I have the issue and have been reading it all the way through, little by little. I am almost done. I have tried three or four of the recipes. The very first one was good but needs some tweeking, Imo. The others were not "Keepers". All through the magazine I keep thinking about two quotes. One by Johnny Carson " You buy the premise, you buy the bit" and the other by Ernest Hemingway, about a "crap detector" in his head, something related to faulty logic principles. Kind of the same thing with Cooks Country, et al.
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I have the issue and have been reading it all the way through, little by little. I am almost done. I have tried three or four of the recipes. The very first one was good but needs some tweeking, Imo. All through the magazine I keep thinking about two quotes. One by Johnny Carson " You buy the premise, you buy the bit" and the other by Ernest Hemingway, about a "crap detector" in his head, something related to faulty logic principles. Kind of the same thing with Cooks Country, et al.
I have the issue and have been reading it all the way through, little by little. I am almost done. I have tried three or four of the recipes. The very first one was good but needs some tweeking, Imo. All through the magazine I keep thinking about two quotes. One by Johnny Carson " You buy the premise, you buy the bit" and the other by Ernest Hemingway, about a "crap detector" in his head, something related to faulty logic principles.
I have the issue and have been reading it all the way through, little by little. I am almost done. I have tried three or four of the recipes. The very first one was good but needs some tweeking, Imo. All through the magazine I keep thinking about two quotes. One by Johnny Carson " You buy the premise, you buy the bit" and the other by Ernest Hemingway, about a "crap decter" in his head, something related to faulty logic principles.
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