"Laughter and joke-telling is healthy and can be used to convey messages that may otherwise be too difficult to express!" - Jesse Eisenberg, A Marriage Counselor Tries To Heckle At A Knicks Game
If someone is cutting up baby bocconcini (for example, to put in a pasta or a salad), it's fun to stand behind them making tiny little screaming noises.
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
In the first place you've got to question their motivation in buying baby bocconcini and then cutting them up. Baby bocconcini have a higher ratio of less delicious tough surface area, to more delicious stretched curd inner goodness. Which makes them, somewhat ironically, less tender. "Baby" is totally a marketing ploy.
If you ask me, they're asking for it. And I don't mean the bocconcini. Because that would be slightly weird.
A raging Bruxist, I grew up on an ostrich farm until I was mistaken for a woman one time too many. Leaving my angsty post-teen life as one of three only children, I flew to Stockholm where I unexpectedly won the Man Booker Prize for lengthy blogging about being short. I'm perplexed to report that I like painting tiny Romans.
2 comments:
In the first place you've got to question their motivation in buying baby bocconcini and then cutting them up. Baby bocconcini have a higher ratio of less delicious tough surface area, to more delicious stretched curd inner goodness. Which makes them, somewhat ironically, less tender. "Baby" is totally a marketing ploy.
If you ask me, they're asking for it. And I don't mean the bocconcini. Because that would be slightly weird.
hey good answer, I hadn't thought of that. I've been fooled by the baby vegetable trick!
From now on, I'm going to insist that my bocconcini be obtained as a single sphere the size of my head to maximize the tasty goodness.
Post a Comment