Jim Lynch's Radio Days : It may be the kick in the pants that I need to start writing again...
Updated: 11/26/02; 2:21:33 PM.

 


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Monday, September 23, 2002

I kid you not... they had these at the Santa Cruz county fair two weekends ago! Straight Outta Brooklyn!!! (via Scotland, of course)

Twinkie, Twinkie, Little Star.

Forget Mars Bars, Twinkies Now the Deep-fried Treat

"Move over, Krispy Kreme doughnuts. A new artery-clogging, belt-busting obsession is sweeping the Unites States: Deep-fried Twinkies....

'We sold 26,000 Twinkies in 18 days. People drove for hours just to taste our Twinkie,' said Rocky Mullen, who sells the deep-fried, cream-filled treats for $3 (U.S.) each at the Payallup Fair, 50 kilometres south of Seattle.

As if Twinkies are not sweet enough already, vendors such as Mr. Mullen add chocolate or berry sauce and sprinkle powdered sugar on top....

All of this has come as a surprise to the dessert's inventor, Christopher Sell, a 36-year-old Brit who owns the Park Slope ChipShop in Brooklyn, N.Y.

His fish-and-chips restaurant was already serving up deep-fried Mars, Snickers and other chocolate bars -- treats that originated in Scotland and have since become a staple at U.S. fairgrounds -- when his general manager suggested he toss a Twinkie into the vat of oil. Just to see.

'So we did, and it was good, and we put it on the menu . . . as a joke almost,' he said. It might have ended there, except that a New York Times food writer tried one and wrote a positive review last May. Soon, the Food Network and CNBC were calling.

The secret to making a deep-fried Twinkie, he says, is to place it in the fridge first to give it more stability. He then rolls it in flour, covers it with batter -- the same that he uses on fish -- and plunks it into the oil.

Hearing about Mr. Sell's invention, Hostess, the company that makes the 71-year-old snack, started promoting deep-fried Twinkies to state and county fairs, where a captive population of junk-food addicts began gobbling them up between pig races and tractor-pull competitions.

How bad are they for your health? After deep-frying, a Twinkie packs an estimated 400 calories and 28 grams of fat." [The Globe and Mail, via Boing Boing Blog]

Gloria first told us about them sometime this summer. Apparently they were a big hit at the Illinois State Fair. I've always hated Twinkies because there's no chocolate outer coating, but this I would try!

[The Shifted Librarian]
9:14:36 PM    
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Some turtles are more equal than others
A stray reference to the U.S. as "the turtle on top of the pile," in response to my post below regarding the new Bush doctrine of U.S. uber alles, has incited a stirring exchange involving the (highly relevant) saga of Yertle the Turtle. (Here's the condensed version.) Being "top turtle" may not be all it's cracked up to be; you may recall that Yertle, the ruler of all that he sees, is eventually laid low when a peon at the bottom sneezes.

(This is not to be confused with the celebrated tale of the scientist confronted by the old lady who insists that the world is a flat plate supported on a tortoise's back, and when the scientist challenges her as to what the tortoise is on, she replies, "It's turtles all the way down.")

And while I am gamely analyzing the Bush doctrine in light of Dr. Seuss, Frank Lynch is finding his way in via Dr. Johnson. [Scott Rosenberg's Links & Comment]

Once your metaphors reach a seussian level, entire generations will stop and take notice. At least I hope so...


5:29:26 AM    
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Earthquake hits UK. Large parts of England and Wales are hit by an earthquake measuring 4.8 on the Richter scale[cedilla] but there are no reports of casualties. [BBC News | UK]
5:24:46 AM    
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© Copyright 2002 James Lynch III.



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