This yummy craft adhesive for youngsters is actually a healthful edible paste of vitamins and minerals that every creative glue-eating kid needs. Nutrition disguised as gluition.
Best of all, it's sugar-free!-- nihilo, Jun 27 2006 Howsit woik?-- methinksnot, Jun 28 2006 You know-- it's sticky and healthy. Like Peanut Butter. Like Elmer's, but with vitamins.-- nihilo, Jun 28 2006 Egg whites.-- Texticle, Jun 28 2006 Can't argue with scientifical knowledgeablity. [+]-- methinksnot, Jun 28 2006 Just as long as it looks and tastes nothing like Elmer's.-- RayfordSteele, Jun 28 2006 craola uses corn starch to attach the wrappers of their crayons to make them non-toxic. it's a good idea.-- tcarson, Jun 28 2006 So you can eat rice glue; big deal, you can eat Elmer's, too. Snot is sticky, mucilaginous, and edible, also. That doesn't make it Youthpaste. Youthpaste is intended as a food product that kids can use for craft projects-- a dietary supplement, good-tasting, and fortified with vitamins. A quick Google search turns up no discriptions of rice glue as an adhesive being "yummy", a "healthy snack" for kids, and replete with "vitamins and minerals" -- the exact defining characteristics of Youthpaste.
Glue exists. Kids' snacks exist. Childrens' vitamins exist. This idea combines all three factors. Without them, you don't have this product.-- nihilo, Jun 28 2006 Raw garlic is good for you and makes a decent paper glue. Not sure about "yummy kid's snack" though.-- wagster, Jun 28 2006 No; the volume of the child is the only limit. "Orange", "white", and "pink". No-- but much to the chagrin of the animals, it has been thoroughly IMproperly tested.-- nihilo, Jun 29 2006 random, halfbakery