But Thanksgiving is also a spiritual time of quiet reflection -- a time when we pause to remember, as generations have remembered before us, that an improperly cooked turkey is -- in the words of the U.S. Department of Agriculture -- "a ticking Meat Bomb of Death."Yes, it is a tragic but statistical fact that every Thanksgiving, undercooked turkeys claim the lives of an estimated 53 billion Americans (source: Dan Rather). Sometimes the cause is deadly bacteria; sometimes -- in cases of extreme undercooking -- the turkey actually springs up from the carving platter and pecks the would-be carver to death.
The only way to be sure you've killed all the bacteria in your turkey is to cook it until a meat thermometer inserted into the breast melts, indicating that the turkey has attained the same internal temperature as the sun. "Basically," advises the surgeon general, "you want to be serving your family a 16-pound charcoal briquette."
Even then you should keep a flamethrower handy. Speaking of which: The "hot" new Thanksgiving culinary trend is to cook turkeys in big deep-fat fryers, which are hugely popular because they give guys an excuse to spend Thanksgiving outside drinking beer and messing around with a device that could potentially destroy an entire neighborhood. Now that guys have decided to become seriously involved in Thanksgiving food preparation, it's only a matter of time before they come up with a recipe for mashed potatoes that involves a grenade launcher.
Of course, not everybody is comfortable with the idea of eating turkeys, which are, let's face it, living organisms, like dogs, or celery. You may wonder: Is there a more humanitarian option that you can serve for Thanksgiving dinner? There certainly is: It's tofu, a semi-foodlike substance secreted by soybeans as a defense mechanism. Tofu can be used as a high-protein meat substitute, as well as a denture adhesive or tile grout. In its natural state, tofu is tasteless and odorless, but if you form it into a turkey-shaped lump, season it well, add gravy and bake it for two hours in a shallow pan at 350 degrees, you can also use it for minor driveway repairs.

10 comments:
LOL!! peck the carver to death! dude i love tofu..hey remember "peas and tofu" i always picked it out..not because it tasted so great (cuz anita always deep fried it) ...but anything was better then the peas :D
dude you just described my thanksgiving....a very weird one i might add..lol....we even had the deep fryers outside and all the guys were out drinking beer.....
ahhah no way. yes christie! the little thin pieces were so crunchy i can just taste it now!.........love gave a mothers heart to mary, and in josephs tender soul...a fathers love for jesus grew?
I still don't understand the hype about thanksgiving. we did more for one of the mexican holidays I don't remember.
anyway, who even LIKES turkey?
oh please...dont see the big hype?!? im sure ya'll have a big holiday about when the aboriganees went waltzin matilda over to teach the pilgrams of Australia how to cook dingo.
haha how old is that pic of your family? -heidi
hahaha!waltzing matilda...hey remember sam?
hey, I cooked the pumpkin pies too, and the maid never did the dishes
we don't celebrate thanksgiving in South Africa but I don't really miss it either, it wasn't that big of a deal
deep fried tofu is yummy
kind of defeats the healthy purpose though, deep fried with lots of salt
omg dont ruin my stories anita! no one cares that she really washed the dog bowls...anyhow ANITA'S PUMPKIN PIES ARE THE BOMB!
yeah. Whatever. Julie I want to go see Santa Claus! Thanksgiving is so last week.
Christy you should forget sam swiftly, or I'll tell you what he named his child. :D
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