I've loved peanut butter & jelly forever, and when I told Hailey I'd never eaten an Uncrustable, she kindly brought me one. It disappeared faster than the time it took to take these photos. My Friday tie looks like a paisley Uncrustables tie.
I've loved peanut butter & jelly forever, and when I told Hailey I'd never eaten an Uncrustable, she kindly brought me one. It disappeared faster than the time it took to take these photos. My Friday tie looks like a paisley Uncrustables tie.
The only flying example of of a PBJ-1J (Navy version of the B-25) N5865V makes a pass at the Capital Airshow, Mather Field, California. March 2025 #airshow #capitalairshow #aviation #AvGeek #spotter #USN #B25 #PBJ #photography #Nikon #nikonphotgraphy #CCA2025 #Z9 #Warbird #WWII
The only flying example of of a PBJ-1J (Navy version of the B-25) N5865Vmakes a pass with bomb bay doors open at the Capital Airshow, Mather Field, California. March 2025 #airshow #capitalairshow #aviation #AvGeek #spotter #USN #B25 #PBJ #photography #Nikon #nikonphotgraphy #CCA2025 #Z9 #Warbird #WWII
New Post From Cliff's Vernissage
Day 83 of the #365in2025 challenge.
Some friends sent us the brand new PB&J Reese's Peanut Butter cups!
#365in25 #Reeses #PBJ #PeanutButterAndJelly #Food #Snacks #Candy #Treats #Photography #iPhonePhotography #iOSPhotography
View on Vernissage https://vernissage.photos/@CliffWade/7485429948778285655
Day 83 of the #365in2025 challenge.
Some friends sent us the brand new PB&J Reese's Peanut Butter cups!
#365in25 #Reeses #PBJ #PeanutButterAndJelly #Food #Snacks #Candy #Treats #Photography #iPhonePhotography #iOSPhotography
Question for Australians and New Zealanders:
- Did you grow up eating peanut butter and jam/jelly sandwiches?
When I was growing up in England, I did not encounter the PBJ sandwich until my teens, when a school friend who had lived for a while in the USA surprised me by spreading jam over his peanut butter at supper one evening.
#Food #Foodways #PBJ #AmericanFood #AustralianFood #NewZealandFood #PeanutButter #PeanutButterAndJelly ##PeanutButterAndJam
Passwords and Peanut Butter
Wanna buy some *really* expensive peanut butter?
For a modest investment of $1,069.00, you too can acquire a tasty 3-pak of NIST Standard Reference Peanut Butter.
Coming in at approximately $59/ounce, that’s a bit pricier than the $.20/ounce you’d spend at the grocery store. But in this case, you’re buying more than the product in the jar. You’re buying “truth.”
NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, is well-known as the government agency which sets password policies. NIST is the reason most websites began asking users to create passwords which contain: Upper-case letters
Lower-case letters
Numbers and
Special characters
NIST is also the reason most websites now ask for passwords longer than 8 characters, and why websites *don’t* ask us to choose from a list of goofy questions like “Where did you attend high school?” or “What’s your favorite food?”
In the world of cybersecurity, NIST is almost always thought of as the good guys.
In addition to defining best practices and providing advice related to technology, NIST also produces 1,300 Standard Reference Materials, or SRMs. Thirty of these are food-related.
These highly-analyzed samples are used by manufacturers all over the world to calibrate their testing equipment. Lab techs know if their results agree with the NIST standard sample, their tests are reliable.
The high cost of these reference materials — including peanut butter — is really all about the extensive process NIST used to accurately measure the ingredients, and all the scientific expertise that went into verifying the sample’s chemical and physical properties.
NIST refers to their Standard Reference Materials as “Truth In A Jar.”
Other fun facts about these reference samples: NIST sells $20MM per year
From a 20,000 square foot warehouse
The most popular SRM is a break-away product called “Charpies”
NIST even sells standard cigarettes for flammability testing
The newest Standard Reference Samples are: Typical Human Diet
Human Sludge (ugh!)
Live Hamster Ovary Cells for production of human monoclonal antibodies
So NIST isn’t only all about passwords. They also help lab techs find nasty impurities in peanut butter, like aflatoxins, that would do us a world of hurt if not for the vigilant folks at NIST.
Here's a recent behind-the-scenes video from Veritasium as they tour the NIST SRM warehouse:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esQyYGezS7c
And Tom Scott did an excellent, 4-minute video interviewing NIST staff in their lab. Check out the freeze-dried urine and whale blubber:
A history of the PB&J sandwich. I once worked with a guy who had a sign in his kitchen that read "Home of the ORIGINAL PB&J Sandwich."
https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2023/08/pbj-an-american-love-story/
Sam Bankman-Fried was veg, vegan to be true
Now confined to jail, his meals were few
His favorite snack, he missed most of all
Four PB&Js a month, his stomach did bawl
This restriction caused him great grief, definitely no reprieve
#sambankmanfried #vegan #pbj #jail #poetry
http://www.businessinsider.com/sam-bankman-fried-limited-peanut-butter-jelly-sandwiches-jail-2023-8
Passwords and Peanut Butter
Wanna buy some *really* expensive peanut butter?
For a modest investment of $1,069.00, you too can acquire a tasty 3-pak of NIST Standard Reference Peanut Butter.
Coming in at approximately $59/ounce, that’s a bit pricier than the $.20/ounce you’d spend at the grocery store. But in this case, you’re buying more than the product in the jar. You’re buying “truth.”
NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, is well-known as the government agency which sets password policies. NIST is the reason most websites began asking users to create passwords which contain: Upper-case letters
Lower-case letters
Numbers and
Special characters
NIST is also the reason most websites now ask for passwords longer than 8 characters, and why websites *don’t* ask us to choose from a list of goofy questions like “Where did you attend high school?” or “What’s your favorite food?”
In the world of cybersecurity, NIST is almost always thought of as the good guys.
In addition to defining best practices and providing advice related to technology, NIST also produces 1,300 Standard Reference Materials, or SRMs. Thirty of these are food-related.
These highly-analyzed samples are used by manufacturers all over the world to calibrate their testing equipment. Lab techs know if their results agree with the NIST standard sample, their tests are reliable.
The high cost of these reference materials — including peanut butter — is really all about the extensive process NIST used to accurately measure the ingredients, and all the scientific expertise that went into verifying the sample’s chemical and physical properties.
NIST refers to their Standard Reference Materials as “Truth In A Jar.”
Other fun facts about these reference samples: NIST sells $20MM per year
From a 20,000 square foot warehouse
The most popular SRM is a break-away product called “Charpies”
NIST even sells standard cigarettes for flammability testing
The newest Standard Reference Samples are: Typical Human Diet
Human Sludge (ugh!)
Live Hamster Ovary Cells for production of human monoclonal antibodies
So NIST isn’t only all about passwords. They also help lab techs find nasty impurities in peanut butter, like aflatoxins, that would do us a world of hurt if not for the vigilant folks at NIST.
Here's a recent behind-the-scenes video from Veritasium as they tour the NIST SRM warehouse:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esQyYGezS7c
And Tom Scott did an excellent, 4-minute video interviewing NIST staff in their lab. Check out the freeze-dried urine and whale blubber:
In case you've just been to dying to know the history of not just #peanutbutter
but peanut butter and jelly sandwiches...here you go:
Passwords and Peanut Butter
Wanna buy some *really* expensive peanut butter?
For a modest investment of $1,069.00, you too can acquire a tasty 3-pak of NIST Standard Reference Peanut Butter.
Coming in at approximately $59/ounce, that’s a bit pricier than the $.20/ounce you’d spend at the grocery store. But in this case, you’re buying more than the product in the jar. You’re buying “truth.”
NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, is well-known as the government agency which sets password policies. NIST is the reason most websites began asking users to create passwords which contain: Upper-case letters
Lower-case letters
Numbers and
Special characters
NIST is also the reason most websites now ask for passwords longer than 8 characters, and why websites *don’t* ask us to choose from a list of goofy questions like “Where did you attend high school?” or “What’s your favorite food?”
In the world of cybersecurity, NIST is almost always thought of as the good guys.
In addition to defining best practices and providing advice related to technology, NIST also produces 1,300 Standard Reference Materials, or SRMs. Thirty of these are food-related.
These highly-analyzed samples are used by manufacturers all over the world to calibrate their testing equipment. Lab techs know if their results agree with the NIST standard sample, their tests are reliable.
The high cost of these reference materials — including peanut butter — is really all about the extensive process NIST used to accurately measure the ingredients, and all the scientific expertise that went into verifying the sample’s chemical and physical properties.
NIST refers to their Standard Reference Materials as “Truth In A Jar.”
Other fun facts about these reference samples: NIST sells $20MM per year
From a 20,000 square foot warehouse
The most popular SRM is a break-away product called “Charpies”
NIST even sells standard cigarettes for flammability testing
The newest Standard Reference Samples are: Typical Human Diet
Human Sludge (ugh!)
Live Hamster Ovary Cells for production of human monoclonal antibodies
So NIST isn’t only all about passwords. They also help lab techs find nasty impurities in peanut butter, like aflatoxins, that would do us a world of hurt if not for the vigilant folks at NIST.
Here's a recent behind-the-scenes video from Veritasium as they tour the NIST SRM warehouse:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esQyYGezS7c
And Tom Scott did an excellent, 4-minute video interviewing NIST staff in their lab. Check out the freeze-dried urine and whale blubber:
I can't be trusted around peanut butter & jelly. The only reason they lasted THAT long is because I was watching football.
After peanut butter and before jelly, do you:
@mez My world is suddenly off-kilter, as I HAD NOT KNOWN THIS RULE until now #PeanutButter When in school I ate a #PBJ sammie every day (because there was no refrigeration and I was suspicious of any food that might spoil before lunch arrived), so my offenses in this matter are grave.