. > > I don't know much of tomatoes but there is some other illegal weed stuff > growing on my balcony... > > The whole thing makes me think of a really scientific method to check if >a > Stradivarius is real or fake. My violin making teacher once proposed, >when > there was one of those really old, really expensive Italian fiddles >lying on > our workbench, to burn it and analyse the ashes using the C-16 method. > > Enough is enough, enjoy your Irish breakfast and the rest of your sunday > > swissPhilipp (busyrecordingandthereforsleepless) > > CIAO TUTTI i like this response a lot better that the one that involved tequila & metal shavings (at least this one contained a reference to music), but i wonder, kim, if the list description has gotten scrambled (no pun int'd) for some folks... lance g. on a lighter note, i looped myself laughing the other night (it's easy to figure out what to overdub as contagion sets in fairly quickly...); it was either my mood or the alteration thereof from the aformentioned loopage, but it wuz a lot of fun (kinda private fun, tho...)