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If a brick of cheese grows moldy, he scrapes off the mold.
Basically, they dump an enormous brick of cheese in the middle of town, and then it's up to you.
Everything goes haywire when Russell, high on the speed weed, starts boning a brick of cheese in the middle of the restaurant -- ruining the whole review and everyone's appetite.
An elderly woman in a bandanna wielded a cheese cutter, slicing through fat bricks of cream cheese.
The glories of Italian delicatessen -- torta filled with spinach, Gorgonzola, and pine nuts, robiola cheese wrapped in cabbage leaves, bricks of goat cheese from Brescia and boar sausages from Lucca -- line the displays at Volpetti in Testaccio.
Bags of baby carrots and bricks of cream cheese: carrot cake!
Bricks of cream cheese are claimed by Kraft and others to be an invention by William Lawrence, a dairy owner from Chester, N.Y., who in 1880 began distributing it in foil packets under the label Philadelphia, a brand eventually bought by Kraft in 1928.
If you do not have a brick of processed cheese, you can use sliced processed cheese instead.
A coffee, a fresh sesame bagel and a brick of cream cheese costs $5.
His omelets were awful, unless you happened to like your eggs badly scorched and folded around an entire brick of cream cheese.
Order a ham, salami and mutz sub ($6.50), as I did on a recent visit, and you'll receive a two-inch-thick brick of meat, cheese and toppings, enough for two meals.
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