search
blog
from February, 2008

Death by Brownies

This is old content from my previous blog, EveryGoodBoyDeservesFruit.com. Check out the new stuff too.

I’m currently riding a wave of notoriety at work after my home cooked brownies were a smash hit at our monthly morning tea, making grown women crumble. All day I had people asking me if I had any more brownies (my team took most of them, including private stashes), and there have been plenty of requests for more. I had an email from one of the people on my interview panel inquiring about the recipe and word started spreading to the other super funds. At least it’s going somewhere to repair the damage after my homemade shortbreads tasted like sand (though even the Scottish woman on my team ate a few).

I’ve programmed the music for the radio programme this weekend, so I’m off to bed for a spot of Murder, She Wrote (which will be the first time I’ve watched in quite a while), and a reasonably early night. Bring on the weekend, even if it is mostly booked up with non-social events already.

No Responses to “Death by Brownies”

  1. Kevin says:

    With the Super funds eying off your culinary skills, can we expect a brownie led economic recovery?

  2. Tyson says:

    Kevin – Absolutely. Forget blue chips, I’m talking chocolate chips!

Leave a Reply

Collective Anger

This is old content from my previous blog, EveryGoodBoyDeservesFruit.com. Check out the new stuff too.

Greg and I went road tripping to the Parramatta Record Fair today. We also saw two queens, but they weren’t specifically of the floating variety.

After venturing to the Collectables Fair two years ago, I was pretty sure that we’d find gold at least within the people who frequent these things. Sadly, this time there was no costume donning, but the bootleggers all wore their uniform of all black and a baseball cap. Whilst I was browsing someone’s collection a fellow came up to the stall owner and asked “So what have you got for me?” The seller leapt into action “Fresh, just in from Japan. Haven’t shown it to anyone else,” as he took the CD out of the paper holder with something unreadable scribbled on it. He held it up to the light with both hands as if displaying fine jewelry. “Haven’t seen one like it for a while”. The prospective buyer’s head ducked and weaved as he made sure he saw the light hit it from every angle. “Japan, you say? Hrm, okay then.” “Excellent choice. Three dollars please.” It could only have been more perfect if the seller had a jeweler’s glass and the buyer had a monocle.

One of the drawbacks of these gala events is the air circulation. Put simply, not enough. The smell of one man made my eyes water. It took me back to a day on the bus when a man had secretions that only the devil himself could have concocted and injected into his pores. It was at this point that a terrifying thought struck me: My fingers have been flicking through hundreds of CDs and records that these very same men had been contaminating all day, long before I had arrived to see the worst of it. I was paralyzed by the thought for some considerable time, and it was a while before I had to courage to even flick through the soundtracks sections (which, I figured, would have the least abused fingers scraping DNA across them).

Whilst Greg made shady under the table deals to obtain the latest Beatles bootlegs, I picked up quite a few bargains, including Australian cast recordings of La Cage aux Folles, Annie and They’re Playing Our Song on vinyl.

Afterwards we headed over to Westfield to grab some lunch. We chose a sandwich shop run by an Asian man who was every Asian character ever played by Peter Sellers combined and a Germanic woman who frightened us over and over. I kept getting nervous each time I asked for an ingredient and she would reply in an angry slur, “Of course you do.” When some small children starting making noise she said (or at least we think she said) “If they were mine, I’d take them home, lock them in a cupboard and pour scalding water on them.” Busy day, then? Greg had problems of his own when the man asked him “Father and son?”, referring to us. “Uhhh… not exactly” Greg replied before turning to me and saying “If you blog that I’ll slit your throat.”

It was a fun day, but if you’ll excuse me, I have to create a Facebook group called “If that security alarm goes off when I walk out of here, you’re giving it to me for free.”

No Responses to “Collective Anger”

  1. Kevin says:

    The latest Beatles Bootlegs? There are recordings that could be classed as “latest”? I could have sworn two of them were dead, but maybe I dreamed that….

    If your fingers start to discolour, I would recommend a serious wash with some disinfectant soap and rush to see a doctor. Who knows what strange diseases people who lust after old vinyl records may have.

    So Greg will be arriving with a knife shortly then?

  2. Tammy says:

    One word for you missy ‘serated’.

  3. Tammy says:

    Oh!! one more thing (i have a lot of time to think, sharpening a serated garroting knife is rather time consuming) i would like it known that last Friday night upon entering the Illawarra pub with Marc i was stopped and asked to show my ID, the look on the guys face was gold as i handed over my licence, once inside the door i sunk to my knee’s and wept tears of unadulterated joy, only standing when Marc had finished laughing and helped me up.

Leave a Reply

Chattering Teeth

This is old content from my previous blog, EveryGoodBoyDeservesFruit.com. Check out the new stuff too.

I’ve been discussing the prospect of moving out with my parents, something my mother cannot understand because living in the same house as my parents must simply be heaven on earth. Nevermind the fact that my mother moved out of home when she was 15 because “that was different – my parents were annoying.” Can you imagine how hard it is to settle on just one thing to say after being offered that line?

After a slight ‘altercation’ on friday night between myself and my parents (I made a joke about how boring cricket was, my father cracked the shits, I told him he was rude (yes, I actually said ‘rude’)), I think my parents were trying to make amends by offering to take me down to Domayne, a furniture and home electricals store to spend a $50 I had. This isn’t the kind of store I’d normally shop at on account of the heavily inflated prices simply because they arrange the stock they have in colour groups so as to appear as if it has been “designed”, but I had the voucher to spend.

After struggling to find a toaster under $70, I decided to find a rice cooker and vegetable steamer and go on our merry ways. I had the option of an older stock model for $43 or the current stock for $55. As the only difference was the colour (white vs stainless steel, which is a real pain to keep clean), I went for the older model and walked up to the counter. While standing in line, my parents held a typically detailed conversation about which model I really should have chosen with insightful comments like, “Wasn’t the top clear on the other one?… No, it was aluminium…. What about the buttons? Were they rounder?”

When we reached the counter after a considerable wait (and don’t worry, there was plenty of loud commentary about that), my mother tried to buy a $5 gift card, but it wouldn’t work in combination with the gift card. The overwhelmed but kind-spirited cashier was trying to get through the line as quickly as possible and my mother was not helping. I was more than happy to forego the $7, but my parents were not. Cue a $7 shopping spree through the electrical department of Domayne as the three of us spread out in different directions to find something under $7. Batteries? $12. Ipod cover? $30. Blank CDs? $18. Finally my parents grabbed a ream of paper ($6.95) and joined the line again. A few moments later, after seemingly handing over all my personal details, we walked back through the shop to the car with a rice cooker and a ream of paper.

I thought the nightmare of shopping with my parents was over. I couldn’t foresee the row of electronic massage chairs lining the path to the exit. Imagine my horror while my parents try out each one multiple times discussing each one like there was a remote chance they put the $6000 on their credit card and walk out with one of those monsters of leather and fake wood-panelling strapped to the roof of the Volvo (also with the leather and fake wood-panelling). At one point, when all the machines were bulging and thrusting, it looked like the scene from Are You Being Served when Mr Humphries puts the chattering teeth down the underpants of one of the mannequins, except as if this was David Jones’ stocktake sale. When my parents, who had no hope of reading the small screens in front of them started pressing buttons making one machine continuously beep, I knew it was all over.

After what I suspect was supposed to be an operation to encourage me to stay home at least until the year is over, all I could think about in the car on the way home is how long it will take me to pack my things. At least I’ll have rice and some paper to write my recipe on.

No Responses to “Chattering Teeth”

  1. Kevin says:

    If you need a ladder to escape out of your bedroom window in the middle of the night, don’t hesitate to call. The combination of your helpful parents and a Volvo must be a nightmare.

    Domayne (you know Gerry Harveys wife is the boss don’t you?) couldn’t just give you $7 change?

  2. Gus says:

    You know, Aldi were selling toasters, kettles and other kitchen appliances for $7 last week. The didn’t look that bad either. Even saw a nice stainless steel kettle for $30… was most annoyed because I paid the same price for a plastic on the day before!

    Good on you for moving out of home… it’s worth it:-)

  3. Tyson says:

    Kevin – I didn’t know Gerry Harvey’s wife ran that. I guess either way they get that new holiday home.

    Gus – I need to get all that stuff. $7 is certainly the right price, but I know how those old girls get when there’s money to save! Heaven knows they’ve got to have their $1.20 box of Coco “Puffs” that taste like rat poison… Wait, what were we talking about?

Leave a Reply