The cooking gods hate me.

Every now and then I can be a bit lazy. I once went two weeks using paper towels as toilet paper. I’ve worn the same socks four days in a row because I didn’t want to do laundry. I watched a marathon of Chrisley Knows Best because I couldn’t be bothered to change the channel.

This week, the laziness gorilla struck again and forced me to make two poor choices. First, I delayed cooking adventures until Friday night, the night traditionally reserved for Redbull Vodkas, but during March reserved for watching unhealthy amounts of college basketball. Second, since I’d rather be watching basketball than cooking I decided to make a really simple soup, write a really short post about it and get back to the shooty-hoops.

The cooking and basketball gods knew my lazy intentions and they were not pleased.

No one cares about other people’s March Madness brackets. Brackets fall under the same category as children and bowel movements. Everyone’s happy you have them; they just don’t want to hear about it. So I won’t write about any bracket busting or money lost because of those spiteful bouncy orange ball gods. Plus, I’m a University of Missouri basketball fan (19-44 in the past two seasons and zero Final Fours ever) so there’s really no more pain they can put me through anyway.

The cooking gods know how to pack a punch when you don’t pay your proper respects. They were not happy with my lazy attempt to make 30-Minute Pasta e Fagioli (Page 196), a traditional Italian soup where you pretty much throw everything in a pot and let it simmer for a while. Under their angry boot, soup and blood would both be boiling.

It all began with a stark realization. I’ve spent a lot of money on various herbs and spices lately. I’ve had to purchase thyme, bay leaves, parsley, basil and countless other indistinguishable green and yellow dirt flakes. My long-term savings goals have grown to include vacation, buying a house and purchasing spices. As I resigned myself to needing to purchase oregano, I noticed something unexpected.

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Do you know what that is? Over there on the left? That’s a spice rack. Sitting next to my goddamn stove. Where I stand and cook every single one of these goddamn recipes. Over the past 3 months I’ve spent more money on spices than David Beckham and almost everything I’ve ever needed has been less than four feet from my face this entire time. I could feel my blood temperature beginning to rise.

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Prep work time. Where everything is always perfect and nothing could ever go wrong.

Half of the onion got stuck on my knife. So I applied a little pressure to try to free the blade. Still stuck. More pressure. Still jammed. I pushed a little harder and the knife released. The onion went with it off the cutting board into the air and directly into the trash can across the room like a buzzer beater in one shining March Madness moment.

Appropriate, yet infuriating. Onion basketball was my first curse from the gods. I took out my anger on the poor half of an onion that was left. I don’t think I did it right.

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The feelings were stirring inside of me like taco Tuesday on Wednesday morning

Opening cans should not incite rage. I know how to build a number of excellent IKEA furniture solutions; I should be able to open a damn can of tomatoes. I didn’t actually open the tomatoes as much as I used the can opener to transform the can into a mangled lump of razor metal classifiable as a deadly weapon, but not effective at dispensing tomatoes.

The little things on this recipe were adding up fast. After almost losing a hand to my murder can, the ball of anger moved from my chest to my face.

Next, I needed to squeeze the tomatoes to separate them into smaller pieces. The Food Lab warned they might squirt. I didn’t listen. The cooking gods didn’t like that. After the first tomato my favorite shirt looked like a wardrobe piece from a Tarantino film.

So far the cooking gods had demanded in sacrifice half an onion, my favorite shirt and nearly a hand. That’s a high price to pay for soup, which is really just hot water with bits in it. Everything goes in the pot, gets stirred around for a while and then all the liquid goes on top. As it and I both begin to boil over I started to think about what I’d done to anger the cooking gods. I was a faithful servant. Why would they punish me?

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The pasta went in and I looked at the final step. Then I knew what I’d done. More importantly, I knew what had to be done to appease their vengeful wrath.

“Stir in the parsley.”

It was time to make amends. I’ve spent a lot of words and time trashing parsley as useless, flavorless and the worst thing to happen since they remade Psycho with Vince Vaughn. If parsley and I could come to an agreement and end this destructive war, I felt we would both be better for it. I stripped the parsley of its stems and I chopped. I chopped like I’d never chopped before. Sparks flew from my knife. Blisters formed on my fingers but I never stopped. I became one with the knife as I just kept chopping. Up and down. Up and down. Then there was nothing. I was alone in time and space. Just me and the parsley in a perfect calm moment.

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And so the great Parsley Treaty of 2016 was enacted over a bowl of soup.

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The soup tastes good, flavorful and with more substance than your typical water with bits in it. But I don’t think the soup is quite as good as the lesson I’ve learned here. Pay your respects to the gods of your craft and they will reward you. Disregard them, and be prepared to pay the price.

Except the basketball gods—those bastards have screwed me enough.

Recipe: 57/68

Did I do the Dishes: Yes. I am shame.

Man Tops Meal in Overtime.

Author’s note: Post contains picture of a bloody finger but hockey is a brutal sport. What you gonna do?

Guys don’t cook for other guys. The only reason most men even know how to cook anything at all is to impress women. The only reason most men do anything at all is to try to impress women. If I didn’t want to impress women I wouldn’t shower, work out or try to dress well. Hell, I barely even do those things now.

Barbecues don’t count. Those are mostly about drinking Keystone Light and playing games with disturbing names like Cornhole and Hillbilly Golf, and not about the quality of the food. After all, if you’re drinking Keystone Light, you really don’t care if something tastes good or not.

What I’m saying is that 26-year old guys don’t invite their bros over to watch the hockey game, have a few beers and enjoy a nice home cooked meal prepared with love. Until now.

The game? St. Louis Blues versus Chicago Blackhawks. Good versus evil. Jedi versus Sith. Craig versus Parsley.

The meal? Easy Skillet-Braised Chicken with Mushrooms and Bacon (Page 252) and Seared Brussels Sprouts with Bacon (Page 433).

Tonight on Craig Cooks Crap, it’s Man versus Meal in the Wednesday Night Rivalry matchup of the season.

Let’s check out tonight’s starting line up.

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Now, down to center ice to drop the puck.

First Period.
The game has gotten off to a painfully slow start behind a man at the grocery store who is committed to making six separate purchases, and paying for each of them via different method. I don’t know much about personal finance, but I know that this guy is an ass. I’m sure there’s a reason for his mad-scientist money approach of using checks, debit cards, vouchers and cash to pick up some apple sauce, but all it did was get me ready to drop the gloves early in the first.

Luckily, the line judge (cashier) can sense my rage and keeps the game under control with a simple apology, saving me from having to spend five minutes in the penalty box for fighting and probably facing an assault charge.

THE GROCERY STORE SCORES FIRST TO TAKE THE EARLY LEAD!

I have to go back to the damn grocery store because I forgot that in order to make Easy Skillet-Braised Chicken with Mushrooms and Bacon and Seared Brussel Sprouts with Bacon you really need to make sure you have…oh I don’t know, maybe goddamn bacon! Combine that with a ten-minute wait to make a left turn off my street and the fact that the real hockey game got underway before I’d even sliced a shallot and I think it’s fair to say that Meal has taken an early lead over Man.

It may be 1-0, but Man is making a mighty comeback in the end of the first. For the first time in two weeks I have completed my entire prep work without sustaining any injuries. The team is going to need to stay healthy for us to have any shot at making the playoffs (cooking Easter Dinner). We’re counting that as a goal for Man, and going into end of the first all tied up at one.

First Period Intermission.
Meal – 1

Goals: Grocery Store Rage (1)
Man – 1
Goals: Not Cutting My Finger Off (1)

The first intermission is highlighted by the arrival of my two alternate captain (bros, bruh) and an Urban Chestnut STLIPA. If I were a betting man, I’d bet real hockey players have a drink during the intermission too. How else could you deal with the fact that you probably look like this?

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Second Period.
The pace has picked up.

Pan too small. Two chickens in. One left out in the cold. Three minutes of hockey watching. Flipped first two chickens. Four minutes of hockey watching. Why is there so much smoke? I act like the cloud is a smoke machine during player introductions and I’m taking the ice. Why is sizzling chicken so loud? I mentally reframe the sound of hot popping grease as a screaming crowd. Two chickens out. Third chicken in. Three minutes of hockey watching. The Blackhawks scored and the refs blew a call. Chicken rage-flipped. Four minutes of hockey watching. The Blues took a bad penalty. Chicken out. Bacon in. Bacon burnt.

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Put a goal on the board for Meal.

The bacon touched the pan and caught fire like the Internet after Kanye West drops another substandard album, or his wife drops another substandard nude. Maybe it’s time to turn down the offensive heat, and play a little more defense.

I focus on the fundamentals for the second bacon attempt. Fundamentals like don’t burn the damn bacon. Mushrooms, shallots and everything else go in the pan. Like all great hockey players, I keep my stick (spoon) on the ice (pan) and my skates moving (stirring), managing to not catch anything else on fire.

Chicken stock and wine complete the braising concoction. The chickens get a soak like a defenseman in the ice bath after the whistle blows. The whole thing hits the oven for the second intermission.

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Second Period Intermission.
Meal – 2

Goals: Grocery Store (1) Bacon Burnt Like Ryan Reaves by Officiating (1)
Man – 1
Goals: Prep Skills (1)

Politics are discussed in the locker room over drinks. Surprising everyone, we don’t solve global warming, the shrinking middle class, the second amendment or police brutality with our heated discussion.

Third Period.
Like the Blues who currently trail 1-0, we need a late-game rally if we we’re going to take this game home. Unlikely heroes show up on great teams when you least expect them. Alternate Captain, and now honorary sous chef, Bryan came off the bench and offered to handle the Brussels sprouts prep while I drank beer and watched the game. He did admirably for a man so incompetent he once tried to order a Shamrock Shake at a Lee’s Famous Fried Chicken. Man scores to tie the game at two goals apiece!

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More bacon is cooked and the Brussels sprouts are invited to the bacon party, even though hockey night is totally a sausage fest.

The weird green balls don’t seem like they’re cooking properly in just the bacon grease, so I drown them in vegetable oil and hope for the best. Sometimes when the game is tied this late, you have to get creative.

Somehow, the alien-testicle vegetables turn out really well. I’m counting that as a goal for the good guys. Man takes a 3-2 lead early in the third. The Blues have scored twice to take the lead, and the chicken comes out of the oven. I’m feeling confident—too confident.

As a Blues fan I should know better, about my own cooking abilities and a hockey team with more failures than an Insane Clown Posse concert. Just when you think everything is in good shape, that’s when it all goes to shit and people get hurt. Really, really hurt.

I remove the chicken from a pan that’s been in the oven for 45 minutes and take the Brussels sprouts off the burner. I mix in the heavy cream with the chicken/wine/mushroom juices and disaster strikes for the home team. In order to move the molten-pan to the burner, I grab it and leave the fingerprints from my left hand stuck to the handle as my skin begins to melt like nacho cheese.

Meal scores. In a big, bad and burny way. I scream, curse and go to the bench to ice down my upper body injury.

The game is tied and my skin is turning the color of those ugly Chicago Blackhawks jerseys.

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Hockey-player mentality shows up. You play through the pain. Stirring the heavy cream into the sauce, I call over my alternate captain to assess the damage as I start to plate the food.

My hand is so burnt I’m bleeding. I didn’t even know that could happen. Wait a minute. My left hand isn’t bleeding. Where is all the blood coming from? Son of a bitch. The back of my right hand is covered in blood and I have absolutely no idea how or why. Good thing I’m not European Royalty in the 19th century, because my general clumsiness and vulnerability to injury would have killed me from blood loss a long time ago.

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That’s definitely another goal for Meal. 4-3 and the bad guys have the lead late. I’ve blown this game, and the Blues have done the exact same thing with 1:17 left. Everything has gone wrong.

I only have one chance to score and take it to overtime. Grin, bear it and plate this up pretty enough to make Maneet Chauhan weep.

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This bitch is tied. We’re going to overtime.

Meal – 4
Goals: Grocery Store (1) Burnt Bacon (1) Hand-fire (1) Red Wedding (1)
Man – 4
Goals: Prep Skills (1) Alternate Captain (1) Alien Testicles (1) Plating Like A Playa (1)

Overtime
I’m sidelined in overtime. Both of my hands are falling off and I can’t focus on anything, even eating. I defer to my alternate captains for a final review.

“I can’t believe I ate the whole thing. The part of the meal I enjoyed most was how injured Craig got while preparing it, that’s what it’s really about.” – Alternate Captain Bryan

“Wait, there’s how much blood in this? If I had to describe the meal in three words they would be: Damn. Good. Chicken.” – Alternate Captain Bill

PUT IT ON THE BOARD! GOOD GUYS WIN. BAD GUYS LOSE. SUCK IT THE FOOD LAB. YOU DON’T COME INTO MY HOUSE AND TRY TO TAKE DOWN A TEAM ON A HOT STREAK.

The average hockey game lasts around two hours and 14 minutes. Making Easy Skillet-Braised Chicken with Mushrooms and Bacon and Seared Brussels Sprouts with Bacon takes even longer when Craig’s team captain.

The Blues even pulled it out in a shootout, so the burning sensation in my left hand and the second gash in two weeks to my right middle finger seem worth it. I feel wonderful. I didn’t expect the praise of my friends to feel this good. I’m in excruciating pain, yet sit here a glorious victor.

This must be what it feels like to win Lord Stanley’s Cup. Unfortunately, I’m a Blues fan, so I’ll probably never know.

Recipe: Can’t Actively Rate Due to Pain

Did I Do the Dishes? No. It’s getting disgusting in here.

Caprese Salad is a whole bloody affair.

Once I got lost in a grocery store. I remember circling the produce section three times, then wandering the aisles searching high and low as my anxiety began to build, my senses to sharpen. A memory hides within me of a guileless return to the produce section, my soul still hopelessly misplaced under the glow of fluorescent tube lighting. I paced back and forth between the two cheese displays, perplexed and exhausted. A third lap to the produce section was accompanied by only the dream that some loving soul would reach out and save me from my inevitable fate.

Unfortunately, no one wants to help a 26-year-old who’s lost in a grocery store.

The grocery store is an impossible maze, that, when combined with my lack of proper grocery list planning, creates a shopping process more complicated and frustrating than the bipartisan presidential nomination process.

I don’t think I’m an incompetent human being. In fact, when it comes to directions I’m pretty damn competent. Blindfold me and take me anywhere within 30 miles of this exact location without a map and I can find my way home. I can tell you which direction is north at any given moment. I can even explain to you the numbering system that dictates the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (evens run east-west, odds run north-south, radials have three digits with an even first number, and spurs have three digits with an odd first number—study up and never get lost again.) What I can’t tell you is whether ramen noodles are in the Asian section or soup section.

What was particularly frustrating about that trip to the market was the recipe’s demands for fresh ingredients. The Food Lab insists that in order to make Tomato and Mozzarella Salad (Page 791) with Sharp Balsamic-Soy Vinaigrette (Page 790) that really pops, fresh ingredients are the absolute key. This is a problem when shopping for tomatoes in early March.

I found the tomatoes right away. They’re pretty easy to spot because they look like clown noses; not like eggplants which look like clown penises. I was unable to determine tomato freshness, and since they’re out of season it seemed like a moot point anyway, so I just went with the ones that looked the most like Donald Trump’s face—red and ready to pop.

Next I circled the produce section four times because I couldn’t decide if basil was produce or not. I picked apart the green parsley, romaine, arugula and spinach section looking for basil, because basil is green. When I run the world, grocery stores will be sorted by color, because the current system just isn’t working for me.

I never found any fresh basil, because they don’t carry fresh basil. I’m 0-for-2 on fresh ingredients, the most important factor in this recipe. I ended up finding some shredded basil in a little plastic tub. With how much pre-packaged basil costs per ounce, it reminds me strongly of another shredded green herb that comes wrapped in plastic.

Then it was time for the mozzarella di bufala, which is made from water buffalo milk. I gave up on finding something made from water buffalo milk almost immediately. I opted for mozzarella in a bag. Make it 0-for-3 on freshness.

The grocery store had defeated me. I’d been there 30 minutes and had absolutely nothing that I actually needed to complete the recipe according to the book. So I just decided to escape the labyrinthine nightmare with hopes that I had the rest of the ingredients at home already.  I bought a meat stick in the checkout lane to make myself feel better about giving up. It worked. I wish my dad would have given me a meat stick snack when I quit basketball in seventh grade. All I got was a long conversation about commitment.

The tomatoes need to salt and the onions need to soak for awhile, so I start there. The chopping goes surprisingly well with both the onions and tomatoes. The onions get a nice cold bath to think about what they’ve done, and the tomatoes get covered in enough salt to destroy Carthage for a thousand years.

Since I’ve got time now, I dive in on the vinaigrette. I feel pretty confident. All I have to do is mix everything together. There’s no chopping or cooking. What could possibly go wrong?

 

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I’m not mad at you, like my gesture would reflect, but I’m mad at myself. Apparently using a parmesan grater to grate shallots was a bad idea. After I’ve bled enough to star in a civil war film, I get properly bandaged up. With a little luck I managed to keep the blood out of the vinaigrette, which is good because I don’t feel like making Balsamic-Soy-Zika Vinaigrette.

I also added a tablespoon of salt instead of a teaspoon. That shouldn’t be a problem right?

It is time to start the salad, which is simple. Chop up the mozzarella, add olive oil to the vinaigrette and mix everything together. Place on plate and take pretty picture.

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I feel like I’ve earned this salad. A hellish journey through the underworld of the grocery store, and a bloody affair with a cheese grater that puts a Quentin Tarantino film to shame have led me to this place. A place with a damn salad on my plate. Woo. I don’t even like salad that much.

But damn, do I like this. It’s a little salty. Ok, it’s salty enough to turn me into a piece of human beef jerky. Yet the combination of all of these flavors somehow works, even with March tomatoes, non-water-buffalo cheese and plastic-wrapped basil. It’s a salty, vinegary salad of not-fresh goodness, and it’s actually very simple to make and worth the effort.

Maybe not worth getting lost and chopping your finger off, but definitely worth the effort.

Recipe: 806/1000

Did I Do the Dishes? No

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Beer. Part of this complete breakfast.

Author’s Note: Due to no post last week there will be two posts this week. Unless I chop off my fingers. Then there will not be a second post this week.

It’s time I addressed a major issue. One that is standing in the way of me cooking my way through The Food Lab. No, there are no food allergies or intolerances keeping me from making every single recipe in this book. I once ate a ham sandwich with mayonnaise that had been expired for over two years. I’m pretty sure my iron stomach can survive pretty much anything. This issue is a matter of taste and a matter of much controversy.

I don’t like breakfast.

When I tell people I don’t like breakfast they act like I hit their dog with my car. On purpose. Breakfast is a religion. Actually it’s more than a religion. Most people are more passionate about their breakfast beliefs than they are about their spiritual ones. I’ve never been punched by someone when I’ve told them I’m not Catholic. I was hit when I asked a friend, “Why do people like scrambled eggs?”

Sesame Street taught me that breakfast is, “The Most Important Meal of the Day.” It sounds good. But did you know that Sesame Street’s principal sponsor at the time (at least in my home town) was Ralston Purina, a subsidiary of RalCorp who currently own 42 different breakfast cereal brands? Their brand family includes a cereal called Frosted Flakes with a white polar bear mascot. I think his catch phrase is, “Theyyyyyy’re similar.”

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RalCorp is also owned by ConAgra foods, who in turn owns the Egg Beaters brand of processed egg product. Do I need to spell it out? We’ve all been brainwashed into believing that breakfast is important by Big Breakfast and their corporate interests. We’re all just cogs in a capitalist machine powered by whole grains, man.

I will occasionally have breakfast pizza. Which is what I call normal pizza when I eat it for breakfast after it’s been sitting on the counter for 12 hours.

Mostly though, I’m just not hungry in the morning. Plus, I think a club sandwich is a better way to kill a hangover than a pan-fried chicken fetus.

This is the problem. There are 88 pages dedicated to breakfast food in The Food Lab I will eventually have to tackle. Yet, I’m staunchly opposed to most things breakfast food. So I’ve decided to tackle this problem the way any responsible adult would.

Grab a beer and make the best of it.

I’m making Potato Hash with Peppers and Onions (Page 140), which is apparently just everything in the refrigerator thrown in a pan, fried and covered in eggs.

I’ll be using two cast irons for this dish, my trusty old cast-iron pan, Mama Cast, and a 4 Hands Brewing Company Cast Iron Oatmeal Brown. Actually, a few Cast Iron Oatmeal Browns.

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Since I was drinking, I took time-stamped notes as I proceeded, in order to avoid missing anything. Here’s how the whole thing progressed for this “15-minute” recipe.

7:05 – I have begun peeling potatoes.

7:15 – I am still peeling potatoes.

7:16 – I create a new game. Drink every time I drop my potato peeler in the trash can.

7:25 – I am done peeling potatoes. I have already exceeded the 15 minutes of allotted time. I have a drink to drown my sorrows.

7:27 – I begin to chop potatoes.

7:33 – Captain’s Log: The Potatoes have been chopped, and are currently being par cooked. This appears to be a fancy word for microwaved. I propose a toast to my newfound knowledge.

7:34 – I begin to chop peppers.

7:35 – I go blind in my right eye from squirting pepper juice. I have a drink because it hurts.

7:37 – The potatoes go in the pan. I have a drink because they look very lonely in there.

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7:38 – I begin to chop onions. I start to cry. I have a drink because I’m sad.

7:41 – Everything else goes in the pan. I have a drink because I’m happy that all the vegetables are friends now.

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7:43 – I go blind in my right eye again from popping grease. I don’t have a drink because I’m too busy cursing Big Breakfast for my problems.

7:46 – Captain’s Log: The eggs have been added. I have had a drink because I decided “You can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs” is a stupid saying. Why the hell would anyone want an omelet? All they do is make you fart.

7:46 ½  – Everything goes in the oven. I have a drink in celebration because my eyes are now protected by a sheet of glass.

7:4? – I check the eggs. They don’t look done. I drink to pass the time.

7:51 – I check the eggs again. There appears to be some kind of film on top of them. I don’t have a drink because I’m slightly disgusted.

7:53 – I check the eggs. They still don’t look like they’re done. I have a drink because I’m frustrated.

7:55 – I pull the entire thing out of the oven. I have a drink because I overcooked the damn eggs.

7:56 – I take this lovely picture. I drink because it’s so damn beautiful.

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8:00 – Almost a full hour after starting I get to eat my hash. I have a drink because a drink with dinner is good for you.

I don’t know if it’s the Cast Irons talking but this is fantastic even with my eggs as overcooked as I am. I propose a toast to the end of toast. With excellent breakfast options like this, why in God’s name would I ever eat toast?

I want to fill a pool with this stuff and throw a Hash Bash. I want to eat so much of it I develop Hash Rash. I want to hide a bunch of it for later in my Hash Stash.

This was way too many Cast Irons.

I drink to my greatness, for I have discovered a way for me to enjoy breakfast food. If I ever want to enjoy it at breakfast time I’ll have to start drinking at 7 a.m., but that seems like a small price to pay for something this damn good.

Recipe: 4.2/5.1

Did I do the Dishes? No