Tag Archives: Food

Someone help me cut this sandwich diagonally

Actress Brittany Murphy is causing problems on the set of her new movie, according to Page Six.

“She’s extremely difficult. When she gets to the set, it comes to a grinding halt. She’s so hot and cold, you never know.” According to our sources, Murphy insists on having diagonally cut peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with the crusts removed. “She needs one every hour. It’s painstaking – her assistant takes about a half an hour making each one,” said one crew member.

I’m not a gourmet chef, but I calculate that I could remove the crusts from a sandwich, slice it diagonally, and probably even add a toothpick garnish in less than 30 minutes. I might even be able to accomplish the feat in under 30 seconds. This tells me that I should move to Hollywood, where sandwich-making standards are at rock bottom, and then I could amaze everyone with my godly talent. After I have impressed the celebrities with my de-crusted peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, I will further blow their minds by sticking a straw into a juice box.

It’s the miracle of life!

Egg to chicken. AKA breakfast to dinner in five seconds.

So gross, and yet so amazing. Is that you, God, all covered in mucus and hair?

Holiday Party with an Emphasis on Christmas

The time has come to plan my (and that other guy’s) holiday party! I have a few preliminary ideas for entertainment:

1) Famous local musicians will lead my guests in a Christmas carol sing-a-long. I will pay them in merriment.

2) The two principals of the Charlottesville Womens’ Arm Wrestling League will give a pre-season exhibition.

3) We will paint cookies with dyed confectioner’s sugar that will not be tainted with lead.

4) Someone will dress up like Santa Claus and promise your children expensive gifts.

I need to choose a date. Saturday night the 15th of December? Thoughts?

PS The Christmas tree is dead and won’t be accepting presents this year, but I will.

God cavities

If you go trick or treating in Lovingston, Virginia, you can expect to see:

1) historic houses with haunted front yards bombed with synthetic spiderwebs;

2) goth teenagers in extra-wide, circa 1996 skateboard pants;

3) a piglet in a tiger cub costume (and some other people);

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

4) a coven of six-year-old Disney princesses holding hands, clotheslining other children on their way to the candy;

5) preternaturally smiley and generous people handing out neon glow sticks and Ziplock bags stuffed full of Sweet Tarts, Whoppers, and Sprees. They were positioned on both sides of the Lovingston main street, doling out their goods not from a front porch, but from giant garbage bags on the sidewalk. “Those people are awesome,” I said. “They gave me my own glow bracelet. It’s pink.” “Seems suspicious,” said Darren. Then I reached into my candy sack and found a religious pamphlet published by Billy Graham and company. On the cover were cute cartoon kids dressed in Halloween costumes. They were walking up a shining path lit by pumpkins with trick or treat bags in their hands. At the end of the path was a gold mansion where God lived. Apparently God gives out the best candy.

Big day for diabetes

I had to eat so much chocolate! Since I haven’t been drinking lately, the calories have to come from somewhere. Tonight I started with See’s. Then I moved onto Gearheart’s. Then my dad went out to the trunk of his car and came back to the kitchen table with a dish of chocolate bars arranged like flowers, a Boss’s Day gift from the nurses at his office.

I’ve seen a lot of bouquets in my life. I’ve seen them made from fruit. I’ve seen them made from flowers, both paper and plastic. I have eaten lollipop roses. But I had never seen a candy bouquet before tonight. These craft-store-happy entrepreneurs took a glue gun and attached dozens of fun-sized Snickers and Baby Ruth bars to sharpened sticks. Then they used the sticks to impale a crusty piece of green styrofoam lodged in a cat’s water bowl.  The resulting bouquet is like peering deep into a bottomless bag of Halloween candy from the rich peoples’ neighborhood, i.e. peering deep into heaven. It looks like you’ll never make it to the bottom of the chocolate, but then the thing topples and almost stabs you in the neck while you’re battling the styrofoam for the last KitKat. And you discover that the middle of the bouquet is stuffed with tissue paper colored like plastic wrappers for camouflage. And when the candy is gone you are left with a bunch of sharp sticks with trash stuck to them. What then? Toss them on the grill like garbage kebabs?

I am going to get a raging case of diabetes.

Gentlemen, please take note.  Send me expensive chocolates and flowers separately. Unless you can figure out how to make live daisies taste like ice cream (Lynsie, I am putting you on the case here), I’d like my bouquets sans plastic wrap and high fructose corn syrup.

Fine, I will go to the grocery store

I know it’s been a long time since we’ve had fresh produce in the house. Or bread. Or meat/cheese/cereal/caloric sustenance. But mostly I am finally, after many hungry months, capitulating to this grocery store visit because I am out of sugarless gum. And Christian’s Pizza is right next to Giant so before shopping I can finish a good book while I eat my gourmet slice of artichoke olive tortellini sun-dried tomato broccoli pine nut whatever. I started George Plimpton’s The Curious Case of Sidd Finch last night. It’s quirky, yes, but in an old school, charming way. It’s about a Buddhist monk who is recruited by the New York Mets for his 168 mph fastball. The book is great research for the new gig I got editing a former professor’s sports novel. I have been finding that when you ignore every loathsome personal memory you have about sports (being forced to play them in the rain, being on the losing-est team in the league, being on a team with popular bitchy girls who hate you), sports writing can be pretty entertaining.

UVA football far above Willis

When my aunt and uncle invited me to watch UVA play Duke today from their private, air-conditioned box at Scott Stadium, I naturally said yes. Not because I like football, even remotely. Not because I own an orange, a blue, or an orange & blue item of clothing. Not because it ever pumps me up to see my home team win. I went to the game because I knew my friend Willis would be there in the sun-hammered stands, sitting with the common people, sweating in the 92-degree heat, unable to buy so much as a beer to quench his thirst (they don’t sell alcohol at Scott Stadium – this is the reason you will find a lot of airplane bottles hidden in sundress cleavage at ballgames). Meanwhile I would be in the BOX mingling with wealthy, sophisticated Charlottesvillians who not only didn’t yell “You suck!” when a Cavalier fumbled a play, but who also provided complimentary salmon pate and cupcakes for my lunch. You see why I was excited. This afternoon’s text messages:

Willis: At the stadium give me a call and we will meet at halftime or something.

Wistar: This box is awesome. We”re at goalpost uva team side duke’s endzone. Might not want to leave.

Willis: You suck it’s damn hot out here.

Wistar: I don”t know if i can leave or if u can come up. [This was a lie. I knew I was free to go downstairs because I had made inquiries. I asked my cousin if she had ever left the box to explore the regular stadium. “No,” she said. “Why would I?”)

Willis: I’m in sec 522 what would you like 2 do?

Wistar: Have a good life. I am the one drinking wine & caviar n the ac [Here I took some creative license. It was actually smoked salmon and capers on the buffet table, not caviar. I stood conspicuously in the doorway of the box, hoping that Willis had some binoculars so he could see me drinking my red wine from a goblet.]

Willis: I probably cant come in there you could get back in with your ticket how about you come to my section?

Wistar: Mayb i eat anothr free hot dog now

Willis: You’re the worst and not my friend anymor.

Wistar: Mayb i come c u after this cold beer

Willis: No seriously I hate you.

I went to see him in the stands of course. I stayed for four minutes of the second half. Four real minutes, not four football minutes (an hour). Willis was wearing jeans that were rolled up to his knees. He looked tired and kept wiping the sweat from his eyes. He had taken off his shoes and the tops of his feet were sunburned. For a second, I almost felt bad. Willis went to UVA. He drives from DC to Charlottesville for almost every home game, spending tons of money on hotels, tickets, plastic UVA cups full of soda, etc. He is a true fan. He has probably painted his face before in UVA colors. He probably owns Cavalier underpants. And meanwhile it was all I could do in the box to take my eyes off my sandwich and bottomless cup of cold beer and look at one of the box’s three plasma TVs to figure out which team had the ball. Not to mention I had prime viewing of all the cute hoi polloi babies in tiny cheerleader outfits and UVA t-shirts walking by with their parents below the box. “Look how cute that one is!” I’d say to Darren. “What are you – the baby police?” he’d respond.

Willis, I wish that my box didn’t belong to someone else, and I could have invited you in. 😉 Here is some belated box food for you:

-Hotdogs from silver serving tray, served with tongs, loaded with all your favorite condiments

-Cooler of iced sodas, including Coke Zero which tastes just like Regular Coke

-Cup of chilled gazpacho

-Mini fridge full of Heinekens

U-V-A! WA-HOO-WAH! xo

Haven’t heard from Duane for a while

Here is a Bodo’s bagel for him:

____________

Top half bagel

_____________

Smoked turkey

_____________

Lettuce

____________

Tomato

_____________

Mayonnaise

____________

Bacon (to fatten him up)

_____________

Bottom half bagel