C.T. Thomas @ GurgleSlurp.com



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June 26th 2011: Butterscotch
June 26, 2011

Butterscotch is awesome. Unadulterated awesomeness. The best part is that it’s easy to make and lasts a long time in the fridge. Assuming you don’t just eat it all right away. Which I of course have never done. More than once. Twice. Leave me alone.

Butterscotch is easy to make so long as you prepare beforehand:
4 tablespoons (half a stick) of butter (I don’t bother use unsalted but you can if you want more control over the salt content)
1 cup lightly packed brown sugar
3/4 cup heavy cream
Vanilla (if you don’t have real vanilla extract, don’t bother, just use brandy)
1 teaspoon (or so!) Salt (kosher or sea salt are my preferences)
A whisk

Butterscotch recipe!

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Turn the stove on to medium and melt the butter till foamy.

Butterscotch recipe!

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You can also keep cooking the butter until it starts to brown a bit, which is what I do – I love browned butter. The pic to the left is just butter, I’m whisking it to move the foam away so you can see how brown it is. Then add the sugar in one big plop (right).
Butterscotch recipe!

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Whisk lightly, at first it will look like wet sand (left), but after a couple of minutes it’ll get liquidy again.
Butterscotch recipe!

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The mixture will start to get a bit foamy (left), which means it’s time to add the cream and WHISK (I missed the pic here – it blended super quick!) You can lower the temperature or take the pot off the stove before adding the cream and then put it back on the stove once it’s blended if you’d like.
Butterscotch recipe!

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Whisk lightly for another few minutes (for me it’s usually about 3), and then remove from the heat. Add the vanilla and salt (maybe start with just half the salt). Give it a stir and a taste – but beware! – right now it’s seriously hot so don’t stick your finger in the pot. Dip a spoon in the mix and blow on it first! (Sorry about the patronising warning, but people just don’t take sugar heat seriously!). Add more salt if needed and voila – butterscotch! Once it’s cool (or while it’s hot, I don’t care) transfer to a microwave safe storage container and you’re set.
Butterscotch recipe!

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I like using a microwave safe container since it will get pretty thick once refrigerated and you have to heat it up if you’re going to pour over ice cream (or onto an available sex slave, whatever). Here I have vanilla ice cream and pecans. Yum!
Butterscotch recipe!




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Literally? Really?
June 16, 2011

I will no longer tolerate gross misuse of the word ‘literally.’ If you tell me that you literally shit yourself, I will give you a look of horror and ask how you handled the situation. If you tell me that you literally wanted to kill someone, I will give you the number of a great therapist, so you can work on anger management. ‘Literally’ means it actually happened, like in real life and everything, with memories of the event, and often consequences. Though, I will also accept the more liberal ‘virtually, very nearly, in effect’ usage of the word. Sometimes you laugh until it feels like you are actually in danger of pissing yourself, though you do not actually do so, if in that instance one said ‘I literally pissed myself’ I will accept it – see, I’m not rigid. If you giggled slightly or found something mildly amusing and state that ‘I literally pissed myself’ – I’ll recommend a good bladder control product and comment on how you do often smell like urine.

I understand that people misuse words – I do it, everybody does it. But when I do it, it’s because I actually thought the word meant something different, or the wrong word popped out unintentionally. When I realise what the word actually means, I change my usage. I also understand that the meanings and usage of words often change over time. And indeed, the word literally has evolved, but not to the point where it refers to things that have no basis in reality. If you drift into the opposing lane of traffic and swerve back before getting hit by a car – go ahead and say ‘I literally almost died.’ But if you were simply sick in bed with the flu, you did not literally almost die. Maybe you ‘literally felt like you were throwing up an intestine’ – I’ll take that, and that leaves people a huge amount of wiggle room before I get pissy.

We have so many other words and phrases we can use to convey the magnitude of an event or feeling, why do we have to butcher this one?




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Dead people shouldn’t fly
June 9, 2011

I am pretty sure there was a dead guy on the last flight the Princess (my man/lifemate) and I were on. I say that because at about the halfway point of the flight there was a whole lot of hullabaloo. People in a row behind and to the left of me were all out of their seats and a number of flight attendants had converged there. 40 years ago that would just mean that he was the guy with the good coke, but nowadays it’s either a terrorist or a medical emergency. Everyone was way too calm for it to be the former, so – medical emergency. They finally made an announcement asking if there was a doctor on board. Though another announcement was soon made that a doctor was no longer needed. The guy was clearly not all better, so I figure ‘no longer needed’ means, dead. The seatmates were all moved to other seats and seem to have been given free alcoholic beverages for the remainder of the flight, and everyone else on the plane was given little tubs of ice cream. So I’m left with the thought that there was a dead guy buckled into seat 35A for a good 3 hours. Hopefully someone prepared his tray table and seat for landing.




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Mean people (who aren’t me!)
May 25, 2011

By North American standards, my mother’s family is seriously mean. Scathing. Biting. Bordering on cruel. They don’t recognise it as such, to them it’s normal interaction, entertainment really, and if you can’t take it then you’re just a puss and they’re going to enjoy picking at you even more.

Luckily they all live in the islands and I grew up in Canada, so I rarely had to interact with them. Though I have still managed to amass a number of fun and effective* coping mechanisms for those unwanted but unavoidable encounters.

If you have a partner who must also endure the scathing remarks, the following are quite fun:

  • The drinking game. My sister and I enjoyed this last Christmas in response to my mother’s over critical nature. Whenever my mother would complain about something, we had to have a swallow of wine. Whenever she picked at either of us – whoever she was picking on had to have a swallow of wine. My mother had no idea that anything was going on, but my sister and I had a great time, with no bad feelings.
  • The hot potato. Get a coin or something else that can be easily kept in the palm of your hand. Whoever is receiving the mean comments gets the coin, going back and forth as the comments demand. Don’t pass it back and forth secretly, let people see that you are giving each other something, but refuse to explain what you’re doing. Sometimes people catch on, sometimes they don’t. You could have a small prize for whoever is holding the coin when the evening ends.
  • Keep score. You may need a small notepad for this one, but keep count of how many insults you receive. You can do a number of things with this score:

    – Add them up and spend that amount on shoes/candy/fancy socks.

    – See who gets the most insults and have the loser buy drinks next time you go out.

  • That reminds me. You and your partner have to stay near each other for this one. Whenever one of you gets insulted, the other has to jump in with a ‘That reminds me …’ and follow it with something funny. That reminds me …

    – Are we still watching Mommie Dearest this weekend?

    – How was your root canal?

    – I had the worst diarrhoea the other day.

    – Did you read about that mean old lady they found dead in her apartment – she was there for 5 months before anyone even noticed she had passed.

Going it alone is always more difficult, but it can be done!

  • The obvious jot down. The moment you start receiving an insult, write it down. This is particularly good if the insults only come from one person – since they will soon notice that you write something down when they speak, but not when other people do. If asked you can shrug it off completely and say you ‘just thought of something.’ Perhaps a ‘something my therapist suggested.’ Or if you’re a writer or artist ‘just jotting down notes for one of my characters.’
  • The cathartic jot down. Once the insult is over, tuck away out of sight and write down what was said. Much potential here:

    – You could compile the full list into a letter and send it to the meany in the mail – I suggested this to a friend (as a joke!) years ago – and she did it (ending the letter with ‘this is why I don’t visit’), then received a really tearful apologetic call from her mean cousin days later. Who knew?

    – If you’re so inclined, dress up as the meany in question and recite the list on a YouTube video. It could go viral.

    – Got a Twitter account or a blog? Live updates are always fun – your readers will have your back.

    – You could also just text them to a friend.

  • Harp. Pick something well meaning about the person (or various persons) pestering you. Osteoporosis, for instance, if the meany is very old. Whenever the meany insults you, refer immediately to your well meaning topic. Meany says something mean, you ask about her bone density. Then about how icy her driveway gets in the winter, reminding her that slips and falls for the elderly can be fatal. Then about your friend’s grandmother who broke her shoulder just by lifting the tea kettle. You could shatter a hip by simply sitting down too hard, or reaching for the salt. Say it with a grin that lets her know you’ve got your fingers crossed for a harsh winter. Other possible topics:

    – Their financial situation, mention how important it is to invest, your go to savings tips, how costly their life must be to maintain.

    – How unsafe the roads are these days. Road rage. Texting. Drunk drivers.

    – So you’re sure those moles are benign?

    – Or something totally random and not related to them at all, like funions.

  • Pamper yourself. Make a list of things that you want or want to do or generally deny yourself. Rank them and assign each to an insult count. (2 insults = a candy bar, 5 insults = new lip gloss, 10 insults = a marathon of your favourite guilty pleasure viewing.) Keep track of how often you’re insulted and then see what prize you’ve earned.

A few other techniques might come in handy:

  • The walk away. Unfortunately when you’re standing and talking with someone, wandering away from them can be difficult. Often, they’ll just follow along. You need to make it clear that you are leaving to get away from them, but without calling them a cooch-face.

    – Rolling eyes with a light shake of the head. Then walk away. You are clearly disgusted with them. They won’t follow. They might call after you with something rude, but they won’t follow.

    – Pouting out your bottom lip and using your fingertip to trace a sarcastic tear down your cheek. Then walk away.

    – Agree and ruminate. Something like ‘You have a valid point there, I’m going to go think about that.’ Then walk away.

  • Sometimes something a little hurtful is in order, a good backhand … sorry backhanded ‘I don’t know why’ compliment can be useful.

    – You really make a lot of sense, I don’t know why they’re talking about putting you in a home.

    – That’s so funny, I can’t understand why nobody wants to talk to you.

    – You’re really sweet. The people who think you’re a total bitch are way off base.

    Be sure to master your look of genuine bafflement before attempting this. You don’t want to be the bad guy here, you want them to truly think that people are saying these things about them. If asked who is saying such things, reply with an apologetic ‘oh, you know.’ And wander away like you’re afraid of betraying a confidence.

Good luck – and remember, alcohol is your friend!

*Note: This isn’t about softening your meany or repairing the relationship. This is just to get through an unavoidable encounter and come out of it laughing.




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