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Channels: Living - Cuisine

Tags: back then - hair - deep fried mushrooms - deep fried - deep fried breaded

 

 

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The Mushroom Affair

Views: 3,037
Added: Mon. Dec 08, 2008 11:25am
Posted in: Cuisine


Ever since I was a little kid, I could spot a hair on my plate. Out of the corner of my eye, I could see it if it was halfway buried under the food. They were usually from cats or dogs, since we always had some sort of menagerie running around the house.

In the early 80s, when I owned a restaurant in New Jersey, there were a couple of provision houses where I bought food items. After serving the same menu to customers day after day, occasionally I got a little sick of eating the same things, but at least I got to experiment with what I sold, just to keep it from being so monotonous. One day, I would eat a burger with lettuce and tomatoes; the next day, I'd make it with marinara sauce and Parmesan cheese. Same thing with chicken. You're kind of limited with hot dogs. French fries, I liked to dip in ketchup one day and mustard the next. Salads were sometimes fun because I had a decent selection of dressings to choose from. But, I'd still get bored. Every so often, I'd send someone out to get me a good steak or seafood of some kind. Of course, I was never so unreasonable that I didn't treat the messenger.

One of the nice perks of being in the restaurant business was the free samples those provision houses would proffer. A sales rep would come in and say, "Hey, this product might sell well here. You want to try it out?"

Sure, and most of them were pretty good, but I never really added much to my already existing menu unless I thought it would be a big seller. Every week, the reps would also bring in fliers that promoted new products and let you know what was on sale. One time I saw something for frozen, breaded mushrooms for deep frying . I loved deep fried breaded mushrooms and promptly ordered a 10 lb. box. From that moment on, I couldn't wait for the next delivery to bring me my provisions and that brand new box of mushrooms. I think I waited out by the road when I saw the truck coming.

After the truck driver dropped everything off, I found that box and ripped it open. Grabbing a dozen or so, I plunked them into the fry basket. I didn't care that it was right in the middle of the lunch rush, it was my restaurant and my mushrooms.

"What are those?" some of the employees asked.

"Mushrooms. These are mine. You can try some later." I might have shared some as the lunch crowd dwindled.

When I closed the box to stow in the freezer, I noticed it said PRODUCT OF THE PHILIPPINES in big, bold letters. Who cares where they're from? Not me, but it proved that, even back then, we were outsourcing. Besides, all I needed to know was that every day I could eat deep fried mushrooms. And every day - for an entire month - I fried up a batch so I could bite into the crisp breading to savor those soft, succulent morsels nestled inside, filled with all that rich, earthy flavor.

I was probably about halfway into the box when my love affair with deep fried mushrooms came to an abrupt end. Like every other day, I cooked up a few. Bear in mind, I wasn't even close to getting tired of them yet. As I popped one in my mouth and began to chew, I felt a hair in there somewhere. I managed to grab the end of it without losing any of the mushroom. I started to pull the hair out. Out and out it came. I slowly moved my fingers away from my mouth. The farther I got, the more I realized this was no ordinary hair. It was very long and straight. And black. My God, it must have been a good two feet by the time it completely escaped my lips. I shuddered and spit the mushroom into the garbage and rinsed my mouth under the faucet. YUCK! How did something that long get wound up tightly into one mushroom? I didn't want to think about it. My appetite was gone. I threw the rest of the box right into the garbage and I haven't eaten one since. I still love mushrooms, but the thought of deep fried breaded ones - to this day - gives me split ends.




  • Posted 5:57pm December 16th, 2008
    I relish the thought.


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 8:35am December 16th, 2008

    Don't know them. Men and sizes... Less is more, really! But ok, your head has the size of a 4 ounce hamburger. I hope that makes you happy then.




  • Posted 6:44am December 16th, 2008
    Portobellos are those giant mushrooms, like the size of a 4 ounce burger. They're richer tasting than button mushrooms.


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 5:23pm December 15th, 2008

    But it is true! Oh well. If you rather want to be compared to a regal portobello...

    What is that?




  • Posted 4:55pm December 15th, 2008
    Gee, Ina, other women have at least put me up there with the regal portobello, quite a step up from the average white mushroom. Thanks a lot.


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 7:36am December 15th, 2008
    Bon apetit!

    You know, without my glasses, your head looks a bit of a white mushroom too...
    (to get back on topic)




  • Posted 7:19am December 15th, 2008
    A lot of people are cremated today. I guess the ashes could be mixed in with manure for fertilizer. Then, we could eat whatever grows out of the enriched soil.


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 2:23pm December 14th, 2008
    Embalm? Like Lenin?
    I like the idea (well it just came up) of mushrooms growing on ones grave. If they are ateable, a persons  grandchildren could enjoy  a little food his or hers grandparent somehow provided for. I think that would be a nice gesture somehow. (Or a morbid one? Is it the darkness of december that makes me think like this?)
    Other foods might be used for that too. Fruittrees? People probably have done this already.




  • Posted 1:57pm December 13th, 2008
    Oh, I don't know. There's something morbid about it. Of course, there could be a new twist to the old saying, "He died with his boots on" to "He died with his teeth in" before the undertaker removes them. Perhaps, he could embalm him first, then take the teeth out.


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 1:08pm December 13th, 2008
      The real recycling!  And why not come to think of it? If the teeth fit?





  • Posted 12:14pm December 13th, 2008
    Some cans, yes, but not all. The best deal on false teeth is from the local undertaker, but you need to clean them really good since they come "used" and "as is."


  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 1:40pm December 12th, 2008

    Dat is grappig, Dave.

    They better give them a good set of teeth. You cannot eat without teeth,  but you can open  a can without an can opener though.

    Deep huh.

     




  • Posted 5:16pm December 9th, 2008
    Gee, Debbie, I thought you were Keith Hernandez for a second, except he would never wear a red baseball cap. And I've never seen him in glasses.

    That's interesting about the snack company where your husband and son work and I've never heard of blue bandages that work as an alarm. I would guess that the skin acts as the conduit to complete the circuit, right?

    The hair nets are a good idea. In Florida, all food handlers, including restaurants, must where gloves. I remember about 20 years ago I went into a fast food joint, late at night, and waited in line. I watched one of the female employees come out of the restroom and stop for a minute. She seemed like she was on drugs because she looked out of it. She took her hands and stroked them through her dirty blonde hair, over and over. Finally, she went behind the counter and was told to bag up some French fries. Instead of using the scoop, she took her hand and grabbed handfuls and kept filling bags. When I got to the counter I explained to the manager what I had just seen and I told him I didn't want to eat there. He gave me a puzzled look. I turned around and walked out.

    It was a disgusting sight. If this girl was running her fingers through her hair, my guess was that she didn't wash her hands after using the toilet, either, or whatever she was doing in there. Hair is a magnet for germs and she planted them all over her hands. Actually, that probably cleaned them from where she had just come from.

    I've found foreign objects, such as glass, metal shavings and other things, but no gum. I think that could make the tuna taste like Juicy Fruit if the person depositing it didn't chew out all the flavor first. Personally, I don't think tuna and Juicy Fruit complement each other at all. Nor does the consistency. Bazooka might work better. Plus, you get a free comic.




  • Posted 4:52pm December 9th, 2008
    You know, Ina, old people should just stop trying to open cans with their false teeth. Medicare will pay for an opener.



  • Posted 11:57am December 9th, 2008
    My husband and son are currently working for a snack food company.  They have to wear hair nets; and if you have facial hair, you have to wear a net on your beard. 

    Before they go on the work floor, they have to go through a roll-off room to get lint and hair off their uniforms. 

    Employees can't wear earrings, watches, nose rings, or tongue piercings.  They are allowed to wear simple wedding bands but nothing with diamonds.

    If you get cut, they provide special blue bandages that have a thin metal strip.  If the bandage falls off during the manufacturing process, the metal will set off an alarm.

    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

    One time my husband and I went to a small bar/restaurant.  I think we were still single.  The restaurant served grinders (hoagies or subs).  When my husband was eating his tuna grinder, he found a piece of chewed minty gum in the tuna.  He complained and was not charged for his grinder.  I can't remember if he ordered something else to eat.  That was a long time ago. 

    We wondered if someone was sitting at the bar and spit or threw the gum into the tuna mixture when no one was looking.  The work station was not too far from the bar.


    At home, we found a sharp piece of a broken nut shell in a store-bought baked product, and a cherry pit in some ice cream.  It pays to call or write to the company with your complaint (and compliments too).  They usually send coupons for free products worth more than you spent. 

    In the case of the nut shell, we called the company to complain.  Much to our surprise, within a week or so, they sent us a large shipment of various products they make (no nuts this time).  It was a well-known "farm" company that used to advertise on television all the time.  I believe they are located in Connecticut--if they haven't outsourced yet =)





  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 9:46am December 9th, 2008
    False teeth in cans of food but that is quite common, I believe



  • Posted 9:12am December 9th, 2008
    I don't know. A fingertip in stew? An eyeball in an egg? A customer found the head of a chicken in McNuggets once. All breaded and deep fried!



  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 9:08am December 9th, 2008

    The occasional germ and bacteria   But I suppose you are right.

    Nailclippings in your bread... (Just something I thought of, never happened!)

    I once had a piece of glass in a schnitzel, but the butcher was a real nice man, so I never told him.

    What would be the strangest thing anyone ever found in his/hers food?




  • Posted 8:10am December 9th, 2008
    If I found a fruit fly in my food or drink, I would pick it out and continue eating. People are funny about their food, though. I never threw food out because of a dog or cat hair or even an eyelash, but there's just something creepy and completely disgusting about head hair with all that grime and sweat, especially from a complete stranger.

    I can handle blood, gore and just about everything else, but some things make me sick, like hair and sour milk. The hair thing is probably because I feel people aren't very careful in their work if they don't keep their area spotless, especially when it comes to things we eat. It implies other things about personal hygiene. What else could they be leaving behind?




  • Ina 29 juli 2011.jpg
    Ina
    Posted 5:55am December 9th, 2008

    White mushrooms= champignons to me

    If you just remove the hair, you can still eat the food without getting a sickness. Really.

    Once in Naxos (island in  Greece) I spent some time with people drinking retsina . There were lots of fruitflyes in the can it was poured out from. Now I don't like fly s one bit. But as nobody seemed to mind  I drank the wine with fruitfly s and all.

    I didnot get sick. The wine tasted fine. I hated the fact that the toilet had no door and in fact no toilet. But that is anouther matter.

    When in Greece, drink the fruitfly. When a hair gets on your plate, just remove it




  • Posted 6:44pm December 8th, 2008
    Sassy? My days of wearing a hairnet are long gone. No, not because I'm bald. Not at all. I haven't been in the restaurant business in years. I think it's a good idea though, and communities that make food workers wear them is as important as washing your hands after, well, you know what. Back then, it wasn't something much thought about by health departments, let alone enforcing. Common sense should have prevailed, but we're also talking about a country where the inhabitants still love to nibble on chicken feet when it comes to where that hair came from. In restaurants. Hey, wait a minute. We can do that here.





Dave Knechel

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