
Manly
Men cook for the show, not the meal
By
Lon Walters (an excerpt from Mr. Walter's regular column)
Manly Blender
About six months ago, I got a hair to purchase the
most frivolous piece of impulse gear since my parched Chia Pet.
I found this new treasure at a car show last year where it
attracted hoards of wide-eyed guys to the booth. It was loud,
shiny and "really cool" - a gas powered blender. If
you have to ask why, you wouldn't understand.
It wasn't cheap
but it came with this nifty black carrying case. The most
remarkable thing about justifying the purchase was its purpose.
Promoted as
a potential pancake mixer and including numerous griddle Recipes,
I don't believe any soul who lustfully cherished this spinning machinery
believed it good for anything other than for the most celebrated
margaritas in the universe.
Your fortune
and fame with the best of comrades sometimes comes in small packages.
This one weighed 10 pounds, a bit bigger than toolbox, and
was called a TailGator®.
My grand opening
for this pearl was a farewell party for very dear friends. What
an opportunity to see what they were going to be missing settled
in overcast, wet, too far to be fun - Oregon.
There was little
doubt this device could possible have hit the liberal shored of
the Northwest with the same passion. Strutting around, waiting
for an appropriate moment to unveil the most magnificently unproductive
tool of the year, I would unleash a crowning achievement of guy-things
everywhere.
Ear plugs were
an absolute necessity. Ohhs and ahhs of the astonished assembly
would be ever so distracting for a maiden voyage.
Its green, weed
whacker engine case gleamed in the setting sun. The new, clear,
plastic mixing container was ready to accept a river of pre-mixed
margaritas and was cavernous enough to swallow scoop after scoop
of crushed ice.
The primer button
approved my steady hand, and the starter cord anxiously trembled
for its turn. The 24-cubic centimeter, 2.5-horsepower engine
howled to life, and the crowd was motionless, with eyes fixed to
the magical gadget.
What we didn't
count on was a rotating blade with the force of a typhoon. OK, the
instruction book warned of over-filling, but really, what male of
the new millennium reads the instructions all the way through.
Mix virtually
exploded out of the top like a cannon and popped the lid like a
well-shaken beer. If this were water it wouldn't have been
so bad; however, dried margarita mix has the qualities of flypaper
lying on the deck.
The stuff still
fuses to sneakers after six months. The story isn't over.
We, the guys,
pulled out the instruction book again to scan appropriate pages
on mixing ingredients and were ready for another launch.
Just the right
amounts, just the right starting technique, just the right throttle
to keep it all blending, but it leaked like a sinking vessel and
spilled even more mix on the already soaked deck.
One more humiliating
crack at the instruction book, and this time, with the gasket right
side up, it worked like a charm. Life is good.
To this day,
I insist it became easier to operate as a function of its simplicity
than the effects of a few margaritas.
This toy attracts
throngs like a gladiator movie and rates exceptionally high on the
all-important quixotic meter. From TailGator® in (Grass Valley, CA
(888) 874-7677). Ya' just gotta' try one.
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