Top 18 Creamed Corn Quotes
#1. I like hot dogs. I like eggplant. I like pizza and creamed corn and beer. But I don't like Arabs.
Zach Braff
#2. I have a corn creamer that I love. It extracts pulp and juice from kernels, and I simmer that down into a creamed corn that has an almost mashed potato-like consistency. I add butter and hit it with chopped fresh chives at the end for an accent of color.
Nick Offerman
#3. Some people look at creamed corn and ask, 'Why?' I look at creamed corn and ask, 'Why not?'
Brian Regan
#4. People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a hunt.
Otto Von Bismarck
#5. Well, I'm not going to sit here and pretend that I haven't been a rogue most of my life.
Jack Nicholson
#6. It's not everyone who can teach you something about faith without saying a word to do it.
Jim Butcher
#7. You can solve all the world's problems in a garden.
Geoff Lawton
#8. I think happy, companionate marriages between men and women who respect each other (as far as is consistent with being actual human beings) should be every bit as poetry-worthy as angst, bitterness, and shame.
Delia Sherman
#9. I live up at about the 2000 feet level on a five acre piece of forest that I built a small house on.
Terence McKenna
#10. Those who are apparently absent can feel more present than the people right in front of you.
Sylvia Brownrigg
#11. Any mental activity is easy if it need not take reality into account.
Marcel Proust
#13. I've always known who I am. I might not work perfectly, or be like them, but that's okay. I know I work in my own way.
Sarah Dessen
#14. Let go of fighting your habits. Simply be present and observe their patterns. This will help you to break free until the negative patterns eventually subside.
Christopher Dines
#15. Life's battles don't often go, to the stronger or faster man, but sooner or late the one who wins is the one who thinks he can.
Dorcas Wood
#17. What we hold in our heads - our memory, our feelings, our thoughts, our sense of our own history - is the sum of our humanity.
Richard Eyre
#18. Although by 1851 tales of adventure had begun to seem antiquated, they had rendered a large service to the course of literature: they had removed the stigma, for the most part, from the word novel.
Carl Clinton Van Doren