The Dairy Queen Debacle
I have discovered that the road to high drama or comedy
often starts out as an innocuous trail of breadcrumbs.
Such was the case recently, when in the middle of cleaning
her kitchen cupboards my friend Susan texted me with the wry declaration that
she was married to a condiments hoarder.
“Dozens and dozens of packets of soy-sauce,
ketchup, and sundry containers of salad dressing, vinegar, etc.,” she wrote. She
thanked God for small mercies--at least Ron didn’t save the packets of salt and
pepper, but she said that she could not suggest throwing any of the collection
out.
Ron had said defensively that the last
time the kids were over, he had given them all little ketchup packs to put on their French
fries.
“At that rate,” wrote Susan, “there’s no way we will be able to use them
up before the end of the next decade! Then there are all the other little
packets…And every time he gets takeout…there are MORE!”
“Oh, dear,” I texted back, adding that
I had used up my own ketchup hoard by snipping the ends off the sachets and
emptying them into my large ketchup bottle. Strangely, Susan didn't seem impressed by that.
“Squeeze them into big bottles hey?” she replied, “Ron suggested that, but I told him that was his job…that’s when he
said I should throw them out.”
Ron’s hoard would have come in
handy when Paul and I stopped to pick up supper from the Dairy Queen a few days
later. He had been ill, and had lost his appetite for a couple of weeks, so I
was relieved when he had the sudden urge for a DQ Crispy Chicken Salad with his
favourite Honey Mustard dressing. Things began to unravel quickly when the
server brought out the salad and told him that she was sorry, but they were out
of Honey Mustard dressing. Paul was disappointed. The young server was poised
with a cooked Crispy Chicken Salad, but without the Honey Mustard dressing, Paul did not want it.
Childhood family dynamics made me a Rescuer of Awkward Moments
and this one triggered me. I instantly remembered a leftover sachet of Honey
Mustard Dressing that was waiting in the door of our fridge at home. Disappointment
was unnecessary! All would be well.
As soon as the car stopped in our
driveway, I rushed inside, an invisible red rescue cape flapping in the wind behind me. I skidded to a halt in front of the fridge, and flung open the door--but there was no dressing! In my own round of purging zeal, I had thrown it away. Next I ran to the pantry, where I was sure I had an unopened
bottle of honey mustard dressing. I searched in vain before remembering it had
gone the way of the sachet when I had noticed that the “Best Before” date was several years in the past.
Paul was eating his melting ice-cream
first, but it was going fast. I felt like a contestant on a cooking show trying to beat the clock. I ransacked my cookbooks for recipes for
Honey Mustard dressing—no luck. Undeterred, I ran upstairs and
printed off the first honey mustard recipe I could find on the internet.
I gathered the ingredients quickly: Dijon
mustard, honey, cider vinegar, salt and oil, and started measuring them out.
The print on the recipe was small and I had to squint—my reading glasses weren’t
handy but I didn’t want to waste time searching.
1 ¼ cups of Dijon mustard did seem
like rather a lot, followed by 2 ¼ cups of honey and 3 ¼ cups of cider vinegar.
I was just thankful that I had these things on hand in such quantity. I
underestimated the size of bowl I would need and had to find a bigger one to
transfer the mixture into. This must be a
commercial recipe, I thought, but by now I was committed.
Then I paused to
take a calming breath and looked closely at the next ingredient. I saw to my
dismay that what seemed at quick glance to read, “41½ teaspoons of salt,” was actually, step number 4--1½ teaspoons
of salt, and that what seemed to be ever-increasing ingredient quantities were the result of my
including the step numbers in the measurements. The last one would have been step 5.
¼ cup plus two tablespoons, of oil. The practice of thanking God for small
mercies was heartily applied as I contemplated the amount of oil that would
have swelled the growing concoction on my counter had I not pressed the pause
button before adding that.
I pushed the overflowing bowl to one
side and began again with the right amounts this time--and triumphantly carried in the hard-won dressing
just as Paul was opening his chicken salad.
Afterwards I asked him how it was.
“Not the same,” he said—Paul is
nothing if not truthful. He had no idea of the behind-the-scenes drama that had
gone into its production.
I did briefly consider how I might rescue the
original bowl of ingredients, but to do so would have meant adding 2 more cups of Dijon Mustard and another cup of honey to balance out the volume of cider
vinegar--which was 13 times the correct amount of just a ¼ cup. There would have been enough dressing nobody really liked, to last a lifetime. You have to know when to cut your losses.
I’m trying to decide if the moral of
this story is “haste makes waste” or “penny wise—pound foolish.” Maybe I should
ask Ron.
Comments
http://www.godtube.com/watch/?v=W7ZDPPNX
I can so see myself doing what you did. Thank you so much for sharing- it is lovely to get a break from all the heavy news stories and enjoy a moment with your blog.
I am so glad to share laughter. It's the best thing. Thank you for taking time out to comment. :)