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22nd of June, 2015 (Monday) - 27 comments

Page 244
Rose on page 244
So cute
:P on page 244
Now I want a taco pancake.
:P on page 244
Ash he is clearly is a time traveling genius!
Yochanan on page 244
BEST WAY TO REPRESENT SPEECH EVER!
Lokitsu on page 244
What is that he put on the pancake? Sugar?
M.W. on page 244
@Lokitsu Looks like the little sugar packets for coffee and tea.
Although of note, in the US, sugar packets are almost always white. Pink packets are almost universally saccharine, which I imagine would be as vile on a pancake as on anything else. It’s presumably different in Australia.
Anaryse on page 244
I know they still exist, but it has been years since I've personally seen a powdered-sugar topped crêpe, which is essentially what he made here.
atemu1234 on page 244
For those not inclined to put forth effort, it reads, "Oh my God, you are some kind of genius!"
zhourahl on page 244
Do not use the pink packets. White ones are the best, yellow ones are fine.
In the US, anyway.
Rock on page 244
Ash's opinion shifts with the contents of her stomach. ;)
MikeyLikesIt on page 244
And if sugar isn't healthy enough for you, use honey. That's the way I like it.
gronk on page 244
sugar with a squeeze of lemon juice
Solar on page 244
I love that last speech bubble!
Although I must ask what exactly is in the pink packets??
Sugar or sweetner is assumed, but we need a proper answer! (Here's hoping it's mentioned on the next page.)
Solar on page 244
Oh, and on another note, the only thing I'll put on my pancakes is maple syrup. Accept no subsittutes! Although I do suspect its popularity in Australia is somewhat limited as they don't produce any, afaik, while here in Canada we produce over 80% of the world total.
Tober on page 244
The pink packets are just sugar. I've never heard of this pink=saccharine thing before.
Kid Cthulhu on page 244
In the US, our sweeteners are colored coded. One of the first commercially produced saccharine brands was called Sweet'n Low and they always had pink packets. Regular sugar was always in white packets. Later there were blue &n yellow packets for Splenda and another fake sugar. It's just one of those cultural things.
Bill on page 244
Pink for Sweet'n Low or generic saccharin, blue for Equal or other aspartame, and yellow for Splenda/sucralose. Only the white packets are regular table sugar (sucrose). Oh, and brown is Sugar in the Raw or other turbinado sugar.
Coincidentally, I think that the different colors (aside from white) were introduced in roughly that order, too.
Waylander on page 244
I don't get it.. what is this land that eats pancakes, but does not use maple syrup? Some sort of vile, twisted.. non-Canada?
Page 214
Books are better on page 214
That first panel slaughtered me...
Page 72
panda on page 72
You need an excuse? I'm pretty sure that you just eat pie after making sure that no one was gonna take that slice.
Page 71
atemu1234 on page 71
@Liz
No clue, what did you say? Now I'm bloody curious.
Page 67
atemu1234 on page 67
What I mean to say is that from that point it's pretty much set in stone for a human being. The only way to alter it is through scarification and that's fairly obvious.
DNA, on the other hand, is almost as difficult to permanently alter. What you'd want to do is probably gene therapy of some sort, which is getting a lot more money (due to the actual purposes it serves) as opposed to faking fingerprints (which is difficult and lacks a legitimate reason to do).
Page 56
:P on page 56
Why does Johnny look so much like Ash? Wait it's the other way around. Why does Ash look so much like Johnny?
Page 46
atemu1234 on page 46
Christ, that's just question one. This is why I was so happy to be out of school, I guarantee it.
Page 43
@@VVee on page 43
I think s\he means ash.
Page 7
atemu1234 on page 7
Guys, either can be longest. It's a roughly even split in my family, it's not out of the ordinary.
Page 4
@yochanan on page 4
Bleep blop gleem.