The Dear Mrs DT
Honey, how many burgers do you want for dinner?
Two sounds good.
But you’re having corn and salad and some leftovers from last night. Isn’t two too many?
Then why do you ask?
You’ll have to eat it tomorrow.
Wouldn’t give her up for the world …

That does sound like a lot of grub tho.
But that’s me – I hate that bloated feeling.
Anyway, I do the burgers around here and I only eat one.
Whole wheat bun, 1 slice of cheese, mustard and ketchup.
My wife does the “all the way” thing.
We’re coming out the backside of the “best sweet corn on the planet” season. Have about 6-8 ears left in the fridge drawer.
Been experimenting various commercial salad dressings this year and lately I’ve taken a hankering to the orange French stuff. Has a little more sugar in it than I care for though.
Leftovers are for lunch the next day…
Yeah, mines a keeper too.
Didn’t eat all she said. Salad and burgers was it. No dressing. Corn tomorrow.
I miss midwest sweet corn. This here’s good but something’s missing.
Used to have “parties” out in the cornfields. Get a pot of water boiling, a tub of melted butter. When the water was ready, strip off an ear and bend the stalk so the ear is in the water. Cut the ear off when done, dip in the butter vat, salt and chew. Can’t get much fresher than that. 🙂
I finally got the nerve to try mixing up my own salad dressings. It is great! Pick your flavor and do an online search. Use small jars to save the leftovers. Here is a link to a jalapeño dressing that you wil love. https://www.sipandfeast.com/shrimp-taco-recipe-with-tequila-lime-garlic-sauce/#wprm-recipe-container-25951
Kernels of Truth Come Out When You Eat Corn
By KATHLEEN KELLEHER
Sept. 4, 1995 12 AM PT
Printed in the LA Times
Think of the way you eat corn on the cob as a Rorschach test, a kind of toothy imprint of the psyche, a revealer of truth–kernel by kernel.
The consensus of several psychologists who study eating behaviors is that there are three primary eating styles: the typewriter, the rotary and the hunt-and-peck method.
Chomping styles are genetic, says John M. de Castro, a psychology professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta, where, he says, “there is not an ear of corn in sight.”
“It has to do with DNA sequencing being right to left or left to right or rotary,” says de Castro, who describes himself as “definitely a left-to-right transcripter.”
Typewriter-style eaters probably live orderly, methodical lives and may be more prone to obsessive-compulsive disorders, suggests de Castro.
“I mean, what you want to find out is does the typewriter guy get crazed when he only eats three rows across instead of four? What you really need is an animal model to do the research. Perhaps rodents. They’re good corn eaters.” (Wouldn’t the fact that rats have no opposable thumbs hamper the study?)
The typewriter psychodynamic, says Edward E. Abramson, a psychology professor at Cal State Chico, might be a “manifestation of an inner personality that is more anal retentive.” Guys like Felix of “The Odd Couple” and Benito Mussolini (“The trains will run on tim e !”) were probably typewriter types.
But David Schlundt, a cornfed Indiana native and psychology professor at Vanderbilt University, thinks mowing kernels from left to right may be related to how we read a page. “I eat four rows at a time and then rotate it away from me and usually end up with a few rows left,” he says. (So do people who read right to left, such as Hebrew speakers, also eat corn that way? The Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles guesses that about 50% of Israelis eat right to left.)
The rotary method, psychologists say, is likely favored by creative, artistic, right-brainer folks.
“This person would be good to go to Disney World with because they would make sure you saw the park, which is circular, in a nice orderly fashion,” says Robert C. Klesges, professor of psychology in preventive medicine at the University of Memphis.
Abramson reveals, almost sheepishly, that he sometimes departs from the typewriter approach for the devil-may-care rotary method.
“Eating round and round you don’t have to check to see how you’ve done . . . eating in rows presents an implicit need for orderliness,” he says. “Every now and then I eat it round and round just to try something new and see what it feels like.” (Wild thang!)
The hunt-and-peck method (eating’s equivalent to chaos theory) is a series of random, irrational bites. Children and other impulsive folks chow corn this way. (Don’t sit next to these people.)
“It’s haphazard,” says Abramson. “Adults doing this method, I suspect, would find it very hard to then put the corn down and not worry about the uneaten kernels. Many people probably would feel just as compelled [as typewriter and rotary eaters] to eat all the unfinished kernels.” (Oh, the vagaries of corn eating, oh, angst!)
Hunt-and-peckers flummox Schlundt. “I have seen cobs that have been ravaged that way but have not been able to understand what happened.”
There are deviant corn-eating behaviors, like my colleague, who runs a knife under the kernels but leaves then in place on the cob, enabling him to get that cob effect without the strain on his teeth. (Stay away from this man, Klesges advises.)
And last, what makes a grown man ding?
My father, a lifelong typewriter man, finishes each line of kernels like Woody Woodpecker, with a resounding: “DING!” My father, Klesges surmises, is either a man who needs to know when things begin and end, or else he has a terminal case of corniness.
Good One! LOL
I’m a rotary chomper.
Bottom teef plower.
Typewriter, left to right. I kind of guessed you’d be rotary : )
And someone probably got a PhD for that work as a thesis …. and is now working for the government making about $250K.
We had the last of our sweet corn for supper yesterday. My dear wife fixed steaks and fried ‘taters from our garden. Fresh maters too. Ambrosia is the variety of corn we planted. Later we sat in the back yard and watched the sun go down behind the Coast Range and sipped Kilbeggan on the rocks.
We have been in a drought for this summer. Here is one of my neighbors explaining what he and his family are accomplishing. I order my meat from them. There are only two of us at home and we are living on SS so I cannot afford the great stuff, but even the hamburger is fine tasting! I am grateful for that family and the beef they produce, and the opportunity to share.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/montana-blackfoot-valley-cattle-ranchers-local-food-regenerative-ranching/
P.S. Can’t make the link thingy work!