Photo courtesy www.edibleblog.com |
Now, at the risk of being thought of as a total grump, this seems to me a bit silly. Juvenile, even. It was interesting when evil Watergate plotter G. Gordon Liddy admitted in an interview that as a youth, he once killed, roasted and ate a rat, because he thought it would make him fearless. And, as mentioned in his autobiography, a young Barack Obama, then living in Indonesia was introduced to eating dog, snake and insects (which he recalled as crunchy) This is interesting stuff.
But, mere lists of foods checked-off do not give the reader any information about your character or motives. Who gives a rat's patooty that you have eaten Twinkies?
The rest of us are only interested in the story behind the meal? We want the tasty details of setting, the personalities of your server, chef, host. There should be an element of danger or passion or mystery associated with the dining experience for it to be worthy of sharing the disclosure with friends - even FBF's.
Cricket Salad |
On a List of "America's Most Adventurous Eaters" my name would be way, way down near the bottom - and in small print. I have no exotic stories to report, except maybe the time on that camping trip with Dick Cheney where the guide was shot and killed -- accidentally of course -- and the rest of us cooked and ate him. You can't make stuff like that up.
3 comments:
If you want, you can actually roast and eat Dick Chaney's old heart which was recently replaced. To do so requires a hefty donation to the RNC. Contrary to popular myth, it is not black,
Then, why do they call him "Darth Vader"?
He uderstood "the force."
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