A flute made out of dark chocolate. Give a rousing performance, then follow it up by an orgasmic culinary experience-- theircompetitor, Jan 29 2004 whistle pops http://www.spangler...cts/whistlepops.htm [JesusHChrist, Apr 01 2005] Piccocolate. Melts on your mouth and in your hands.-- Worldgineer, Jan 29 2004 cf. "Toot Sweets" in the movie "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang"-- krelnik, Jan 29 2004 [orgasmic culinary experience]
Do you mean it to be used in that manner? Doesn't chocolate melt rather easily? Granted, the cleanup could be fun....-- normzone, Jan 29 2004 When I was a kid, we had these little slide whistles, only they were candy. I loved them...-- spacecadet, Jan 29 2004 It would have a very dark tone.
Truthfully though, I don't think you could get chocolate to resonate at any decent frequency.-- RayfordSteele, Mar 31 2005 What next, chocolate violin bows and music stands for the musicians to munch on during a performance.-- phundug, Mar 31 2005 [spacecadet] you can still buy those sugar slide-whistles here, and also sugar 'flutes' (well, more like ocarinas I guess). Baked.-- Basepair, Mar 31 2005 Whistle pops (link)-- JesusHChrist, Apr 01 2005 --Hey, would a potato flute be a "Choccarina"?-- Steamboat, Apr 03 2005 excellent idea.-- po, May 11 2005 I'm amazed P.D.Q. Bach (aka Peter Schickele) never composed any music for edible instruments.
He did come up with the Concerto for Horn & Hardart, the Hardart being a large bulky instrument with compartments containing cups of coffee and pieces of pie for the musician to eat during the performance. But never a composition that called for the instrument itself to be eaten.-- phundug, May 11 2005 random, halfbakery