Email us at easternshorefishandgame@gmail.com

Check out local business partners "click here"

Monday, April 18, 2016

What’s the Point?


As the old saying goes, “You can’t swing a dead cat without hitting______.”  You usually fill in the blank with something overly abundant.



In this case that dead cat would hit somebody making chicken and waffles, or shrimp and grits.



My sainted wife very much enjoys watching food and cooking shows, some of which involve competitions.  Cooks and chefs make signature dishes or family favorites in order to please judges.



It seems as though invariably, someone on each of these programs prepares one of those two dishes, and sometimes both.



I love good fried chicken, and my sainted wife makes some of the best.  I also enjoy a good waffle whose little waffle wells catch the syrup and melted butter preventing runoff.



But putting both together seems a bit messy if not altogether sacrilegious.



Chicken prepared for this dish contains bones thereby requiring the use of fingers to eat, while the waffles require at least a fork to get those sweet, sticky morsels to your mouth.  As a meal you are looking at a sloppy train wreck, at best.



On the other hand, shrimp and grits seem somewhat benign in comparison.  You have another southern staple consisting of gruel, I mean grits, and shrimp.



To the best of my knowledge, the only people who don’t eat shrimp are those with seafood allergies and folks who are too poor to buy them.



In any case, my sainted wife fancies herself as a grit connoisseur, if there is such a creature.  As the stories go, she was reared on grits and butter.



For any reader who has never had grits, they are akin to eating wet sand, much as you would find on the edge of the ocean – right where the waves lap up onto the beach.



Now all this sounded too much like punishment, similar to waterboarding.  Evidently, not to Southerners.



Very much like mixing chicken and waffles, and ammonia and bleach, shrimp and grits falls short of the promise of something touted as special.



Unfortunately, we attempted to replicate the shrimp and grits thing.  The shrimp was tasty, the grits were gritty.  I expected more but, that’s because I still believe in unicorns.



Now every time we see someone attempting to woo judges on any of those cooking shows, we grunt an “Ugghh!” in unison as a commentary and reaction to our flashback of our attempt.  And feeble it was.



Reinventing the wheel is fine if you can improve on something however, if you do something just to make it different, do us all a favor and don’t.