Winnie-the-Pooh
and his friends were staging a play. Piglet, despite his feeble protests, had
been elected sheriff, and Jack, macho leader of the horse thieves, was about to
trounce the little pink porker. When the sheriff’s badge fell off, Jack feigned
ferociousness. Thief’s honor disallowed trouncing a sheriff with no badge.
“NOW,
what am I supposed to do?” Jack asked Piglet. “If you’re not sheriff, I can’t
trounce ya’,” he said in a slow western drawl.
In real
life, WHO could I trounce but myself?
The
Cheese-Bean recipe said, “Cover and bake at 350 degrees for 35-45 minutes. I
didn’t notice the word COVER.
After a
birthday lunch, the 9x12-inch dish chock-full of cooked pintos, sautéed onions,
chili powder, dry mustard, chunks of still-raw cooking apples, shredded
mozzarella, chopped tomatoes, and white cooking wine, sat practically
untouched.
“Rotten
grass,” the child said.
“Potpourri,”
the uncle said, because of the apple chunks. “Something you’d serve at a
ladies’ luncheon. Don’t ever make it again.” Was that a loyal relative or
what??
Still,
what to do? Dumping it flew in the face of thrift. Soup was a possibility, but
transforming that much casserole into soup would require more broth and tomato
juice than I had containers.
I had
an idea!! Hauling out a gadget that would swallow lumpy brown stuff in the
black hole of its maw, I spoon-fed it, whirring each bit of casserole into
dip-textured goo. Two storage containers of the stuff weighed six pounds!
Several
cookbooks turned up nothing, but Sanyo’s microwave booklet saved the day. A recipe
for dip using mashed canned beans, cheese spread, hot sauce, catsup, and chili
powder gave me another idea.
Shaking
several dashes of Tabasco into the smaller bowl of puree, I added cheddar
cheese cubes and sour cream. It tasted good enough on white-corn chips.
I
feigned arrogance, and took it to a family potluck. Some sniffed, others tried
it, and our vegetarian yuppies, who adored refried-bean tacos, took home the
rest.
Piglet
offered horse-thief Jack the sheriff’s badge. After pinning it on himself, Jack
became a John Wayne softie. “Now, look here, Pilgrim, I’m gonna clean up this
town, ya’ hear?”
The
rust-colored sludge was finally cleaned up, but it might have been because of
my threat. “By golly, family, if ya’ don’t at least try some of this, I’ll
never bring anything to potluck again.”
Hey, it
worked for my bread pudding!
NOTE:
Though this happened several years ago when we lived in Arkadelphia, it wasn’t the
last kitchen disaster I’ve experienced. Sometime, I’ll tell you about the
cheese ball for this Christmas that wouldn’t keep its shape. Now, it’s all
glommed together in a Pyrex dish in the fridge waiting till I’m hungry enough
to retrieve it and figure out how to salvage it.
c 2018, PL, dba lovepat press, Benton AR USA
3 comments:
We all have those tales.
The day my mother got her first mix-master she emptied in raspberries and cream and set it to high. That dish is now known as raspberry splat. It reached the ceiling, the walls, and generously bedaubed her glasses and hair...
Love this post. Who hasn't accidentally left out an ingredient or mis-read a time or temp? I often (foolishly) try new recipes for special occasions, then I'm stuck with taking something not quite right or appearing empty-handed to a pot luck (a terrible faux pas in the south). Congratulations on your innovative new dish.
Lovely. ;)
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