CUP IN THE PIE DISH
Seventj' years ago a popular periodicall published this query: Mr Editor.—Will you tell me why. If a cup I invert and insert in a pie, The juice collect beneath the stone, While the process of baking is going on? And what becomes of that portion of air, Within the cup when inserted there' The reply ran: When the cup is placed there, it is full of col'd air. Which, when in the oven, gets hot And expands, as we're told by cooks young and old; But when the pie's cold, say philosophers bold, Juice rushes in where caloric is not.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 3, Issue 214, 18 September 1940, Page 3
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105CUP IN THE PIE DISH Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 3, Issue 214, 18 September 1940, Page 3
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