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Because sometimes a status update just isn't enough.

Because sometimes a status update just isn't enough.
Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts

07 October 2011

Facebook Status of the WEEK 3

"Mom, you're not putting this on Facebook, are you?" (Sean, pits deep in corn.)
Never fear, Sean... of course she did. It's her job.

My friend Cassidy has two of the most unintentionally hilarious and unique boys in the world. Her Facebook status updates on their daily conversations kill me... they never fail to make me laugh and honestly, they remind me of my own unintentionally hilarious and unique boys when they were little. (Ohhhh how I miss them!!!)

To give you an idea of a typical conversation in her house:

"I've already decided lots of things for when I grow up, like what kind of car I'll buy, And I think I'll get that Baby Bullet to make baby food for my kids. But I'm still undecided about car insurance. I'm thinking Nationwide or Progressive. But Progressive gives you discounts the longer you stay with them. So that's something." - Ethan, 10 years old, who clearly watches too many commercials.

Since the invention of the internet and most importantly, Facebook, the parental duty of embarrassing your children has become even easier. In this case, however, I am helping Cassidy's sons, Sean and Ethan, embarrass their mother by sharing her following post:

Proof of political correctness at work in younger generations: Ethan - "Why is it getting hotter instead of colder?" Matt - "I don't know. It's Indian Summer." Ethan - "Man, if it's hot here I'd hate to see what they are getting over there in India." It never occurred to him that it was a reference to Native Americans. I almost undid it all by saying "feathers, not dots." Clearly there is still work to be done in the older generations.

"Feathers, not dots." Really, Cass? Reallyyyy?

It's so politically incorrect that I'm ashamed of how hard it made me laugh.

Love you long time, mama!!


04 August 2011

The legend of the corn pancakes

I just made myself a fried egg sandwich for breakfast and I'm not ashamed to admit that I was pretty excited about it.  I don't make myself breakfast too often (mostly because I'm too lazy) so when I do, it's kind of a big deal.  


I love going out to breakfast, having someone bring me donuts and coffee, or waking up in the morning knowing that there's something in the Danish family nestling sweetly on my counter, covered in icing and buttery crumbles and layered with raspberries.  Seriously, as I'm taking my first blissful bite I can barely contain my joy. 


It isn't difficult to trace my breakfast obsession back to childhood.  I know exactly when it began, why it began, and whose fault it is, MOM.


When ever someone brings up a disgusting food that their mother would make, my sister and I know that we can top it.  We will win every Grossest Food contest, EVER, because NO one can ever out do what my mother did to pancakes.


Breakfasts of my childhood were an Oliver Twist-ian nightmare. (Only believe me when I say we never asked for seconds.  Never.)     My mother had an obsession with foods that could be cooked to a slimy, glutenous consistency and served in a bowl.  We had gruel, Roman Meal, Malto Meal, Oatmeal, Cream of Wheat, Wheat Hearts, and those giant loaves of shredded wheat that she would leave un-sugared and pour hot milk over.  *gag*  Nothing in the cold, sweet, sugary cereal family would ever cross our table.  Pop tarts were but a dream that we would whisper about in the dark, and our biggest hope was that someday we would be adopted by a fat, toothless family who would finally feed us the crap we craved.  We would sit at the table, poking at the steaming bowls of nutritious glop, trying to barter with my mother on how many bites we had to take before we could remove ourselves from the Hell known as "breakfast".  ("I'll take 4 bites, not throw up, and make my bed every morning for the next 2 weeks.  Final offer.")  


Once in a very cold and blue moon, we would wake up in the morning and smell something wonderful.  Pancakes!  French toast!  Waffles!  Bacon!!!  We would race to the dining room and gleefully await our warm plates filled with happiness and maple syrup, and it would be the BEST. DAY. EVER.


One morning my sister and I awoke to the alluring aroma of pancakes and bacon wafting tantalizingly down the hallway and tickling our noses.  We floated out of bed like cartoon characters, being carried by the nostrils by the delicious scents filling our minds and bodies with anticipation.  


We arrived at the table, pajama clad, and eagerly dug in to the stack of golden brown pancakes sitting before us.


We shoveled in the first mouthful and slowly, it began to dawn on us that something wasn't... right.


Something was definitely wrong with these pancakes.


Upon second glance we were able to see what had been hidden beneath the golden brown crust of the pancake and the dripping butter and maple syrup...


My mother had put CORN in our pancakes.  CORN.  CORN.


CORN.


Not cornmeal, or cornflakes, or popcorn, or even corn nuts... oh HELLL to the no.  She put actual kernels of frozen corn into our pancakes.


(Backstory:  One of the three vegetables I flatly refuse to eat is corn.  I will eat it off the cob or popped in a bowl or ground into a tortilla, but other than that?  No.  I hate the texture and the taste.  And my mother knows this.  She used to tell me that if I didn't eat my corn she would sell me to the Indians... because it was the pre-PC 60s and 70s... and they would make me eat corn every day or starve to death, my choice.)


WHO DOES THAT?


What kind of diabolical mind would entice little girls to the breakfast table by making them believe they were going to be fed their favorite breakfast in the world and then put corn in it?


We were damaged by this.  Hideously, horribly, traumatically damaged.  To this day I have to pick a little at my pancake with a fork just to make sure that corn didn't sneak into it while I wasn't looking.  


So go on... give me your horror stories of blood sausage, tripe, or chitlins... I can throw down hard and take home the gold with corn pancakes.