Dear Doctor:
I read with interest your worksheet on “Foods to Avoid” and
“Foods to Use” that your staff kindly sent to help me lower my cholesterol. I
have a few comments and questions:
First of all I have to tell you that I am half Ruthenian/Lemko --it's kinda like Ukrainian, kinda not really Polish -- anyway, you get the idea.
Without a weekly infusion of pierogi, kielbasa and sour cream, my DNA will
break down. I put gypsy curse on person
who wrote list.
I am also half Irish, and if I tell me sainted grandmother
that I am not allowed to drink Guinness or eat corned beef and hash, she will
take her shillelagh and haul me into St. Aloysius’ on my knees to pray for my
sanity.
How can it be okay to eat olive oil but not eat olives? This must be a typo.
I’ve said it before and I will say it again: Life without
butter would be a mistake.
“Avoid marbled beef.”
Ha ha.
If I do not drink 27 cups of coffee with half and half and
two teaspoons of sugar every day I will fall asleep at my desk and get fired.
“Dried peas or beans may be used as a bread
substitute.” Have you tried
making a grilled cheese sandwich with tomato, hot peppers, pork roll and egg on
dried peas?
“Buy a good low fat cookbook.” So, I can eat that because
it’s low-fat?
The nice people at the Entenmanns’ Bakery are counting on me
to keep their jobs.
The worksheet keeps referring to fried foods. Is there another kind?
Eating ice cream keeps the evil aliens from landing in my
backyard. It must be true because I eat
ice cream all the time and I have never seen an alien. In the interest of global safety, I must
continue to eat ice cream.
Grandma Annie’s Kettle Cooked Potato Chips are
non-negotiable.
Also, if you see a doughnut and you do not eat it, it hurts
its feelings.
Dark Chocolate Raisinettes are fruit.
Melba toast is the spawn of the devil. It says so right in the Old Testament.
The slice of lime in a Gin and Tonic counts as a citrus
serving, right?
“Avoid coconuts.”
Does this mean I cannot wear my Polynesian Halloween costume this year?
“Limit eggs to 4 a week, including those used in cooking”
That is just mean. I think you might be
a little nicer to a patient whom you have been treating for over 35 years.
I am trying, really, but it seems that the
only things I can safely eat are steamed jellyfish on Communion wafers with
mustard.
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