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Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Rarebit.
Examples
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The overall arc has been written by Game Designer Ben Chamberlain (or "Rarebit" in-game) months in advance, but it's fleshed out by live events put on by the volunteer coalition of players called the Live Event Special Interest Group ( "LESIG," for short).
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The overall arc has been written by Game Designer Ben Chamberlain (or "Rarebit" in-game) months in advance, but it's fleshed out by live events put on by the volunteer coalition of players called the Live Event Special Interest Group ( "LESIG," for short).
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The overall arc has been written by Game Designer Ben Chamberlain (or "Rarebit" in-game) months in advance, but it's fleshed out by live events put on by the volunteer coalition of players called the Live Event Special Interest Group ( "LESIG," for short).
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The overall arc has been written by Game Designer Ben Chamberlain (or "Rarebit" in-game) months in advance, but it's fleshed out by live events put on by the volunteer coalition of players called the Live Event Special Interest Group ( "LESIG," for short).
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Rarebit doesn't pop up until some 60 years after the recipe itself first surfaces, although given both have been in use for over two centuries, I think you're entitled to go with either.
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First, Kim Turner who sent me a copy of Windsor McCay's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend (1904-1913).
"Every Day I Write the Book" docbrite 2009
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Jack Brawn has the honor of owning the first spit-take committed to celluloid with 1906's "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" check out the 2:31 mark, and since then the spit-take tradition has been proudly carried on by such luminaries as Gene Wilder, Jeff Goldblum, and the nerdy kid from "Can't Hardly Wait".
WATCH: The Ultimate Movie Spit-Take Reel Ben Craw 2011
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This week's picture is kind of a commission, although I was paid in books rather than cash - Ulrich Merkl is one of the editors of Sunday Press's frankly wonderful Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend collection, which he sent me a copy of in exchange for a Krazy Kat drawing.
Archive 2009-05-01 Roger Langridge 2009
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Jack Brawn has the honor of owning the first spit-take committed to celluloid with 1906's "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" check out the 2:31 mark, and since then the spit-take tradition has been proudly carried on by such luminaries as Gene Wilder, Jeff Goldblum, and the nerdy kid from "Can't Hardly Wait".
WATCH: The Ultimate Movie Spit-Take Reel Ben Craw 2011
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Mark Hix, perhaps anticipating a Welsh backlash, goes for caerphilly in his book British Regional Food, while Delia consigns any such concerns to the bottom of Lyn Tegid, and plumps for an equal mix of cheddar and parmesan for the Welsh Rarebit Soufflé in her Complete Cookery Course.
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