Move Over Martha, Make Room For the Redneck

Up north, here in the land O' Canada, we are celebrating our turkey long weekend. In our family, not only do we give thanks to the pilgrims before us, but we slap on the paper hats, grab a few candles and celebrate Fric and Frac's birthday with Boo's family.

Nothing like a little Betty Crocker's frosting to wash down all that pie and turkey.

Every year, since I managed to wrangle my way into this family, I have been responsible for bringing the desserts to these family functions. Easter, Christmas, Thanksgiving or Groundhog's day, my in-laws eagerly await for our family to arrive to see the bevy of sugary products I bring in from the car.

It's a lot of pressure to put on a mom who taught her five year old daughter to make toasted tuna sandwiches for lunch so the mother wouldn't starve to death.

A lot of pressure for a woman who's greatest culinary accomplishments lay in her skill to operate a can opener and a microwave blindfolded and with one arm tied behind her back.

A lot of pressure for a chick who still hasn't learned how to use her fancy new stove with it's pretty convection oven and overwhelming choice of digital buttons.

(The instruction manual is two inches thick people! Who has time to read that???)


However, this is a burden I must bear and since it means I have total control over the dessert options available to cram down our gullets, I try not to bitch about it. At least publicly, where any of the in-laws could hear. They may decide to change their mind and assign me as the official (and dreaded) turkey cooker.

Nothing says family love than having to shove your hand up a dead turkey's butt and pull out the giblets. I'd rather sell my soul than wrestle with a slippery, slimy carcass every year.

(Everyone has their thing. A dead bird is not mine.)

Because I am me - a poor planner, a procrastinator and all around failure as a Martha Stewart wannabe - I waited until the morning of our scheduled Thanksgiving supper. Nothing like putting a little pressure on myself to bake four different types of pie as well as a birthday cake, to get the blood pumping.

I might have been better served to be the reincarnation of Betty Crocker if I hadn't gone out with my darling Boo and a herd of our friends the night before to celebrate a birthday. I might have been better served if I had not ingested every alcoholic beverage I could get my mitts on. And there is the small fact I may have been better if, in a moment of drunken stupidity and complete lapse of dignity, I had stayed off the mechanical bull instead of demonstrating to the underaged patrons of the establishment that I may be old, but I can still ride a bull. One handed and pie-faced.

It's good to be queen.

However, none of that was helping me bang around my kitchen, hung-over, slightly bruised and dessert-less the next morning.

After much coffee and painkillers, I managed to bake four pies. I died a little bit on the inside every time I had to roll out another pie crust, but my pride wouldn't allow me to cheat and go to the nearest bakery.

I knew if I did that, I would be on turkey duty forever, and that is a task that must be avoided at all costs.

So the apple pie was over-cooked, the pumpkin pies had too much nutmeg and the praline pie looked lopsided. They were edible, on time and fresh. Boo couldn't believe I had it in me. He was secretly phoning the nearest bakeries, looking to salvage my reputation and save me from having to wake my ass up in the wee hours of the morning next year to shove a bird in the oven.

Shame on you, Boo for doubting me. But I love you for knowing me so well.

Turning my slightly blurred focus on to the birthday cake, I rummaged through my pantry, looking for a box of cake mix. I ripped that closet apart, hoping for a devil food's mix or a lemon cake. Anything.

Luck was not on my side. Not a cake mix or pudding package to be had. Pushing up my sleeves, I knew I had to delve deep. I could do this. I just made pies from scratch. Surely a cake wouldn't be too difficult. I had done it before. On eight hours of sleep and no alcohol running through my veins. Any one can do that. But it takes a special type of person (re: desperate and stupid) to try it my way...baking on three hours of sleep and reeking of liquor from every pore I had.

I was feeling pretty good about myself. I did it. I triumphed. No store bought desserts for this family. I avoided bird duty with every successful dessert I pulled out of my ass.

Life was good. Until I got cocky.

In my defence, it looked perfect. Yet, I'll admit, if I had paid more attention to what I was doing, instead of gloating to Boo about what a super woman I had morphed into while he looked like death warmed over and could barely function after one night of recapturing our misspent youth, I may have noticed the cake wasn't completely baked.

(It looked so perfect in the three seconds before it fell and crushed my dreams.)

It still tasted good. Doesn't that count for something?


Damn. I'm sure there is a lesson to be learned somewhere there, but I'm choosing to ignore it.

With no time left and bird duty looming on the fore front of my hungover mind, I did what any woman of desperation would do.

I bought a cake. And blamed the baking disaster on my husband.

Even with ice cream and strawberries, it still tasted like cardboard.


Who said you couldn't have your cake and eat it too? Or in my case, pie. I wouldn't touch that store bought crap if my life depended on it. We fed it to the throng of kids instead while we adults cleaned off the pie plates.

I'm free of turkey baking for another year...by the skin of my Safeway-saved ass.

Like I said, it is good to be queen.

I Knew I Should Have Bribed the Music Teacher

Back in the days of yore, when I first discovered I was about to become a parent, I was filled with doubts and worry. I worried I wouldn't be a good momma, I worried my child would grow up and hate me, and I worried my ass would grow to rival the size of small country.

A country where they subsist on coffee products and baked goods. Especially honey glazed donuts.

Clearly, I was young and hormonal. After all, I am a good mom (take that you adoption asshats), my children thus far think I hung the moon and my ass may want it's own zip code to spread where ever it chooses, but I'm determined to keep it's sprawl limited to the confines of jeans I already own.

(Or at least until I bend over and split the seams, thereby declaring an emergency shopping day for pants one size bigger...)

Over the years I have tried to be a good mother to my spawn. All right, so some days I have tried harder than others. How many points do I lose since I have yet to throw them a birthday party? I keep them fed. Not well, but they aren't starving. I provide them with ample resources to fuel their minds. Ok, so I supply them with Google and drive them to the public library twice a week. I make sure they exercise their bodies to grow healthy and strong. So what if I make a little money on the side renting them out to local farmers so they can spend the day picking rocks from the fields. They're exercising.

My point is, I have done my best to be a good parent to them. Including, but not limited to, playing chauffeur and driving their asses all over hell's half acre to deliver them to extra curricular activities which cost a small fortune; entertaining a seemingly endless stream of neighbourhood children who wander in at all hours of the day and subjecting myself to one mindless class project after another, all in the name of being a good mommy.

So what does my daughter do to repay me for my efforts? She joins band. And brings home this:

Obviously, I pissed off the music teacher somehow.


The french horn. Also known as a tool of the devil. This is what I SHOULD have worried about back when I was gestating my children. How the hell I would survive band practice.

Now, between the dog's barking, the birds chattering, the hamster's constant churning of their wheel, the repetitive beat of Ms. Duff or Fergie that is continuously played by one child or the other, I have to listen to an eleven year old try and learn how to play the french horn.

Which sounds suspiciously similar to an elephant in heat trying to lure a willing partner while fighting off a trio of monkeys who are trying to remove his tusks with a dull butter knife to sell the ivory to a band of outlaw poachers.

Good times at my house. Good times.

And it will only get better. Frac informed me that he intends on trying out for either the tuba or the drums next year. Then I will have two of my very own band members to serenade me with their mating calls rehearsing.

For six more years. Until they graduate. (Or go batshit crazy and steal their instruments and ransom them back to the school...)



I'm trying to find an upside to this hell. Maybe if I buy them some sequined tops and leather bottoms, I could market them as the next Donnie and Marie.

Because everyone loves the french horn and the tuba, right?

Red Devil Cake

It's my 32 birthday today and I woke up with an eye infection. In both eyes. I'm trying hard not to read into this and take it as an omen that this year is going to suck sweaty monkey balls. All this means is that I'm plagued by thousands of germs and in no way has any bearing on what my future holds.

Right????

As I stumbled, very bleary eyed, into my kitchen to brew some ambrosia coffee, I called my children to get their asses out of bed.

"Wake up!! It's momma's birthday! Come and make me some breakfast and be my little minions before I ship you off to school."

Instead of being greeted with warm wishes and hugs from the darling creatures I gestated, delivered and have spent the last eleven years chasing after and feeding, I was greeted with horrified gasps and nervous stares.

"Ewwwww! What is the matter with your eyes? You look gross. Freaky," muttered my son as he tried to poke at my infected eyes.

Slapping his hand away, I turned to my daughter hoping she would overlook the freak staring back at her and remember my birthday.

"Mom! That is just disgusting! You're not contagious, right? Please tell me you aren't going to pick us up at school today, looking like that."

"Gee, thanks guys. Good to know my bright red eyes aren't noticeable. Now come and kiss me happy birthday."

Funny, they took two steps backwards. Chuckleheads.

"I don't want to get what you have. But I really love you, Mom. No matter how you look. As long as none of my friends see you looking like that," said Fric as she went to grab the card and gift she had carefully made for me last night when she was supposed to be sleeping.

"If I hug you can I touch your eyeballs?" said Frac as he reached out like E.T. phoning home.

"Only if you want your finger to burn off into a pile of ashes and then walk around with red eyes for the rest of your days," I countered.

"Nah. But I'll give you a kiss, Mom." How gracious of this child of mine who was at that very moment ingesting food I had provided for his consumption.

Leaning in for my kiss, he ducked so he would avoid my diseased face and picked up my hand and kissed my knuckles.

"Gee, thanks, Frac. I'm overwhelmed with love," I said dryly as he was scrubbing his mouth with his sleeve.

"No problem Mom. I love you. I'm sorry you aren't feeling well on your birthday." Aww, my icy heart was beginning to thaw.

"Is it okay if I bring a couple friends over after school so they can see your eyes? I can't wait to freak them out with my creepy mom."

Story of my life. It's a great start to my 32 year. Happy freakin' birthday. Literally, in this case.

Now I have to go find myself a doctor willing to treat this side-show. And buy myself a big-ass cake.

Last night trying to pose for a pic to send their father.


I'm thinking the red eyed devil I've become is more fun. Maybe I should go to the school to see my kids...