That you have psychopathic tendencies. Just kidding, there isn't a way to eat a ginger bread man without appearing to have a grudge against humanity. (snapping bits off one to eat appears sadistic.. eating one bit by bit could be construed as torture... and I'll let you figure out what licking the icing off first means...)
They eat the gingerbread house after Christmas!
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Use foam paper brown color, you can't eat it and it makes a fake gingerbread well.
They tend to eat pierniczki a gingerbread cookie basically.
Yes, some medieval people did eat gingerbread. According to the Wikipedia article on gingerbread, it was introduced to Western Europe by an Armenian monk named Gregory of Nicopolis in the year 992 AD. There is a source link below.
head first
It's a cake - a treacly gingerbread.
The fox viewed the Gingerbread Man as a delicious treat and wanted to catch and eat him. He saw the Gingerbread Man as a snack rather than a living being to engage with.
You eat it of course because you don't want to waste your money.
first they cut the body and then they start with the head they always eat the head first. Then they bite of the legs and then the body
That phrase is not talking about the gingerbread you eat! Victorian Era houses had a lot of decorative woodwork that was called "gingerbread" because it looked a bit like the decorative gingerbread houses people make. If your gingerbread on your house had gold leaf rubbed on, it was gilded, or gilt. "The gilt has worn off the gingerbread" thus means that time has passed and the decorations aren't as pretty - in other words, the newness has worn off.
These are two different things. Gingerbread is a something to eat or something that is very ornate. The gingerbread man is the main character in a children's story. The story is beloved by children for many reasons. The first reason is that as the cookie runs away to escape being eaten the list of those who failed to catch it grows. Those hearing the story get to repeat the growing list and so become part of the story. Children also love the the sly fox who uses great strategy to get the gingerbread man close enough to eat. They love the simplicity of the moral that food is meant to be eaten. Everything has a purpose so why do some people over decorate their houses to resemble the gingerbread house discovered by the abandoned children in another story? That is another story for another day.