| ← Older revision | Revision as of 03:09, 28 November 2012 |
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| | ===Noun: "a whoopie pie"=== | | ===Noun: "a whoopie pie"=== |
| | {{timeline| | | {{timeline| |
| − | 2000s=2005 2010 2011}} | + | 2000s=2005 2010 2011 2012}} |
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| | ====Uses==== | | ====Uses==== |
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| | * '''2011''', Jane Stern & Michael Stern, ''The Lexicon of Real American Food'', Lyons Press (2011), ISBN 9780762760947, [http://books.google.com/books?id=mHBVnMl3nMkC&pg=PT296 page 290]: | | * '''2011''', Jane Stern & Michael Stern, ''The Lexicon of Real American Food'', Lyons Press (2011), ISBN 9780762760947, [http://books.google.com/books?id=mHBVnMl3nMkC&pg=PT296 page 290]: |
| | *: The alternative account of whoopie pie's genesis is that when Amish women served them to their husbands or children, the recipients were so delighted they shouted "Whoopie!" Before the exclamation became its name, the pastry was called a '''''hucklebuck''''' {{…}} | | *: The alternative account of whoopie pie's genesis is that when Amish women served them to their husbands or children, the recipients were so delighted they shouted "Whoopie!" Before the exclamation became its name, the pastry was called a '''''hucklebuck''''' {{…}} |
| | + | * '''2012''', "[http://www.epageflip.net/i/67477/9 Whoopie Pies]", ''Parade'', 27 May 2012: |
| | + | *: Or it could have been created (and christened) in Pennsylvania Dutch country, where, according to lore, children were so excited to find what was known as a "''hucklebuck'''" in their lunch boxes that they shouted, "Whoopie!" |
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| | ===Verb: "to dance the hucklebuck"=== | | ===Verb: "to dance the hucklebuck"=== |
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