When you're a kid you're told not to play with your food. But what if creating works of art with your food was actually a good lesson in creativity.
As an adult,Watch Midhunter 30-year-old Greg Milano from Connecticut can play with his food all he wants. So on Thanksgiving on Thursday, he created a starchy version of Tesla's Cybertruck with some homemade mashed potatoes.
Greg's brother, Dan Milano, shared some videos on Twitter showing Greg carefully sculpting a glob of potatoes on a dinner plate with a knife. "My brother has been working on a mashed potato cybertruck for over an hour," Dan tweeted.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.SEE ALSO: Tesla's Cybertruck window fail is funnier every time you watch it
Greg, who studied art history and architecture at Boston College, described himself to Mashable as "just a big kid."
No waste here. Greg took full advantage of the potatoes as he scooped out the truck's bed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
He even "mashed" the truck's windows, an homage to the company's embarrassing failure during the truck's launch last week.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Eventually the truck was filled with some delicious gravy, and Dan tweeted that his brother "ate every bite."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Part of the reason it all started because I love my mom’s recipe. Poured the gravy over it and ate it, I usually do!" he said.
When asked about the difficulty in shaping the truck, Greg said the "hardest part was achieving the angular and cold design in a soft and warm medium like mash potatoes."
He added it's "... always hard to carve under something like a car to make it look like it is standing on wheels."
Clearly, this isn't Greg's first go at mashed potato sculpting. He told Mashable that he's been sculpting things out of his mashed potatoes for as long as he can remember. "Mostly people asked jokingly, 'what are you going to do this year?' And [it] quickly became a Thanksgiving tradition," Greg said.
As for his inspiration, Greg says that he tries to sculpt things that are "a color similar to mash potatoes and block like to keep it simple." He tries to keep things topical, too. In the past he's sculpted the White House in an election year, and a Hostess Cupcake and Twinkie the year that the company went bankrupt.
From Mashable, keep mashing, dude.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Apple is actively looking at AI search for Safari
Everything we think we know about the Samsung Galaxy S8
SpaceX's Saturday rocket launch is a big freaking deal
BBC is investigating if Russians leaked Sherlock finale
Best Garmin deal: Save over $100 on Garmin Forerunner 955
The internet just can't believe what this Mississippi city calls MLK Day
Dude's viral complaint about a tanning mitt is relationship goals
Trump to use personal Twitter account instead of @POTUS, report says
Best portable power station deal: Save 44% on the Jackery Explorer 100 v2
Yes, Jude Law knows about your 'Young Pope' memes
Waymo data shows humans are terrible drivers compared to AI
Prepare to be very jealous of President Obama's custom Air Jordans
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。