Kitchen Cyclone
My
Sweet Baboo suffers terribly in the heat of Western Washington. Those
85 degree temperatures can be brutal to someone who has lost their heat
resistance after nearly 5 years in residence in a climate that consists
largely of drizzle and mild cold. She already has heat flashes to go
with her medications, various surgeries and conditions, so she is
suffering mightily this summer.
My wife also believes that if she is miserable, everybody must be miserable whatever they might say to the contrary.
I was making potato salad for the 4th of July (and doing it wrong, of
course). There is a swamp cooler in the kitchen blowing in a generally
southerly direction and a small fan in the window blowing generally
westerly. Together they make a nice southwesterly draft that carries
the cool air past me as I work. There is a third fan at the edge of
the living room which I have pointed in a westerly direction to carry
the cool breeze on through the rest of the house.
My wife has this theory that if you point two fans directly at each other things will be twice as cool.
So when she looked in a few minutes ago and decided I looked
overheated, acting on her theory of double coolness, she turned the big
west-facing fan around to the northeast pointed directly at me a few
feet away and straight at the other two fans creating an invisible
vortex around me of which I was blissfully unaware. I was adding spices
to the potato salad at the time.
Having been raised in
Texas I am mostly impervious to heat or temperature change and when I'm
working on something you could have set fire to the place and I really
wouldn't have noticed. So I didn't - that is until I went to add a touch
of paprika to the taters - at which point a sudden tornadic swirl of
red paprika rose up in front of my face. In fascination I watched the
little red cyclone take a couple or three swirls and then break apart,
half of it sailing off across the kitchen and a generous portion of the
lower half collapsing into the potato salad bowl.
Paprika is red.
And now so is my potato salad - a nice pinkish shade of red.
Sheila looked in a few minutes later.
"Potato salad isn't supposed to be red," she commented. "That's not MY recipe!"
That is how holiday legends are born and somehow it will be the "Dad's
Red Potato Salad" incident and will give much hilarity to my offspring,
friends and relations.
I tried to brush it off. "I'm a very funny guy," I said.
"It would be nice if it was on purpose," the household's other resident wit shot back without hesitation.
© 2015 by Tom King

No comments:
Post a Comment