Have you ever sent a post out into the blogosphere, absolutely convinced it was going to be Freshly Pressed? And then it wasn’t?
I’ve asked some fantastic bloggers to select the post that had them muttering,”THIS One Should Have Been Freshly Pressed.” A new blogger is featured each week to receive the coveted Freshly Pegged distinction. Participants will be awarded a genuine, simulated “Freshly Pegged” JPEG badge, suitable for posting in a place of honor on their blogs. Or not.
**UPDATE** I feel the need to clarify that Freshly Pegged and Freshly Pressed are not mutually exclusive awards for a blogger. As a matter of fact, most people featured here HAVE been Freshly Pressed at one time or another. If they haven’t been, they will be; they’re just that talented. This award is about a specific post that hasn’t received the attention it so richly deserves. My mission is to right that wrong. I’m fighting injustice like…like… a superhero. Like Robin Hood. Yeah.
Be sure to read all the great Freshly Pegged offerings to date. But before you do, let’s check out…
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The Jackie Blog. With the exception of Lisa at the Big Sheep Blog, I’ve known Jackie longer than any other blogging buddy. She jumped in here at WordPress on 1/1/11 when she took on the 365, Post-a-Day challenge. Crazy I know, but that was Jackie – a crazy, fresh-faced kid. You’d think somebody facing that kind of quota would resort to posting any old thing, but not her. She rose to the challenge with such features as Lollipop Tuesdays, where she double-dog-dared herself to try new things. She’s still challenging herself, and that’s one reason she’s on WordPress’ list of Recommended Humor Blogs.
When I popped over to Jackie’s to talk about this Freshly Pegged nonsense, I found she was up to her eyeballs in the comment ballyhoo that surrounds Freshly Pressed for her latest offering, My Struggle With Dance. I guess that’s a nice honor, too.
Actually, we have a bit of a rivalry going on for number of times Freshly Pressed. I have a sinking feeling she may have passed me up with this latest (now that the WordPress gods have abandoned me), but it would be too depressing to know for sure so I’ve adopted a don’t-ask, don’t-tell policy with her.
Check out all the fun at Jackie’s Blog, as soon as you read…
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How I Almost Engulfed My Father in Merciless Hellflames
Last night marked the single, most epic baking disaster of my life.
It is a rare and sad occasion when I set out to produce a batch of wholesome chocolate chip cookies and instead almost produce a body count. I was a victim of my environment, really.
Having received an early morning phone call that my sister-in-law was having contractions, my family packed up and drove to my brother’s house for the weekend to wait on the arrival of a soon-to-be-bundle of girly joy and sunshine sparkles. But the labor was long and slow so instead of waiting it out at the hospital, my parents and I slept over at my brother’s house and anxiously awaited the real action.
Long and late into the evening, my sister-in-law had not yet been officially admitted and my old folks (being old folks, after all), passed out. My mother made it a conscious choice and retired in the upstairs bedroom. My father, however, fought the urge and failed, passing out on the couch to a rerun of “Cow and Chicken”.
Being designated the main line of communication for my brother’s updates and having a sudden urge to prove a wonderful aunt, I went about baking up a batch of chocolate chip cookies. Entirely out of my element, I gathered all the necessary accoutrements and began relishing in my domestic prowess. Halfway through, I realized I forgot to make sure my brother had baking soda and resorted instead to baking powder, which Google assured me was just as good as its soda-y counterpart so long as I tripled the measurement.
Lies.
As I repeated batch after batch of terribly flat, terribly depressing excuses for cookies, I started to lose hope. The only solace I found was in my sister-in-law’s well-equipped kitchen, bursting with Pampered Chef delights. I remembered earlier in the day my mother had found a square, rubber nondescript and wasn’t sure where to put it when we were cleaning. Assuming it was a pot holder of some sort, I placed it in the appropriate drawer and went about the rest of my business. And since said rubber nondescript was in the pot holder drawer, my brain later reminded me of it and I used it to house the baking pan as the cookies cooled between batches.
When I was on my fourth batch of tears and resentment, I made my way over to the oven to pull out the disappointing fruits of my labor. Before opening the oven, I shot a glance over to the counter to make sure the rubber-nondescript-assumed-potholder was still there, ready for cookie landing.
It was not.
Knowing there could be no other answer, I jumped to the oven to confirm my fears: the rubber had stuck to the bottom of the baking pan and it was now a melty, smoky mess in the heart of the oven. With the rubber dripping everywhere, my mother sound asleep upstairs, smoke filling the house quickly, and my father passed out on the couch, I had some quick decisions to make. Unsure of the best solution, I instantly went to wake my father for his assistance.
But it occurred to me that I wasn’t sure how to wake him in the middle of a smoke-filled room without instilling a sense of panic.
I stood over him, playing with the phrasing, wrapping my head around the syntax, and measuring which part of the explanation should come first. What does one say when bringing another out of deep sleep for assistance in a fire? Figuring there was no good way to do it, I resolved to let him sleep (and perhaps die a firey death) while I went solo.
I yoinked the rack out of the oven and put it in the sink, where the maroon rubber nondescript melted into the basin, serving a grueling death for being mistaken for a worthy potholder only hours before. With the entire living room smelling like burnt rubber and smoke billowing from the oven, I ran around the house with real potholders in my hand, fanning the smoke away from my father’s head and the smoke alarm simultaneously.
I was a penguin, flapping silently and violently in an attempt to not disturb him.
After five minutes of pure freaking out, I was a sweating, heart-racing mess and thankful to the good Lord in Heaven for sparing me the lifelong burden of murdering my family. I cleaned the oven, tossed the cursed cookies into the trash, and put my feet up to bask in my narrow victory.
Interrupted by his overwhelming urge to take a leak, my father stirred on the couch and rose slowly. I calmly confirmed that my sister-in-law had officially been admitted to the hospital and he smiled. Thinking this was as good a time as ever to drop the bomb of his almost-death, I casually mentioned that I almost burned the house down because I didn’t know what to say if I tried to wake him in the middle of a smoke-filled room.
He sleepily replied: “You say ‘Dad, don’t worry – we’re okay – but the house is burning down and I need your help'” – and chuckled on his way to the bathroom.
Surprisingly lighthearted reply from a man who narrowly avoided engulfment in cookie and rubber hellfire. ♣
This is a truly fabulous story, and the type of situation I could well imagine finding myself in…although I think I could have made a decent batch of cookes with the baking powder by the third attempt, without needing to go for that fourth, near-fatal attempt. Just sayin’.
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* cookies, not cookes!
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I’ve got drive, Vanessa, what can I say ? 😉
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Can someone clarify – are baking soda and powder in any way interchangeable?
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Google later told me that you can use baking soda if you don’t have baking powder but not the other way around.
Sometimes I don’t like to read all the words…
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I’m SO going to remember that. Right.
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I guess you won’t be babysitting for your new niece anytime soon, huh?
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Everyone was surprisingly cool with the idea of near-death. I think my family’s ready to meet their Maker.
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She can babysit if she promises to bring Oreos.
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Too funny and a little sad… Jackie is great. She almost made me want to get up and exercise for thirty days, but the timing wasn’t right.
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I heard that. You can start any time you know 😛
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Yeah, I was almost really, really inspired too, Don. It was close.
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Take heart in the fact that baking chocolate chip cookies is the most noble, honorable and loving thing any person can do for another. It is the quintessential effort, saying “I love you” in a most direct and caring way. The fact that they were inedible does not diminish the good intent.
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Al! That’s very kind of you. Thanks 🙂
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Yeah, that WAS very kind of you Al. Why are you being kind? Are you feeling OK?
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I was until I read this comment. Now I am rolling on the floor laughing uncontrollably and about to lose my wheaties!
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Your intentions were noble. That’s all that matters. Was the rubber thingy Pampered Chef? Isn’t their stuff magical? It shouldn’t have melted.
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I don’t know its origins but everything at my brother’s is top notch (he spent 15 minutes telling me about his new amazing garbage can) so I’m going to say yes. Also, I’m all for pinning this on the rubber thingy’s failures.
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With how much Pampered Chef stuff costs, you have a right to expect better performance than this. They should have paid to clean the house and replace the now-rubber-lined-sink.
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Pingback: Pressed and Pegged and Oh-So-Flattahed | The Jackie Blog
Baking the time away! Baking powder and baking soda – one hilarious post. And can so see this happening. Written with style.
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Thanks, mouse. I gave your site a drop-in and I’m intrigued by your style. Nice blog 🙂
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This was hilarious! Oh and I’ve been there. It involved a pizza in the oven with the cardboard still attached. See, Jackie, I can’t even cook frozen pizza properly. Give yourself kudos for attempting cookies with no baking soda and melted rubber.
Congrats on the Freshly Pegged and the Shall-Not-Be-Spoken-Of in Peg’s presence Freshly Pressed for the umpteenth time!
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Oh man I worry about the cardboard all the time 🙂 thanks for the Grats!
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I can’t believe you had time to stop by, Miss Darla, since you are hanging around today at http://dailypost.wordpress.com/ being interviewed on what it’s like to be the funniest person in the world. Daily Post – you diva!
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Grats, Darla!
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I love, love, love this story. I once started a fire on the counter when a kitchen towel got too close to the gas range.
So did the cookies at least taste good???
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I have a gas range too – many a time I’ve wondered if it will be the death of me
And no. I threw them all out.
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That was probably wise, Jackie.
And Rache, I tried thinly sliced chocolate mint on strawberries last night as you suggested. I had 2 Tablespoons of raspberry jam in the bottom of a jar, so I put that in a pan with a little white wine and a splash of balsamic vinegar, added the strawberries and heated a little. Then sliced the mint and served with a scoop of frozen Cool Whip. (I know, the last part isn’t too healthy, but it’s all I had.) Not too sweet, and yummy!
Jackie, now that you’re a healthy workout maven, you should really check out Rachel’s blog for beautiful healthy food recipes, etc.
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Yes ma’am!
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Great story. And great moral — don’t buy the expensive crap if you want to keep your house. And congrats on being Freshly Pegged!
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Thanks! My home is happily full of cheap and reliable crap
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This was quite the tale. I see posh bakeries in your future when in need of chocolate chip cookies.
How did the new Mom react to you almost destroying her “perfect” kitchen?
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For the record I’m an excellent baker. I am not, however, excellent at substitutions. Apparently I also have to be in my own home. 🙂
In the midst of the delivery and the madness I don’t know if I ever actually relayed this information to the kitchen owner…
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…probably a wise choice. 😉
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Tee hee!
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Congrats on being Freshly Pegged! I enjoyed your tale of woe and have a few to match, if I was in to embarrassing myself here on my sista’s blog! Loved your Dad’s response upon waking. Glad you did NOT burn down the house before Mom could bring baby home 🙂
Ah, life lessons …
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Feel free to share all the embarrassing stories you’ve got, Miss Guitar. I’m sure we’d all be delighted to hear them.
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Agreed – it makes me feel like my sort of stupid is more regular. Share away, Tar
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What a great story, Jackie! I love how you combine your humor with your eloquent words. I don’t know you, but the visual of you being a penguin flapping silently and violently fanning the smoke away, got me. And I love your father’s “matter-of-fact” answer to how you could have woken him up. Congratulations on being pegged! 🙂
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Gotta love dads – they’re usually unflappable because they’ve seen it all, right?
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Thanks! My dad has gotten so soft over the years. He’s a military guy but now that he’s a grandfather you wouldn’t know it 😉
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I was sputtering my coffee everywhere reading this. Another reinforcement for store bought cookies and cheap kitchen accoutrements. Although the mishaps might have encouraged exercise, perhaps you could market the penguin flapping as a new dance routine for Zuppa – Zumba?
This was wonderfully told and so deserving of Freshly Pegged. Thank you for brightening my morning.
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I know – I could just see Jackie flapping around the kitchen like a bird ready for take off. Although I was picturing more a dodo…
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Thank you so much! It’s truly an honor. And I agree with Peg – more dodo than penguin perhaps 😉
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Oh, other people’s kitchens are so dangerous! I once started a fire at my grandfather-in-law’s kitchen and burned up all this pantry. WHY anyone would use their oven as a pantry…
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Oh, jeez, my in-laws used to do that. It was only by the grace of God we smelt the burning bags of potato chips in time.
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Oh man – I had some friends in college who threw their liquor in the bottom of the stove when their parents visited and when they cooked later that week, the oven exploded. Firemen came and all. So, so stupid. Ovens are not pantries indeed.
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I’m just happy you are okay, Peg! This is EXACTLY the sort of thing that would happen to me. I could set of a smoke detector making tap-water.
🙂
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Okay… so… guess who is good with fire and bad with judging when one post begins and one post ends. YIKES! Very sorry about this (Jackie AND Peg). Can I blame this on my mouse… because… it’s… the um… the scroll wheel thingy is… um… it’s…
(turns and runs away)
😦
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ha! You’re OK, SIG. It’s that whole absent=minded artiste thing, right?
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Hahaha… yes… that must be it, because… hey, what’s that over there?!
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The double teaming can be hard on the brain. You’re certainly excused.
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I just found your blog from the WordPress “Humor Blog Roundup”. Great post! Thanks for making me laugh out loud 🙂 I’ll be back here.
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Thank YOU for stopping by – glad to have you!
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I can related to this story minus the waiting for someone to give birth part! My roommate in Spain almost killed all of us too via a heart shaped frying pan and plastic spatula. She was a fantastic person, just a bit forgetful. We had an electric stove which she left on with the plastic spatula on top of the heart shaped frying pan (she liked to buy cute accessories). The plastic spatula melted into the heart shaped frying pan and caused a lot of smoke. Spain doesn’t believe in smoke detectors so she only realized her mistake once the smoke was in the hallway.
So much smoke damage! I’ll let you picture the aftermath. And then a serious talking to in Spanish by our Spanish landlord (who could have been so much meaner but she liked us, but probably less after this incident).
And all because of a heart shaped frying pan.
I’m glad we both survived to tell these tales!
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My post could have been much more humorous if I could have incorporated commentary on adorable cookware throughout. Dammit! 😉 thanks for sharing – glad you’re alive. They should give out medals or something.
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Thank you for introducing Jackie to us. I loved that story and had to laugh out loud. Really funny!
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She knows how to juggle words so when you read, you end up spraying your beverage out your nose. Just a little warning.
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oh gawrsh. Thanks Pleun and Peg
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