Neal’s Belch no. 159 for 8th Sept, 2004
Many of you may be aware that I recently changed my favourite colour from red to orange, in order to realign my visual tastes with my food preferences so that my favourite colour is now the same as my favourite flavour.
And I know what you’re thinking. If I ate blood oranges, I could have remained loyal to the colour red while still enjoying orange coloured foodstuffs. The problem is, blood oranges taste like urine. And that happens to be one of my least favourite flavours. I avoid urine flavour ice creams and crisps like the plague.
Although come to think of it that doesn’t entirely make sense. I don’t avoid the plague. I don’t have to, because it has never threatened me or come after me as far as I know. Me and the plague have never crossed swords.
Not that I’m friends with the plague, it’s just that it’s been sensible enough not to start an argument with me, so I’ve had no reason to get upset. No matter how much I may dislike the plague, if I were to start a fight with it today I could quite rightly be described as agressive and a trouble-maker.
Anyway, now that I’ve nailed my colours to the mast as regards colours and flavours, I may as well go the whole hog and reveal my favourite breakfast cereal. It’s Frosties. Known in some countries as Frosted Flakes, but always featuring Tony the Tiger on the box.
Obviously the cat is part of the attraction. But I also love the idea that brave cereal manufacturers traipse out into the street at four o’clock every morning to gather frost and dew with which to coat my corn. It makes a welcome change from the usual mass manufacturing of cereals that goes on in most places. There just aren’t enough hand-made breakfast items in the world today.
Take for example toast.
Now, here in Ireland toast is delivered by the milkman at some ungodly hour, and if you get up too late it’s gone soggy. I’ve got round that problem by ordering dry toast, and adding the butter later when I’m ready to start eating it. But this is a busy world, and I’m only too well aware that many people do not have time to be spreading dairy items on their cooked bread first thing in the morning.
I suppose at this stage I should propose some kind of solution to this problem, but I’m not a paid journalist and I can’t see what’s in it for me.
And frankly, I don’t think this Belch is much good. I suppose I could delete it and start again but these essays are my babies and I’m never going to do that. Instead, I’ll just carry on and hope that my self-deprecating comment here has made the reader warm to me. Actually I’m quite warm myself at the moment. I bought an excellent new electric fire today The second that I touched the match to it the whole room felt like a furnace.
I love that word, “furnace” by the way.
It derives of course from two words, “fur” and “ace”, and first came into common parlance after Dick Whittington’s legendary cat won a game of strip poker and got to keep his fur, thanks to a hidden Ace of Clubs which his owner had very kindly hidden in his cat’s ass. I’m sorry to be vulgar, by the way. I don’t like to talk about putting things up cat’s asses, but no matter how much I thought about it I just couldn’t think of another place on a cat’s body where a playing card could be concealed.
Although I’ve just realised that Dick Whittington’s cat’s “ass” is probably a donkey, not a part of the cat’s anatomy. I hate the way some words have two meanings. It’s so confusing sometimes.
Maybe I should have written about a mixed breed cat who’s mother had mated with a kangaroo and who therefore had a pocket. But I don’t like to be too silly. You lose credibility if you go off on tangents like that, and you start to look less professional.
Then before you know it, you’re a circus clown.
And let me tell you, face paint is very difficult to remove. It gets stuck to fur and and you get fined for animal cruelty and people start to lower their opinion of you. Then you end up having blood oranges for breakfast because the citrus is good for disolving paint, and it’s way too late for that because I’ve already changed my favourite colour by deed-pole, and there’s no turning back.