Welcome to All Things Stacey Longo
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Bibliography
  • In the News
  • Contact

My Life in Food

4/25/2014

 
Why do I have such a dysfunctional relationship with food? No, seriously, God, why?

Some people are stress eaters; others eat when they're bored. Some reward themselves with food; others punish themselves by eating a rice cake when there is chocolate cake to be enjoyed. Personally, I eat when I'm feeling hungry, tired, happy, bored, sad, vaguely irritated, irrationally ecstatic, sluggish, manic, and/or completely satiated. Yup, I'm an eater.

Who do I blame for this? Who do you think? Of course it's my mother's fault, and she will indignantly tell you that it's her mother's fault, and she's probably right. I remember going on trips with Grandma during which she took pictures of waiters, buffet tables, dessert trays, and deli platters. Never mind that we were at the Grand Canyon; it was the sparkling glaze on the honey ham that attracted Grandma's eye. And, I'll admit, I found this not completely insane, but kind of endearing. Thus, a lifelong weight battle was born.

In our family, we defined our vacations by what we ate on the trip. In California, Mom and I found a fabulous candy shop hidden midway through the wax museum. (Plymouth, Massachusetts and Orlando, Florida also have some lovely candy stores.) There were sugar cookies in Maine, cinnamon sticks in Virginia, and sticky buns in Pennsylvania that all still bring back fond memories. Not all of these trips were winners, though. My mother and I remember a vegetable lasagna on one trip to D.C. that still brings about a shudder when it's mentioned (in hushed, somber tones).

Having someone else in the family who understands what it's like to get a stomach bug and still gain four pounds is nice, particularly since my father and sister have no such woes. It's a Longo gene or something, because I also have a cousin on my father's side, Tina, who eats whatever she likes and never gains an ounce. My father and sister only eat when they're hungry, simply eat until they're full, and get on with their day. It's like my mother and I lived in a house with two aliens. I remember how bizarre lunchtime always was in our house. Dad would eat a sandwich, and then shake his head when Mom would gesture towards him with an open bag of Doritos®. "Nope, I'm full. I think I'll go chop several hundred cords of wood now," Dad would say, waving off the chips. (Apparently, in another life, my father was Abraham Lincoln.) Mom would look across the table towards me, eyes filled with puzzlement. I'd smile, and, looking at the Dorito® crumb stuck to her cheek, ask her if she was going to eat that. Hey, it's not my fault she married a weirdo.

This is no doubt why all of the women on my mother's side of the family (except, of course, my sister Kim, who doesn't even own a scale) are experienced dieters. For every diet out there, someone in my maternal line has tried it. Atkins, South Beach, the Cabbage Soup Diet, eDiets, the Carbohydrates Addict's Diet, Scarsdale, the Grapefruit Diet, Jenny Craig, the 3-Hour Diet, the Blood Type Diet . . . you get the picture. A family portrait of my mom's side will reveal no less than eighteen Weight Watchers lifetime members (of which I am one). The same picture will show all of us beaming as we stand around a perfectly glazed honey ham, with a side of rice pilaf to add texture to the portrait. I'm going to chalk it up to genetics.

You know how they say that you should never judge a person until you've walked in their shoes? In our family, you'll inevitably find those shoes are hiking it to the Hickory Farms kiosk, where free samples are known to abound.
Picture
Photo purloined from www.allrecipes.com. Grandma would be proud.

Easter Candy Done Right

4/18/2014

 
Every year around this time, I find myself appalled by how many people seem to be unaware of the rules for eating Easter candy. Oh yes, there are rules. Let me enlighten you:

  • Jelly Beans: When taking a handful of jelly beans, it is polite to select one (and only one) of each color from the bowl. They are then to be eaten in order from worst to best flavor. This order is: yellow, green, black, orange, white, pink, purple, red. It is debatable whether red or purple is the best flavor, but you must always finish with red or you will be unlucky in love.
  • Peeps®: When Peeps® are purchased, the package is to be opened but the marshmallow treats inside are to be left untouched. This promotes "staling" of the Peeps®, which, as everybody knows, makes them chewier and more delicious. It is permissible to sample a Peep® about four days into the staling process to see if the appropriate level of chewiness has been attained yet. It will not have been, but it is impossible to have an opened package of Peeps® on the counter without sampling one. Always bite into the Peep® head first.
  • Reese's Peanut Butter Eggs®: These delectable luxuries are to be consumed in a total of five bites—no more, no less. Consuming these eggs in fewer bites will cause the chocolate and peanut butter to smear across your teeth, which is disgusting to look at. Taking more bites to eat these will not give you the full flavor with each bite, and overall is just ridiculous.
  • Brach's Marshmallow Chicks & Rabbits®: These circus-peanut-like goodies come already pre-staled, which means you can eat them right out of the bag without any preparation. They are to be eaten in this order: yellow chick, orange bunny, blue chick, yellow bunny, orange chick, blue bunny (and repeat). Always start at the head and work your way down (I cannot emphasize this enough. Any other way would be a crime against humanity and candy.)
  • Chocolate Rabbits: The rule of thumb for any chocolate rabbit, whether solid or hollow, is to start with the ears. Solid rabbits can be broken into chunks and dipped in a jar of peanut butter, ears first. Hollow rabbits are to have the ears bitten off, leaving an open hole on the head of the rabbit that should then be filled with peanut butter and consumed.
  • Cadbury Crème Eggs®: Listen, I'm not a strict, unbending traditionalist, people. Eat these however you'd like . . . as long as it's with a spoon.

On a completely unrelated note, I have OCD.

Happy Easter/Passover/Volunteer Recognition Day, everyone!

Picture
I was joking, but apparently this really is a thing.

I Get Fan Mail

4/11/2014

 
Sometimes, I get fan mail. It's true. I thought I'd share some of these e-mails with you this week.

Dear Ms. Longo,
I am a writer, too. Can I ask you how you come up with ideas?
Desperately,
Lisa

Dear Lisa,

I get my ideas from the things I observe around me every day. Just last week, I was sitting outside in my green lawn chair, enjoying my coffee, when a giant yellow mastodon wearing a polka-dot tutu trotted across my lawn, crossed the street, and ate my neighbor, who had been performing an interpretive dance in his front yard. Of course, my first thought was "This is a darn comfortable lawn chair. I should write a story about it."
Hope that helps!
Stacey


Dear Stacey,
Has anyone ever told you that you look like Richard Simmons?
Bill

Dear Bill,
Oh, you sweet talker, you! Usually I get Gene Simmons. So this is quite an improvement.
Hugs,
Stacey


Dear Stacy,
You are my favorite writer. I've bought every magazine and anthology you've ever been in, and own six copies of Secret Things. When is your next book coming out?
Sincerely,
Joe

Dear Joe,
If you can't even spell my name right, I have no time for you. Get lost!
StacEy


Dear Miss Longo,
I have loved you from the moment I first read "The Amazing Adventures of Beluga the Gobbledygook." I know that we are destined to be together. Please find enclosed a picture of us doing it that I made out of macaroni and nostril hair.
Love,
Hughie

Dear Hughie,
I'm sorry that I was unable to reply to your letter personally, but I couldn't read your cell block number on the return address. Also, as flattering as your picture was, I think bowties would have been a better choice than manicotti shells.
S. Longo
cc: Attorney Tom Kane


Stacey-
Nobody's ever heard of you. Why should I buy your book when there are authors like Picoult, Patterson, and King out there?
Signed,
Not a Fan

Dear Fan,
Why don't you ask Patterson, Picoult, and King why they recommend my work? Yes, your precious James Patterson referred to me as "brilliant" when I was his waitress out on Block Island; Jodi Picoult once called my book "perfect" when she used it to prop open a door; and the great Stephen King once said that I was "the reason why restraining orders were invented." So if these great authors think I'm so wonderful, who are you to judge?
S.

Dear Stacey,
I found the macaroni picture of you and that convicted rapist in a compromising position. You've got a lot of explaining to do. Also, don't you think bowties would have been a better choice?
See you in court!
Your husband,
Jason


Me: Uh-oh.
Picture
See? GENE Simmons.

Parenting Problems

4/4/2014

 
I am not a parent. Why? The reason for this is not really any of your business. However, being childless, I do feel that I am an expert on parenting. Why? Because that's how obnoxiously delusional I really am.
I've discovered some alarming things about being a parent that are enough to make me never want to be one. Becoming a parent makes you completely lose your mind. Here, let me share:

1.      As a parent, you lose focus on what's really important. My sister, for instance, was furious with me when I taught her then-five-year-old son the words to the South Park theme song. Did she care that her young son had mastered complex words like "temptation" and "vagina," clearly indicating that he was a genius? Heck, no. She complained about "inappropriateness," "he's too young to know what the 'p' word and the 'v' word are," and some other nonsense. Her son was practically a virtuoso, and she didn't care. Also, I wasn't allowed to babysit any more.

2.      Becoming a parent makes you lose your sense of humor. My sister-in-law did not find it one bit amusing when I hand-crafted pillows shaped like bloodstains for her young son and daughter. These delightful keepsakes make it look like you're bleeding from a gaping head wound when you lie on them, and my niece especially liked the velvety red fabric I'd used to create these wonders. Funny, right? My sister-in-law didn't think so. Also, I'm not allowed to babysit anymore.

3.      Being a parent makes you resentful. I can't tell you how many times my sister has shot me a look of pure death when I come over, be my usual 'cool aunt' self, encourage my older nephew to guzzle two cans of Arizona Iced Tea and give the Stone Cold Steve Austin double-finger salute, applaud my younger nephew when he's able to attach glow-in-the-dark dog poo to his forehead and keep it there for a full four minutes, and then leave. It's like she's jealous of my coolness or something. Also, I'm not allowed to watch wrestling with them or shop at Spencer's Gifts for them any more.

4.      Being a parent makes you mean. My sister-in-law did not appreciate it at all the time I described to her then-six-year-old-son the exact ingredients of the sausage he was eating. I thought it was educational. She felt it was disgusting, and made me apologize to my nephew when he started crying and questioning exactly what had happened to Wilbur  at the end of Charlotte's Web. Why she's coddling those children is beyond me. Also, I'm not allowed to share meals with them any more.

5.      Becoming a parent makes you change your priorities. Not in a good way, either. One time I called my sister to see if she wanted to cruise the bars with me to pick up strange men (I was single then) and she not only implied that I was out of my mind, but also made me apologize to both her husband and her infant son for even asking her such a thing. Also, I'm not allowed to call her after 10 p.m. any more.

So there you have it. Clearly, being a parent makes you crazy. This is why I want no part of it. And think about it: do you really want someone like me procreating? Because rest assured, nobody in my family is particularly upset that I haven't.
Picture
Also, I'm not allowed to play with their stuffed animals any more.

    RSS Feed

    Author

    Pretty and perfect in every way.

    Archives

    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010

    Categories

    All
    Aging Gracefully
    Andy Kaufman
    Art
    Bad Actors
    Bad Habits
    Bad Life Choices
    Batman
    Beauty Tips
    Birthdays
    Block Island
    Bloom County
    Bookstore Owner
    Bucket List
    Celebrities
    Christmas Tv Specials
    Connecticut
    Conventions
    Dating Advice
    David Bowie
    Death
    Dieting
    Disney
    Downton Abbey
    Driving
    Duran Duran
    Easter Candy
    Editing
    Etiquette
    Exercise
    Family
    Fashion
    Father
    Fishing
    Gardening
    Generation X
    Greek
    Halloween
    Holidays
    Horror
    Illness
    Iphone
    Kennedy
    Life Lessons
    Love Songs
    Lyme Disease
    Marriage
    Mother
    Mother Nature
    Movies
    Movie Stars
    Music
    News
    Painkillers
    Parenting
    Penn State Football
    Pets
    Philanthropy
    Pms
    Politics
    Potluck
    Presidential Assassination Theories
    Psychic Abilities
    Reading
    Relationships
    Resolutions
    Restaurants
    Ron Jeremy
    Science
    Sexy Actors
    Shopping
    Sisters
    Social Media
    Star Trek
    Stephen King
    Telephones
    Television
    The Storyside
    Tick Removal
    Travel
    Truman Capote
    Vacation
    Weather
    Working
    Writing
    Zombie Apocalypse

Web Hosting by iPage