Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Name Your Poison

by Cassondra Murray

Is it Rocky Road? Pralines & Cream? Or perchance..Strawberry Cheesecake?
Double Chocolate Chunk or Gold Medal Ribbon?
Sidle up to the bar in the lair and order one. Make it a double (scoop, that is).

Hey, we never said alcohol was the only scandal served at the Bandit Bar.

Ice cream and me, we go way back.

My mom went to church three times a week. Sunday morning, Sunday night, and Wednesday night prayer meetin'. Most of the time I was forced to attend these three (*cough* boring *cough*) services along with her. But every now and then I'd get a reprieve.

My dad, you see....well...he had no use for church. Never saw him in one. Didn't mean he didn't have faith. Just meant he didn't like church. My mom didn't drive at that time, and my dad would drive her in to the services. So when I was about three, I figured out that on Wednesday nights when we'd head out to prayer meetin', if I begged hard enough, I'd get to stay with my dad instead of going with my mom.

This was a good thing.






What did my dad DO while my mom was in prayer meetin'?

He went to the pool room to shoot pool. And he took me.

First we'd go in, and the regular fellas would all ask me how I was doin'. I'd tell 'em I was doin' fine. Then we'd go up to the counter and I could have a hot dog or a hamburger and a small coke. Then I sat in one of the armchairs on the side of the room right beside the table where my dad would play pool. Now that I'm older, I realize that he put me there so that I was never out of his sight, but I didn't know that then. Then, at age four, this part of my world was good.
I watched while my dad chose a pool stick and proceeded to play. I don't remember whether he won or lost. I was too busy getting an education in male behavior. Now as I look back, I also realize that all those guys straightened up their acts and cleaned up their language just for me. And it was quite a gift, getting to spend prayer meetin' night in the small-town equivalent of the men's club. As I ate my burger and drank my coke, I'd plan what I'd get for dessert. Once my dad hung up his pool stick and we said our goodbyes, we climbed in his truck and drove around the square and down the hill to see his best friend and hunting buddy, Merle.


Merle owned the Dairy Queen.

The Dairy Queen in our town was about the size of a Dixie cup. No lie. It was tiny. About three employees could fit inside and then it was crowded. The DQ was basically a box made of windows, and it set at the bottom of the big hill a block from the town square on Jamestown Street. Yes, the square with the courthouse in the center and the clock on top. It's true. I lived in a cliche.

You had to walk up to the DQ window to order. The thing I remember most clearly was the giant plastic ice cream cone (complete with the fancy little twirl on top) in the window. It was enormous. But it had a seam going up the side. Even at age four, I saw that seam as a dead giveaway. That cone was not real. But what it represented? THAT was real. The perfect cone.
I also recognized the immense skill level necessary to make the "poofs" on the real ice cream cones just above the wafer cups, and then to put that little twisty-twirl right on the top? Not everyone had the gift of the twirl.

You could always tell when they hired new people. The poof was never right. It was lopsided. And new people never added the twirl. Obviously, the twirl was the hardest part of making an ice cream cone. There's one bad thing about working in a box made of windows. Everybody in town gets to see you try--and fail--at making the "ice cream cone twirl".

As I grew older, they stopped adding the twirl. It was a sign, to me, of the lack of ambition and onset of good-for-nothing-ness in the population of teenagers in our town. I mean, really, if you're getting ice cream from DQ, it bloody well ought to have a twirl on top.

I always got a strawberry sundae. I was a tiny little thing at age four. Short for my age, and blonde. (Yes, I was once blonde. Go figure.) And I ate the whole thing. I think that was the beginning of my true love affair with ice cream. By the time I was six, I'd moved on to the banana split. By that point I was an afficianado of soft-serve ice cream.

I have no idea when some angel from God first shoved a bit of ice cream into my mouth, but it had to be a cataclysmic moment. A life was changed. I saw the LIGHT, BABY.

I moved on from that first, unremembered bite, to the developmental stage (sundaes and the banana splits), and finally to the pinnacle of DQ delights....the parfait.

To this day, I still see the light. I've broadened my horizons and I've tried all kinds. But I'm true to my own north star...it guides me back, regularly, to the Baskin Robbins or the DQ.


I love Baskin Robbins many choices of flavors, and their seasonal specialties like eggnog ice cream. Yummmm.
But if it's a banana split I want, nothing will do but Dairy Queen. Nobody does soft-serve like DQ.

I've tried soft-serve at all kinds of places. There's a little "box of windows" in a town near me. It's called the Frosty Freeze. It lures me sometimes, but the ice cream is sort of...well...mealy. It's like you can taste the sugary grit in the ice cream. I'm sorry if I seem judgemental, but...well...it's sub-standard.
Still, I like walking up to the window and ordering from teenagers, just the way the generation before me, and the generation before them, walked up to that same window and ordered from the people who were teenagers then. Maybe that's why I like those places so much. Getting ice cream there makes me a bit of that town's history.

Yes, I've dawdled with the newfangled shops with the marble slabs--the ones that let you watch while they smoosh all kinds of goodies into the scoop of whatever you want and serve it up to you deliciously unfinished and raw....for $5 per scoop.
And yes, I dropped my money on the table and took their ice cream and LOVED IT. But I looked squinty eyed at them as I slurped. Okay it was good. Okay. It was ungodly good. But since it was double the price, when the temptors went the way of all stupidly overpriced places in our town, I was happy to go back to the thirty-onederful flavors at Baskin Robbins, and to my old standby, Dairy Queen.

My banana splits are made in the traditional way. Strawberry, chocolate, and pineapple syrups, no whipped cream, no nuts. Just like the ones I got from Merle's DQ at the bottom of the hill. Nuts are nice and all, but on a banana split? For me, they're just wrong.


I've shot a few games of pool since I sat in that armchair and watched my dad. I suppose it didn't affect me. I suppose it was fate that made me the pool champ at my first two-year college. (Fate and a guy named Glen, who taught me how to slice a ball into the corner and how to cuss like a sailor.)
Ice cream is still a perfect ending to an evening of such debauchery.
Tonight it was a scoop of Nutty Coconut, plus a quart of Strawberry Cheesecake, and one of plain vanilla, so that later, I can make a sundae with fresh strawberries (a gift from some Amish friends--it's strawberry season in Kentucky).
What about you, Bandits and Buddies?
Do you like ice cream? How much?
What would you choose? Let's tally the score.
What kind--hard ice cream (scooped, like Baskin Robbins) or soft-serve?
And what about those hoity toity marble slab places? Do you like those?

But now for the real questions:
What flavor?
What do you like on your banana splits?
Oh, and ....ahem....nuts, or no nuts?
Name your poison.

255 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 255 of 255
pjpuppymom said...

LOL @ Anna! I know what you mean. I could feel my hips spreading with every post I read! Hey, congrats on nabbing the GR today. Is he driving you crazy yet? :)

p226 said...

Okay with hellion's Sex-In-A-Cone comment I've clearly taken a turn to the dark side in my thinking. First SIAC, then Mr. Whippy, then this totally sensual-sounding dessert...

Um... in that context, let's reread your very own comments...

So, someone in the comments was saying they couldn't get their homemade ice cream hard enough. Do you have that trouble...getting it frozen hard? I admit that the homemade I've had before has been kind of mushy--more like a slush than like hard ice cream. Just not frozen enough I think...

You Banditas are BAD.

jo robertson said...

Funny you should ask, Jeanne. Emma's mother reminded me that I fed their first-born some of my home-made DELICIOUS ice cream when he was 3 months old. Sheesh, everyone's so worried about allergies nowadays you can't feed the baby anything. So, no, I haven't dared initiate Emma (although I've been very, very tempted LOL).

Uh, Pepsi -- Dark Side?? I think not, m'lady. Coke is way, way too sweet for my tastebuds. I suspect we'll have this controversy till Doom's Day.

But at least EVERYONE loves ice cream. And Cassondra, I love the holiday flavors of Baskin Robbins too, especially the pumpkin at Thanksgiving!

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Hahahahaa! Yep. To the Bone, P226. Cassondra's going to howl when she reads that and realizes how it sounds out of context.

Gutterbrain, though, thy name is P226.

Snork

And then there was the bit about the peaches and the bathtub...

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Yep, we'll have to agree to disagree on the Coke/Pepsi debate, darling Jo!

Had to LOL about the indoctrination at 3 on the ice cream. I was so "bad" with my kids. I figured I'd rather find out early if they had allergies. The only one of those "rules" I followed was the honey one. I didn't give the kids honey till after 2 years old. But the thing about Strawberries and Kiwi and ice cream? Ignored 'em. :>

Pissenlit said...

Cassondra - I'm so sorry you never were a DQ kid. WE can make you a DQ adult though. Just hang around. The way this crowd likes ices cream, we're all bound to end up at a DQ at some point.

I'm willing to be converted as long as taste testing is involved ;)

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Pissenlit, I'm SURE that can be arranged! Heehee.

Nancy said...

Jeanne wrote: Ohhhhhh, Nancy! You are makin' me so HOMESICK!!! I want Gaffney, SC peaches, like RIGHT NOW. . . .

Sorry, Duchesse. I'd bring some to DC if I weren't flying. You can always come get some, y'know. Drive down that road and let the boys smell 'em. Ought to be nice and ripe by July.

Nancy said...

Just got back from critique meeting at Borders, where I had the crack-equivalent coffee. Its official name is blackberry creme latte, and it has blackberry and lemon sprinkles on top, and it's a pretty good dessert substitute.

Just FYI.

Nancy said...

p226, we may be BAD, but our buddies egg us on! *g*

Jeanne is right--Cassondra's reaction will be interesting.

Nancy said...

PJ, your aunt and uncle owned a Tastee-Freeze?! You lucky! I loved Tastee-Freeze when I was growing up.

I know what you mean about the metabolism. I once ate a whole Sarah Lee cheesecake in one evening and didn't get sick or gain weight.

Those days are waaaay back in the rear view mirror, almost past the horizon, alas.

Anna Campbell said...

Nah, PJ, he's been a perfect gentleman. Clearly meeting all those romance writers at RT has scared him into a bit of decorum!

Perhaps I should send him to visit P226! ;-)

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Yeah, see Nancy, now the whole fam's in Asheville and Durham, rather than in SC, so there's no reason to drive that way. *pout*

Yum. Sara Lee Cheesecake.

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Anna, the GR's probably hoping we'll be lulled into a false sense of security and let him go to National. I'll be he's got that secret network going again amongst the cover models.

*shakes head* He's a sly old bird, that one.

Pissenlit said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Nancy said...

Jeanne, you drive from Durham to Asheville VIA Gaffney. It's a bit out the way, but it's scenic. And you can take the boys to the Kings Mtn. National Military Park on the way. And it's not too far from Gaffney to Cowpens.

And Gaffney has the Peachoid, perfect if you're reading James and the Giant Peach (the peachoid is a water tower that looks like a massive peach. From most angles.)

I hope that bird does not make it to National. He has gotten way too big for his nonexistent britches lately. Locking him up didn't stop him last year, so I'm not sure what we should try this time.

At least Fo made him throw his mess away.

Pissenlit said...

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) - Pissenlit, I'm SURE that can be arranged! Heehee.

Then consider me converted! :D

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Yeah! Pissenlit converted!

Nancy, that peach water tower's a cool one, isn't it? Love it.

As to the chook, we couldn't keep him away last year, but hey, we can try bribery, potted plants...something like that.

Tawny said...

My belief - ice cream should be eaten naked. Not me naked, the ice cream naked. Nothing on it. Just the ice cream. How can you improve upon perfection?
...

By topping the naked with whipped cream and nuts!!! Everything is better with whipped cream (and I'll just stop there *g*)

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

Snork. This from a woman who evidently wrote about peaches, ice cream and bathtubs?

I cannot WAIT to get done with this Mess in Progress so I can read the two newest

Nancy said...

Jeanne wrote (about Tawny):Snork. This from a woman who evidently wrote about peaches, ice cream and bathtubs . . .

I cannot WAIT to get done with this Mess in Progress so I can read the two newest
. . .

I've read them both! It's a wonder that ice cream didn't melt faster. *g*

Going Down Hard is great fun, and I love the hero's hat thing and the Batman reference, and the way Tawny used photography and computers in the plot. The sparring between the hero and heroine was fabulous!

Pissenlit said...

Oh boy, after all this talk about ice cream, I went to the freezer for some Chocolate Trifle gelato. Turns out there was only a little bit left so I ate it all. *tear* I want more!

Nancy said...

Pissenlit, Chocolate Trifle Gelato? Yummm.

Of course you had to eat it all. You couldn't leave it languishing there alone. That would be cruel. :-)

Tawny said...

Jeanne said: Snork. This from a woman who evidently wrote about peaches, ice cream and bathtubs?
...

bwaahaaahaaaaa

oh. wait. I should have included whipped cream, huh? I'll do that in this next book *beg*

Tawny said...

Nancy said: Going Down Hard is great fun, and I love the hero's hat thing and the Batman reference, and the way Tawny used photography and computers in the plot. The sparring between the hero and heroine was fabulous!
...
Awwwww, I love you, Nancy!!!!! Thank you!!!!!

p226 said...

Nancy said:
p226, we may be BAD, but our buddies egg us on! *g*..


Ok, Nancy. After reading this page of comments, it is clear to me that the Banditas require ZERO encouragement in this department.

The Bandita Buddies stand blameless.

Joan said...

Dear Lord people! Torture a girl after 16 hours at work!

I've read and skimmed through the 6,000 comments. And you're all wrong. The best ice cream came from a local Louisville family owned company called Ehrler's. They went out of business years ago so an acceptable substitute is Graeter's. Don't like those slab places. It looks like they are ruining my ice cream "smooshing" it everywhere.

DQ is fine for what it is but the soft serve is only good as a Blizzard, IMHO. And actually, McDonald's soft serve isn't half bad for a reduced calorie item....3 points on WW.

Best flavor? Chocolate Chip. Second? French Vanilla

Cones. Depends on the ice cream.

No thank you to bananas. An occasional strawberry is fine and nuts only for a turtle sundae.

And I'm doing the blog for tomorrow....what do ya'll think about bread? :-)

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

P226 said: The Bandita Buddies stand blameless.

Nope. You are aiders and abetters. Allllllll of you.

Cassondra said...

Hi y'all. I'm back! Yay!

PJ said:

I love soft serve cones but we don't have any ice cream shops in my town and the stuff you get at the fast food restaurants just isn't up to snuff. ...


Amen, sistah (waving hanky) Amen!

Summers here are great for fresh peach ice cream from Clemson University. The Ag. students produce the ice cream and sell it at the student union. It's all delicious but the peach is to die for...


Oh, that sounds WONDERFUL. I love peach ice cream.

Jeanne (AKA The Duchesse) said...

*groans!* Joanie! My weakness above all things - forget the ice cream - is bread.

Stop. The. Madness.

Cassondra said...

Jeanne said:

I want Gaffney, SC peaches, like RIGHT NOW. You can't come up that mountain road from Greenville to Asheville w/o stopping and buying. If you drive with the windows down through Traveller's Rest you can smell them...ahhhhhhhh.
Oh, MAN! I want to experience this. Fresh peaches are one of the most amazing things in the universe. It might come very close to being my favorite food. I wouldn't say it IS my favorite, but it would come close.

Cassondra said...

Virginia said:

Those Brownie Earthquakes from DQ are pretty great. Just a soft serve cone is good to if the soft serve has some flavor some of it doesn't have a good vanilla flavor.
...

OH. My. Gosh. I've never seen a Brownie Earthquake. But with a name like that, it's got to be good.

And you are so right. Fast food cones are sub-standard. Sometimes mealy, and sometimes just sweet, but with no actual flavor. Flavor is required. It just is.

Cassondra said...

Pink Peony said:

The reefer temps were at +3 above zero. B&J quality control folks said we couldn't deliver it because it was 3 degrees higher than they deemed "safe"...they sent men out in lab coats and stuck thermometers in some of the ice cream and decided that they didn't want to chance it....

No WAY! Three degrees above zero was not cold enough? No WAY! They threw it away? OMG!

Well, I guess if you're in the food business, safety is important, but three above is really cold. This, I do not understand.

So Pink Peony, are you in the trucking business? I don't think I ever knew that.

Cassondra said...

Treethyme said:

My son and his girlfriend introduced me to Cold Stone Creamery a few months ago. That place is currently my sin of choice (well, one of them).Oh yes, the Sin of Choice. The SOC. Oh, yes. I like this new acronym. Indeed I do.

And I like your Sin of Choice. Indeed. I don't like the price of the ice cream, but I do like eating it.

Sin Of Choice. I'm going to find a way to use that in normal conversation. That's a good one.

Cassondra said...

Jeanne said:

Hey Becke! Rocky Road, eh? Good stuff. I know Cassondra's keeping a tally. :>
Ha! Cassondra has lost count. Cassondra did not count on the overwhelming response to the subject of ice cream!

Cassondra said...

JoMama said:

Yummmmy, ice cream. I'm the plaid, dyed in the wool vanilla freak ice cream lover. And of course, I must mix it with my favorite PEPSI to make a delish float.
...

Nuthin wrong with vanilla Jo. Nuthin ahtall. PEPSI? Well..okay...I concede that Pepsi MIGHT make an acceptable float. ;0p

Cassondra said...

Jo said:

we always stopped at the Woolworth halfway home and indulged in a scoop of ice cream. I still remember the fun of sitting on those stools up at the counter. Everything tasted better from that spot!
OH, the Woolworth counter! I haven't thought of that in YEARS! Those were the BEST ice cream counters. Has anyone ever heard the Nancy Griffith song (also recorded by Kathy Mattea) Love at the Five & Dime?

It's a great song, and she wrote it about a girl who worked in a Woolworth's store...

Rita was fifteen years
Hazel eyes and chestnut hair
She made the Woolworth counter shine

Eddie was a sweet romancer
And a darn good dancer
They'd waltz the aisles of the five and dime....
GREAT song. I miss those old soda fountains.

Cassondra said...

P226 said:

You Banditas are BAD.
...

You just now noticin' that? ;0)

Cassondra said...

Jo said:

I love the holiday flavors of Baskin Robbins too, especially the pumpkin at Thanksgiving!
Ummmm...Pumkin. I forgot about the pumkin ice cream. Yummmm.

And I'm with you Jo. I'm thinkin "allergic" is one of the new trendy things to diagnose. I look kinda squinty eyed when they tell people they can't feed their babies anything but stuff made in a lab. (frowny face) Once again, there I go, trusting cows more than chemists.

Cassondra said...

Jeanne said:

Cassondra's going to howl when she reads that and realizes how it sounds out of context.
Actually, I realized it when I wrote it. Ha! But if I were worried about everything sounding pristine, I'd never write ya know? On this blog, one of us is gonna go there. We just are. I quit worrying about it a while ago. Tryin hard to not attract a p*rn spammer and maintain a PG-13 rating and that's about it.

Nancy said...

p226, maybe we don't need encouragement, but that doesn't mean y'all don't supply it. *g*

As Jeanne said, you're aiders and abetters, all of you! Which just adds to the fun.

Cassondra said...

Jeanne said:

The only one of those "rules" I followed was the honey one. I didn't give the kids honey till after 2 years old. But the thing about Strawberries and Kiwi and ice cream? Ignored 'em. :>
Oh, thank GOD. Somebody with sense. One of these days they're going to figure out that strawberries form brain cells in babies or something and we'll all smack our heads and go "duh"--well--some of us will. I'm certain some people will wail that the scientists ruined their babies. Ah well...ya gotta have someone to tell you how to keep your baby alive. I guess. If I were a parent I'd be worried to death too. I guess.

Cassondra said...

Babies should get ice cream. I believe this. To deny babies ice cream is just...

Wrong.

Wrong I say.

Nancy said...

Cassondra, anytime you want Gaffney peaches, come on. I'll take you there.

All this talk is making me want them now.

Cassondra said...

Cassondra wrote:

I'm so sorry you never were a DQ kid. WE can make you a DQ adult though. Just hang around. The way this crowd likes ices cream, we're all bound to end up at a DQ at some point. ...


And Pissenlit answered:I'm willing to be converted as long as taste testing is involved ;)..

Oh, taste-testing will certainly be involved. I'm sure we can arrange something.....

Nancy said...

Joan, bread tomorrow? Really?

I once knew, long, long ago, how to make biscuits with Crisco. But a recipe that makes two dozen is kinda overkill for one or two people.

Nancy said...

Tawny wrote: oh. wait. I should have included whipped cream, huh? I'll do that in this next book. . . .

Sounds great!

And you're welcome. :-)

Cassondra said...

Nancy said:

I hope that bird does not make it to National. He has gotten way too big for his nonexistent britches lately. Locking him up didn't stop him last year, so I'm not sure what we should try this time.
Obviously P226 has taught him to pick locks. Hmmmm...Maybe we should consider some sort of debriefing--or perhaps reprogramming--when he comes back from his visits with P226.

Cassondra said...

Regarding Tawny's comment, Jeanne wrote:

Snork. This from a woman who evidently wrote about peaches, ice cream and bathtubs?

I cannot WAIT to get done with this Mess in Progress so I can read the two newest

Yup. That was in Coming On Strong. And it's a really good scene.

And what do you expect from books titled Coming on Strong and Going Down Hard?

Clearly, subtlety has gone completely out the window. Hey. I can live with that. They don't call the line Blaze for nothing.

Cassondra said...

Nancy said:

Going Down Hard is great fun, and I love the hero's hat thing and the Batman reference, and the way Tawny used photography and computers in the plot. The sparring between the hero and heroine was fabulous!
...

I can't wait to see how Tawny redeems this guy. She made him edgy in the first book. I don't have the second one yet. It's waiting at B&N for me to pick it up. Along with Beth's latest, A Not So Perfect Past, which they were about a month late getting for me. (frowny face).

Hey, Beth's book is about food too! The heroine owns a bakery, right? Yummmm...pastries......and for our next blog.....PASTRIES..

Just kidding. I have no idea what the next blog is about. That's part of the fun of being a Bandit. You. Just. Never. Know.

Cassondra said...

Joanie said:

And I'm doing the blog for tomorrow....what do ya'll think about bread? :-)
AAAHHHHHH!!!!!!!!

We're all going to be HUGE! I'm going to have to diet for the next ten YEARS!!!!! I can take ice cream and deal with the cravings sometimes. But BREAD? I. could. eat. raw. dough. I'm like Claudia & her ice cream, but with Bread. Bread is my crack.

Good lord I can't keep up with y'all and these comments! I'm starting to not care if I don't punctuate!

Tawny said...

P226 wrote: Ok, Nancy. After reading this page of comments, it is clear to me that the Banditas require ZERO encouragement in this department.

The Bandita Buddies stand blameless.

...

Hey now...

Oh wait. Its true, why even try to deny it. Except the blameless part. You are all just as bad as we are... admit it!!!

(btw, thanks for the ... clue!!)

Tawny said...

Cassondra wrote: Clearly, subtlety has gone completely out the window. Hey. I can live with that. They don't call the line Blaze for nothing. ...

LOL - I've never been able to pull off subtle anyway. Which means I fit in so well with the Banditas, yes? LOLOLOL

and thank you!!!!! (btw, Beth's book is to blame for a month of Christmas cookie cravings.)

Cassondra said...

Tawny said:

and thank you!!!!! (btw, Beth's book is to blame for a month of Christmas cookie cravings.)
...

You're welcome. Your book is great. And Christmas Cookies? Oh, LORD!

Okay, note to self. Eat a big meal of healthy food before reading Beth's book. And drink LOTS of water so you'll be FULL!
/note to self

Cassondra said...

Thanks everyone, for dishing on ice cream with me! What a great day in the lair. The cabana boys look tired....and Joanie's just starting a garden party.

Ha. No rest for the weary cabana boy!

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