Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Love for Meat Loaf


Most children hide in the pantry when they hear that tonight’s main course is going to be meatloaf.  The idea of creating a loaf of meat just seems wrong to begin with.  The average meatloaf is as bland and disgusting as the name sounds.  The average meatloaf is tough and ugly, not unlike the musician with the same name.  The average meatloaf seems to lack any redeeming qualities.

The average meatloaf is just a loaf of beef with ketchup crust.  If it was supposed to be this way it would be called beef loaf.  Ground beef on its own has virtually no flavor without additional seasoning.  This is no secret, yet people still insist on baking enormous beef turds void of flavor.  These nasty beef loafs need to be put “Out of the Frying Pan (And into the Fire).”

My mother’s meatloaf, however, utilizes the meat that oftentimes is overlooked, ground pork.  This addition is no secret, but it is the redeeming quality that is missing in the average meatloaf.  The 2-1 ratio of ground beef to ground pork is my mother’s secret to making the flavor burst like a “Bat Out of Hell.” 

Her sauce is a combination of ketchup, mustard, Worcestershire sauce and brown sugar.  The brown sugar is her secret to creating the right consistency in her condiment crust.  It caramelizes just enough to thicken it up to a jelly-like, sweet and tangy sauce.   The end result is “Paradise by the Dashboard Light.”  

My mom’s meatloaf is famous in our family for its delicious take on an otherwise disgusting dish.  The mysterious meat ratio and the “secret sauce” is what sets her meatloaf apart from the rest.  When the family savors a slice of this delicious loaf, my brother always says, “MMM…meatloaf.”  Well Brian, “You Took the Words Right Out of my Mouth.”

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Monsanto the Monster

Food Inc. really made me think about the power that big business has in this country.  Monsanto's desire for control has taken over any social empathy they pretended to have.  The company's insistence on ruining the lives of farmers that pose a minor threat shows that they don't care about this country.  The problem is, however, the fact that these sleezy bastards have taken office in the places that should be their opposition.  The movie showed that high-level employees from Monsanto have gone on to executive positions in the FDA and even to the Supreme Court.

Monsanto in 1998, when they first genetically modified soy beans, had control of only 2% of all of America's soy beans.  Now, the same company responsible for Agent Orange, has 90% of the nation's soy beans in patent-protected custody.  They have found a way to monopolize a crop in a country that produces close to 1/3 of the world's soy beans.  The shady business that Monsanto has been involved in is only possible with the fact that their transgressions have yet to be punished.  This disgusting company has infiltrated the American government and uses their political prowess to mold the legislative climate to their liking.

Agent Orange, a pesticide used as agricultural warfare during Vietnam, is a Monsanto product.  This pesticide was used in Operation Ranch Hand as a way to destroy the guerillas' crops.  The pesticide not only destroyed the crops, it sabatoged an entire generation.  The Cleveland Plain Dealer recently did a seven page analysis of the horrible effects that this poison has had on all those who had contact with it.  Generations of Americans and Vietnamese have Monsanto to blame for the horrible side effects of contact with Agent Orange.

Monsanto has admitted to cooking their books with false entries (same thing that went wrong with Enron), yet they hardly got a slap on the wrist.  They have been sued by foreign companies that claim they are monopolizing the marketplace.  Even with all of this negativity directed towards them, these punks still have the audacity to sue over 150 farmers just for using the seeds that grew from last year's crops instead of buying a new batch from Monsanto.

It's severely depressing to me that this company can destroy the lives of innocent people, foreign and domestic, and not face the consequences.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Super Bowl of Guacamole

The Super Bowl appetizer spread is more important to the game than the point spread.  Packers were up against that black and yellow team, guacamole faced salsa, the best of the best were on the biggest stage.  The football season has sadly come to a close, but at least I ate enough to hibernate until August.  With the rest of the entertainment providers of Super Bowl XLV (besides the game) providing lackluster performances, the food got my game ball.

Christina Aguilera butchered Francis Scott Keyes's lyrics, Slash was the only performer not lip-syncing the halftime show and the commercials would be forgotten by next week if we didn't have to watch them after every twelve minutes of programming.  But, the food at the Super Bowl party I attended should be put on ESPN Classic (thanks, Crissy).  The half dozen assorted bags of tortilla chips were dug into homemade guacamole and salsa like cleats into fresh grass.  These classic sports-watching-snacks are, as previously stated, a favorite of mine.  This year, the fresh guacamole had a smooth texture with a flavor as bright as the avocadoes green center.  Its heat was minimal, yet substantial.  The salsa was exactly the opposite.  The freshly diced tomatoes, onions, and jalapenos provided a chunky and spicy contrast to its smooth green cohort.  The other appetizers were an innovative twist on classic dishes.  Pulled pork potatoe skins and buffalo ranch bites were as bold and beautiful as Jerry Jones's multi-gazillion dollar stadium.  After diving face first into this party-food paydirt, my stomach was as big as the 600-ton flat screen Jumbotron hanging over the field.

I was happily full, until the Cheeseheads poured into the snowy Dallas streets in celebration.  Then, I was hungry for more football.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Fast Food

America does thrive on our time-management.  Other than fasting, there is no way to schedule less time for eating than relying on fast-food.  America is fast cars, fast money and fast food.  The difference between the people who associate with the first two examples and the final one are blatant.  People who have the luxury of a Mississippi River-like cash flow do not have to rely on Wendy, the Burger King and Ronald McDonald to provide their meals.  

Each of these quick meal caterers carries a multitude of meals, with different tastes for different taste buds.  If you wanted (or were forced by necessity) to eat a different fast-food every day for a year, you could.  The scary thing is, however, many people are forced to assume this diet due to time-constraints.  It takes a lot of time to go to the grocery store, plan meals and cook for a family.  When people don't have this time, they are forced to rely on other means of feeding their family.  Many homes that are on the lower end of the social hierarchy relish in the convenience of fast-food restaurants.  It is so much easier for a single parent or two working parents to pick up dinner on the way home instead of making it themselves.  Plus, the value menu allows for penny-pinching parents to pick items that will fill their stomachs and not starve their wallets.  Even the inclusion of toys in kids' meals allows a parent to feed and entertain children at the same time.  I still remember the devastation I felt when I lost the secret agent binoculars I got from McDonalds.

Almost every city in America has at least one fast food place, many have dozens.  Fast-food is so engrained in our culture that we have a hard time imagining a village so destitute that it doesn't have at least the three big burger joints.  Thankfully, Ronald,Wendy and the King are not permanent guests at my table.  I do enjoy, however, the ease of inviting them when I want to.