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Blog Entry 137 of 160 Sixteen Pounds from Normal
This used to be the part of my blog description where I told you what a giant, smelly, disgusting wide-body I was. Seriously, I used to be so fat it was yesterday behind me. However, I've lost over a hundred pounds since May of 2008. You'll have to excuse me if I don't regale you with self-depricating humor about being fat anymore. You know, stuff like, "The last thing I saw that big and white, it stepped on a church in 'Ghostbusters'." Nope; no more of that. I do however reserve the right to continue to digust you with stories of personal hygiene gone awry, stupid things done with power tools, inane word play, and an overindulgence of double entendre and innuendo. Be forewarned that political correctness is not high on my list of priorities. This is also an equal opportunity blog. I will write about whatever tickles my fancy at a given time. There are no sacred cows on my blog. On the vast palette of life, few of us are primary colors. Most of us more closely resemble the crap caked on the brush when it's not been cleaned well. And don't expect me to post every day. I'm not so full of crap that I can regurgitate the same boring diatribe day in and day out. Or to put it another way, I'm not a political blogger. Don't get me wrong; I'll kvetch about this and that, but in a hopefully amusing manner. To that point, I also should tell you that I write to amuse myself. If you get yours too, so much the better

A Meat Lover's Vegetarian Journal, Vol. 2


In the best of circumstances, I am something of a suspect chef. For instance, I make great breakfast burritos, but I'm not exactly sure how to boil an egg. I'm not good at frying things, but I'm an idiot savant at making sauces. My chicken dumpling soup is the stuff of legend and I can make home made noodles, but I am seemingly incapable of following simple recipes at other times. Hence, it was no surprise that my first foray into vegetarian cooking was to haute meatless cuisine as Little Big Horn was to successful cavalry engagements.

It all started with a magazine called "Food and Wine". This is a magazine you sometimes see in a doctor's office waiting room or in the lobby of a Lexus dealership. It's a magazine targeted at a reader making six figures or more. I know what you're saying; "Why the heck are you getting it?" I had no choice. A certain newspaper (which shall remain nameless) has, for the last several years, been offering a magazine subscription at no extra cost with a paid newspaper subscription. Never mind that the paper's subscription rate goes up ten dollars a year, I need another magazine subscription like I need a third elbow, and my other choices were "Competitive Needlepoint" and "Nudist Skydiving", and, viola, I am a proud subscriber to "Food and Wine."

While deeply in thought perusing a recent issue (okay, okay, while passing the time taking the Browns to the Super Bowl), I saw a recipe for barley, mushroom, and meatball soup. Being a self-ordained, or at least self-deluded, culinary genius, I decided I could retrofit this recipe to be vegetarian. "I know;" I thought, "I'll just drop the meatballs and use vegetable stock. Hey, we got that pantry full of beans I bought the other day. We ought to go ahead and toss some of those in there, too. Sure, I'll use the cranberry beans. I wonder if they taste like cranberries. Let's use really good mushrooms, too. I'll buy portabellas!"

At this point, I was getting rather full of myself. I had drooled about this recipe over the course of several sittings and thought, "Shoot, I've read this recipe so many times, I bet I don't even need to use the recipe (note: had someone taken this bet at three to one, it would have paid off rather nicely).

It should be noted at this juncture, that one bag and one cup, when it comes to beans and grains, are two radically different things. I had soaked the whole bag of beans the night before the fateful dinner to soften them up. That may have been the impetus for using the whole bag of barley. Add in the two whole diced portabella mushrooms, and this soup had the liquid retaining capabilities of Motley Crue on a weekend sleepover at the Viper Room.

I first cooked up the mushrooms and the barley. I wasn't able to add the beans yet, as they were still somewhat al dente. Already though, I discovered that I needed to add more liquid to my barley. I started cooking at around four in the afternoon. Every hour I checked the beans, and every time they were as firm as a post Viagra Bob Dole (I would imagine. I have no direct experience here). A pattern developed. Check the beans, add liquid to the soup. By five o'clock, the soup had sucked up so much moisture, the Colorado water table had dropped several inches. I was forced to switch to a bigger pan by about five thirty. At six o'clock, beans still firm, I added more broth to the soup. Also, fearing the flavor was being diluted, I added more spices. This pattern also continued. By six thirty, the soup had started sucking all the moisture from my body. Microscopic bacteria in my skin packed up like so many Dust Bowl Oklahomans and set off on a Steinbeckian voyage to moister climes and a better life elsewhere.

Judy had arrived home from work at this point, and we were already hatching the backup plan for ordering a pizza. At seven o'clock, New Orleans called and thanked me for single handedly reclaiming several thousand acres of land from the Gulf. Finally, at about eight, we were ready to eat; or rather the soup was ready to eat. We were actually ready to eat several hours earlier. The final recipe was as follows: Several gallons of broth, a volume of water roughly equivalent to the contents of Lake Superior, a bag of beans, a bag of barley, two portabella mushrooms, three cans of Emeril's essence, and four cups of frustration. Serve in a container roughly the size of a bathtub, garnish optional (note this recipe may only be reprinted with the express written consent of the author).

Judy and I cozied up to the table and took the plunge. The soup was to tastelessness as Paris Hilton is to...well...tastelessness. I emptied a whole pepper grinder into the bowl to no avail. Judy was kind, but I could tell she was less than satisfied. I had seen the look before. After supper, we loaded up six plastic containers of the leftover soup. To my credit, or at least my extreme stupidity, I was able to choke down two more servings of the brown tasteless mash over the next few days. After that I gave up, but I was able to sell the rest to Home Depot as wall paper paste.

The moral of this entry is twofold: Always follow direction no matter how good you think you are and never underestimate the flavoring power of pork.

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Showing 1-10 of 14 comments

Mick.....Don't go exchanging, to try and please me, you never let me down before oooh oh oh oh oooh....Wait; that's wrong.

I woulda been an exchange student, but nobody would exchange me......

Hah, well written! As a semi-vegetarian myself (I eat chicken and ocassionally turkey) I have to say that vegetarian recipes and restaurant meals have gotten much better in the last 15 years or so.

If anybody is wondering about "humour" Peter is an exchange student I went to high school with from Belgium (I hope that's right Pete, I'm too lazy to go look in the yearbook). What have you been up to? You can e-mail by going to my profile above right. Great to hear from you!!

Good to see you haven't lost your sense of humour. It's amazing, even after 25 years. Keep going Bill.

hmmm...seem to have had the same experience with Barley.

Another classic Bill blog!

Very funny. I am beginning to feel sorry for you two.

"...but I could tell she was less than satisfied. I had seen the look before." Priceless...

hilarious, bill. by the way, i thought this wallpaper paste i bought at home depot looked strange. keep us pasted...err....posted!
Showing 1-10 of 14 comments
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