Back in the 1700s, George Washington became the first Commander-in-Chief of the United States in large part for his valor in the War of Independence. In ensuing decades, apocryphal tales flowed about Washington, such as him wearing wooden teeth, or that he spoke with a British accent.
One underreported quote from the first president, however, was this: I cannot tell an air fry. Often misquoted as, I cannot tell a lie, Washington was explaining to Vice President John Adams over lunch at the White House that he couldn t tell the difference between fries conventionally deep fried with oil, and those made in an air fryer.
Back in the 1700s, George Washington became the first Commander-in-Chief of the United States in large part for his valor in the War of Independence. In ensuing decades, apocryphal tales flowed about Washington, such as him wearing wooden teeth, or that he spoke with a British accent.
One underreported quote from the first president, however, was this: I cannot tell an air fry. Often misquoted as, I cannot tell a lie, Washington was explaining to Vice President John Adams over lunch at the White House that he couldn t tell the difference between fries conventionally deep fried with oil, and those made in an air fryer.